Small-town Braddock mayor adds intrigue to Senate race

John Fetterman, right, the mayor of Braddock, Pa., shakes hands with a young supporter while announcing his candidacy for the U.S. Senate, Monday, Sept. 14, 2015, in Braddock. (AP Photo/Keith Srakocic)
John Fetterman, right, the mayor of Braddock, Pa., shakes hands with a young supporter while announcing his candidacy for the U.S. Senate, Monday, Sept. 14, 2015, in Braddock. (AP Photo/Keith Srakocic)

BRADDOCK, Pa. (AP) — With a theme of fighting economic inequality and an outsize reputation for unconventional methods, the tattooed mayor of a small hardscrabble steel town near Pittsburgh said Monday that he will join Pennsylvania’s competitive and expensive race for U.S. Senate.

John Fetterman announced his candidacy in tiny Braddock for the Democratic nomination to challenge Republican U.S. Sen. Pat Toomey, who is running for a second term with a unified GOP behind him, the backing of influential conservative groups and millions of dollars in his campaign account.

Fetterman first must face two experienced candidates vying for the Democratic nomination.

Wearing a black short-sleeve work shirt, gray cargo shorts and black high-top shoes, Fetterman addressed a crowd of supporters from the rooftop of his home, a restored car dealership that overlooks the 140-year-old Edgar Thomson steel mill.

Driving his candidacy, he said, is the same issue that drove him to be mayor: inequality in things like opportunity, health care and “the air that we breathe.”

John Fetterman, right, the mayor of Braddock, Pa., shakes hands with a young supporter while announcing his candidacy for the U.S. Senate, Monday, Sept. 14, 2015, in Braddock. (AP Photo/Keith Srakocic)
John Fetterman, right, the mayor of Braddock, Pa., shakes hands with a young supporter while announcing his candidacy for the U.S. Senate, Monday, Sept. 14, 2015, in Braddock. (AP Photo/Keith Srakocic)

He said he could not, however, promise that he alone “could fundamentally change Washington, D.C., any more than I could bring back the 14 furniture stores that Braddock once had,” Fetterman told the crowd. But, he said, he would fight for “Braddock values” in Washington.

Winning the April 26 primary election could cost millions of dollars and Fetterman, who comes from a well-to-do background in York, acknowledged that.

He made no promises that he could raise millions and instead pledged to pursue small-dollar donors and mount a strong online presence.

This is his first campaign for higher office after arriving in Braddock in 2001 as an AmeriCorps volunteer and winning his first mayoral election in 2005.

The Harvard University-educated 46-year-old has gained national attention for his unconventional efforts to reinvigorate Braddock, from starting youth programs to attracting artists, farm projects and edgy new businesses to vacant buildings and lots. He’s appeared on Comedy Central’s “The Colbert Report” and has been profiled in Rolling Stone, The Guardian, The New York Times and other news outlets.

That notoriety has helped put Braddock on the map for image-makers in search of grit, including the 2013 movie “Out of the Furnace” and a Levi’s jeans commercial in which Fetterman is heard saying, “90 percent of our town is in a landfill somewhere. So reinvention is our only option.”

The U.S. Census listed Braddock with a population of nearly 20,900 in 1920. In 2013, Braddock had about 2,200 people, nearly 40 percent of whom lived below the federal poverty level that year of $23,550 for a family of four.

Besides his choice of dress, the 6-foot-8, bald and tattooed mayor with a three-inch goatee does not look like a typical politician.

“I don’t even look like a typical person,” Fetterman joked.

Fetterman is also unlike any other mayor.

He tattooed the town’s zip code — 15014 — on one forearm and the date of every slaying in the borough since he became mayor on the other.

One of those tattoos represents the death of a nephew of Braddock’s council president, Tina Doose.

“John has stood for good things, right things,” Doose told the crowd. “And we have less violence and crime in our community because of him.”

In 2010, he was arrested for refusing to leave the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center’s corporate headquarters in protest over the closing of a hospital in Braddock.

Later, he performed same-sex marriage ceremonies in his home before a federal judge’s ruling made it legal in Pennsylvania last year.

The candidacy party also was unlike any other: it featured a Reggae band, a blowup bouncy-house for supporters who brought children and the Pittsburgh Taco Truck giving away free tacos.

Fetterman will join a primary field that already includes former Congressman Joe Sestak, who narrowly lost to Toomey in 2010, and Katie McGinty.

Sestak, also a former Navy vice admiral, declared in March that he would seek a rematch with Toomey. McGinty, who has held high-level posts in state and federal government, joined the hunt in August. Both live across the state in Philadelphia’s suburbs.

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