The senator discusses the “astonishing” support for the former president in Pennsylvania, his rift with progressives over Israel and his own position in the Democratic Party.
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From the New York Times, this is the interview.
I'm Lulu Garcia Navarro.
Whatever happens this election, Democrats are going to be in a moment of transformation.
The party has been united in defeating former President Donald Trump, but that focus has masked real fissures on the left.
And at the intersection of many of them sits John Fetterman, Pennsylvania's junior Democratic senator G early political fame as the towering and tattooed mayor of the working class town of Braddock before he was elected lieutenant governor of the state in 2018.
Four years later, he defeated the Trump endorsed celebrity Dr.
Mehmet Oz in a tight Senate race that despite suffering a stroke just months before the election.
But Fetterman's time in the Senate has been bumpy.
On the personal front, his stroke has caused him difficulties with auditory processing, which you might hear a bit in our conversation.