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Pennsylvania Lieutenant-Governor John Fetterman (Democratic nominee for Senate) reacted to Tucker Carlson’s comments about Tucker Carlson’s mocking of his tattoos on Fox News Sunday.
“All your stupid little fake tattoos, it’s a costume, of course. Duh, it’s not real,” Carlson said of Fetterman during his show’s opening monologue September 7, 2007, Fetterman was depicted as weak in fighting crime by him
Fetterman is in op-ed for NBC News, called the monologue “unhinged” and explained how the nine tattoos on his right forearm indicate the dates when someone died violently in Braddock, Pa., while Fetterman served as mayor.
“Gun violence and violent crime might be a joke to someone like Carlson, but they are very real to people in towns like Braddock,” Fetterman wrote.
“My decision to mark these deaths with tattoos was inspired in part by their permanence — the fact that these people, their stories and my town will be with me forever,” he added.
Fetterman is hoping to flip Pennsylvania’s Senate seat this November as incumbent Sen. Pat Toomey (R) retires. In a race that is expected to close out, Fetterman takes on Republican nominee Mehmet Oz. But polling indicates Fetterman still has an edge.
In the op-ed, Fetterman detailed some of the victims’ stories represented by his tattoos, including a man who was shot dead while delivering pizzas and a 23-month-old girl who was found dead after her father sexually assaulted her.
Fetterman stated that the reason he ran for mayor was because of gun violence. He also tattooed “15104,” Braddock’s ZIP code, on his left arm.
“I get that etching art permanently onto your body isn’t how most politicians would express their connection to their communities,” he wrote. “But I didn’t care about what anyone else thought. It felt right to me.”
Fetterman’s unconventional style goes beyond his tattoos. The Pennsylvania Democrat has been known to don hoodies or shorts at campaign events rather than a suit and tie.
Carlson, in his Sept. 7 monologue took aim also at fashion choices.
“By the way, only rich kids wear hoodies to political events,” Carlson said. “‘Oh I’m a working man, I’m wearing a hoodie.’ No working man actually wears a hoodie to a political event.”
Fox News spokeswoman has been reached by The Hill for comment.
Fetterman also took aim at Oz in the article for NBC, saying the celebrity doctor was at the time “peddling miracle cures” and living in a New Jersey mansion, criticisms the Fetterman campaign has frequently lobbed in the general election race.
“I’m the only candidate in this race who has fought violent crime and won,” Fetterman wrote.
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