
John Fetterman looks to November as primary day in Pennsylvania approaches
CNN
Can a Bernie Sanders-supporting advocate for legal marijuana and lower prison sentences flip a Republican Senate seat in Pennsylvania and help keep the Senate in Democratic hands?
Conventional wisdom would say no. But John Fetterman, the tattooed, 6-foot 8-inch, cargo-short-wearing lieutenant governor of the Keystone State is anything but conventional.
"We have to flip this seat," he told a cheering crowd of over a hundred people packed into the Holy Hound Taproom ("Hallowed be thy beer," the sign says) here in downtown York, where he grew up and where his father's insurance agency still operates just a few blocks away.

A number of Jeffrey Epstein survivors voiced their concern in a private meeting with female Democratic lawmakers earlier this week about the intermittent disclosure of Epstein-related documents and photos by Democrats on the House Oversight Committee, sharing that the selective publication of materials was distressing, four sources familiar with the call told CNN.












