Fetterman.

Manonthestreet

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May 20, 2014
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Whispers that Fetterman is brain dead which would mean a special election. Would explain why the wife skipped town.

 
The governor replaces members of the House. There is no special election so this is right where it belongs.
 
The governor replaces members of the House. There is no special election so this is right where it belongs.
meaning>>>>

Likewise, many have suspected that, if John Fetterman were incapacitated, Shapiro might appoint his wife, Gisele, to fill the spot.

???

~S~
 
They're working on a Fetterman Body Double

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Whispers that Fetterman is brain dead which would mean a special election. Would explain why the wife skipped town.

Why would democrats care if he is brain dead when the same democrats elected a real dead person?

 
The governor replaces members of the House. There is no special election so this is right where it belongs.
You do know Festerman is a Senator, right?

I've heard him try to speak & can confirm the rumor that he is indeed braindead.
He has been for some time now.
 
You do know Festerman is a Senator, right?

I've heard him try to speak & can confirm the rumor that he is indeed braindead.
He has been for some time now.

Either way what I said is correct. The governor appoints a replacement.
 
Seems to be an appointment by governor followed by a special election during the next general election date. This is what happened in 1991 when Senator John Heinz died

1991 U.S. Senate special election victory[edit]

Main article: 1991 United States Senate special election in Pennsylvania

On April 4, 1991, Pennsylvania's senior U.S. Senator, H. John Heinz III, died in an aviation accident, leaving his seat in the U.S. Senate open. By law, the Pennsylvania governor was required to appoint a replacement until a special election could be held for the seat. After considering several potential candidates, including Chrysler president and Allentown native Lee Iacocca, who turned down the job, Governor Casey appointed Wofford to the seat on May 8, 1991.[4] He had previously considered running for office, but never thought the opportunity was quite right.[4] He thus became the first Democrat to represent Pennsylvania in the Senate since Joe Clark left office in 1969.[19]

In the special election, held in November 1991, Wofford faced Dick Thornburgh, the former Pennsylvania Governor and U.S. Attorney General under Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush. Candidates for this special election were chosen by the party committees because the vacancy had happened too late to set up a primary. Wofford began the campaign so far behind in the polls that most pundits assumed he had no chance of winning. Indeed, at one point his own internal polls showed him losing by over 40 points. His eventual upset victory over the former governor by ten percentage points surprised many, and was later described as a turning point for the political prospects of President George H. W. Bush.[4][20]

 

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