U.S. Senate candidate John Fetterman, a Democrat, had an odd start for a Saturday rally in Pennsylvania when a sudden gust of wind blew down the row of American flags behind him during his opening remarks.
As soon as the lieutenant governor took to the stage in Pittsburgh on Saturday morning, he downplayed the appearance of his Republican opponent, Dr. Mehmet Oz, and former President Donald Trump, who would later rally with supporters in Latrobe the same day.
“Today, Dr. Oz is gonna be standing with Donald Trump on the stage, and I’m going to be proud to be standing with a president that is 100 percent sedition-free,” said Fetterman, referring to his guest speaker, former President Barack Obama.
Staff soon restored the flags, but the video clip went viral on social media as responses varied by partisan divisions. Many took to Twitter to taunt him over the incident, while others deemed it an omen about Democrats’ fading prospects for Tuesday’s elections.
“The perfect metaphor for Fetterman’s campaign,” Donald Trump, Jr. wrote via Twitter.
Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel called it a “perfect metaphor for Democrats’ control of Congress.” A clip shared by the committee has been viewed more than 3 million times.
The attention on Pennsylvania underscores the stakes in 2022 and beyond for the tightly contested state. As both Oz and Fetterman are vying to replace retiring Republican Sen. Pat Toomey, the race could decide the Senate majority and with it whether the Biden administration can carry out its agenda and judicial appointments for the next two years.
“Of those who say they have heard, seen, or read a lot about the debate, Oz leads Fetterman 55 percent to 41 percent,” Spencer Kimball, executive director of Emerson College polling, told The Hill.
Fetterman showed little trouble speaking on Saturday, and some praised his lack of response to the incident. “Gale force winds wipe out flags, yet strong Democratic candidate doesn’t even flinch,” someone wrote on Twitter, praising the candidate as “strength personified.”
Fetterman’s campaign team did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The key swing state saw a clash of titans on Saturday as the biggest stars of the left and right worked to energize voters in the last days of voting in the midterm elections.
Following the morning rally, Obama also teamed up with his former No. 2, President Joe Biden, in Philadelphia for a final stand before the Nov. 8 elections. The former president has been on a tour of key states to campaign for Democrat candidates in close races amid tough political headwinds for the party.