HARRISBURG, Pa. — When Democrat John Fetterman got elected to Pennsylvania's U.S. Senate seat, many backers hoped he'd challenge convention and the status quo.
He did and has — just not in the way many had expected.
Fetterman has broken with his party on some policy matters and warmed to President-elect Donald Trump, a man he bashed on the 2024 campaign trail as a ''felon" who is ''obsessed with revenge.'' Fetterman later became the first Senate Democrat to meet with Trump since the election.
In fact, Fetterman has warmed to Trump so much that some in his party are quietly disavowing the man they supported in 2022, when the Pennsylvanian easily won a three-candidate primary and survived a stroke amid a high-pressure campaign to become the only Democrat to flip a Republican Senate seat that year.
Christine Jacobs, who founded Represent PA, an organization to help elect Democratic women to Pennsylvania's legislature, said the Democrats she's talking to are both disappointed and concerned by Fetterman's dalliance with Trump.
Their worry, Jacobs said, is that ''Trump can say he's talking to Democrats like John Fetterman, but it's not going to change what he does and it'll end up looking like John Fetterman's being used.''
Fetterman's approach is reminding some Democrats of former Democratic Sens. Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona and Joe Manchin of West Virginia, both of whom clashed with their party during President Joe Biden's term, became political independents and didn't run for reelection.
Still, Fetterman — who often mocked Manchin during his 2022 Senate run — isn't the only one adjusting to the new political reality.