Opinion editor's note: Star Tribune Opinion publishes a mix of national and local commentaries online and in print each day. To contribute, click here.
•••
John Fetterman — the hulking, tattooed, hoodie-wearing lieutenant governor of Pennsylvania — constitutes Democrats' best hope to steal a Senate seat from Republicans this fall. And while few politicians can match his style, or could pull it off, Democrats can learn a lot from his approach.
Part of Fetterman's skill as a politician is that he seems to have successfully transcended some of the factional divides that have hobbled Democrats in recent years. He has many of the same friends and enemies as the party's progressive faction, having endorsed Bernie Sanders for president in 2016 and stomped moderate favorite Conor Lamb in last week's primary for U.S. Senate. Yet he has managed to avoid progressives' demands to make suicidal policy commitments.
He's favorable to fracking and nuclear power, for example, two major no-no's for the left. He says he wants President Joe Biden to continue his predecessor's pandemic-era policy of deporting asylum-seekers at the southern border. Despite past support for "Medicare for All," he's now evasive and non-committal as to where he stands on that litmus test. And at a time when pro-Israel groups and progressives are at war in Democratic primaries across the country, he's promised to "lean in" on the U.S.-Israel relationship.
Despite stiff-arming many of the left's policy planks, he's won a lot of praise from the leftists. One even argued that Democrats should emulate Fetterman and "focus less on dry policy issues and more on eliciting an emotional reaction."
It's good advice — I have been telling Democrats to chill out and be less ambitious for two years now — but it's dizzying to hear leftists claim it as their own. And they actually understate the case: Fetterman is not merely "focusing less" on policy, he's practically ignoring it.
The "Issues" section of his campaign website has essentially no text, just a bunch of headings — minimum wage, immigration, health care, "the union way of life" — with links to videos. The health care section, for example, features a 30-second clip of the candidate saying health care "is a basic, fundamental human right no different than food or shelter or education."