

Tom Wolf, in a landslide.Īfter years in the spotlight, though, Fetterman remains unwilling, or perhaps unable, to play the part of a traditional politician.

In 2018, he was elected lieutenant governor of the state, on a ticket with Gov. But Fetterman had a story: A man who could pass for a Hells Angel and had a Harvard degree was revitalizing a place that epitomized the rise and fall of America’s steel industry-building a community center, renovating crumbling properties, talking about using art “to combat the dark side of capitalism.” Within a few years, he appeared in the Atlantic’s “25 Brave Thinkers” issue and was invited to speak at the Aspen Ideas Festival. Mayors of 2,000-person boroughs don’t typically receive much attention.
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But the man who has been profiled in People, Rolling Stone, the New York Times, the Washington Post and countless other publications-and who became the de facto spokesman for Pennsylvania Democrats after former President Donald Trump cried fraud in the state in 2020, appearing on multiple cable TV networks hour after hour-still hasn’t learned to tolerate it, even if his fame is due in part to how he looks.įetterman first exploded onto the national scene shortly after he was elected mayor of Braddock, a small, dilapidated town outside Pittsburgh, in 2005. The few who don’t treat it as a necessary cost of media attention. Most politicians love being in front of the camera. Lieutenant Governor John Fetterman, 51, stands for a portrait in his office in the State Capitol in Harrisburg, Pa., on March 3, 2021.
