It took less than a year for Mehmet Oz to succumb to the pressures of accepting corporate PAC money in the tight race for Pennsylvania’s open Senate seat.
In January, Oz proclaimed that he would not take “one dime of corporate PAC money, not one dollar,” and that he “cannot be bought.” But his latest campaign fundraising report, which puts him behind his Democratic opponent John Fetterman, shows he took $23,500 from eight separate corporate entities,reported.
Those entities ranged from Bloomin’ Brands, the parent company of Aussie-styled franchise Outback Steakhouse, to an Oklahoman coal and oil company. “Dr. Oz will lie to anyone about literally anything if it means helping himself because this fraud has no core values,” Joe Calvello, Fetterman’s director of communications, told the
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
A Francis Bacon Triptych Leads London Frieze Week’s $210.5 Million SalesThe staggering sum includes $23 million one bidder paid for a Francis Bacon Triptych.
Read more »
John Fetterman Is Here for the Memes — and for Pennsylvania'This notion that Dr. Oz and the Republicans are amplifying that someone who has difficulty hearing is “unfit” is wrong and dangerous.' Read more of leximcmenamin's conversation with JohnFetterman about staring down ableism in politics. ⬇️
Read more »
Sean Hannity brings show to York, uses it to boost Oz campaignThe Fox News host spent most of his show recorded in York on Wednesday touting Republican U.S. Senate candidate Dr. Mehmet Oz while criticizing John Fetterman, his opponent.
Read more »
Oz rejects animal testing chargesPennsylvania Senate candidate Dr. Mehmet Oz’s campaign Wednesday rejected charges leveled in a new animal welfare group’s ad that said he was involved in animal tests over a decade ago.
Read more »
New Trump-backed super PAC injects nearly $4 million in ad spending into key racesA new super PAC backed by former President Trump is injecting money into key 2022 races, investing $4 million in a new round of ad spending.
Read more »