In the race for Donald Trump’s coveted endorsement in Pennsylvania’s Senate GOP primary, it looks like Dr. Mehmet Oz has the edge.
The former president is leaning toward endorsing Oz, said three people familiar with Trump’s thinking, speaking on the condition of anonymity. Trump said recently that he is nearing a decision on whether to weigh in on the race, which is a key contest in the battle for the Senate majority this fall.
With Trump, though, nothing is final until it’s final — and it’s possible he’ll decide to issue no endorsement. He has recently met with both Oz and former hedge fund CEO David McCormick in Mar-a-Lago and talked with multiple people about the GOP primary.
McCormick and Oz, as well as their allies, have been locked in a battle for months over Trump’s nod. With his loyal base and unparalleled popularity among Republican voters, Trump could have a significant impact on the contest. If he picks a favorite, their success or lack thereof will also be closely watched as a test of his own hold on the party ahead of the 2024 presidential election, particularly since some of his candidates have faced challenges this year.
In Pennsylvania, Trump initially endorsed Sean Parnell for the Senate seat before Parnell dropped out amid claims of abuse from his estranged wife.
The choice between Oz and McCormick is even more fraught for the former president because Trumpworld is divided over the two front-running candidates. Some of Trump's allies have strong opinions on the primary in Pennsylvania, meaning he risks upsetting friends no matter what he decides.
Jim Worthington, a Pennsylvania Republican appointed by Trump to the President’s Council on Sports, Fitness & Nutrition, along with Oz, said he has spoken with Trump about Oz on several occasions, including most recently Sunday afternoon at Mar-a-Lago.
“I walked away very, very pleased in regard to his feelings about Oz and what type of guy he was and what type of senator he would be,” Worthington said, declining to elaborate on more “specific details of the conversation.”
During their 15-minute chat in the resort lobby, Trump asked Worthington questions about the Senate race, which Worthington said seemed to be Trump “more or less confirming what he had already thought or knew” about the contest.
“I can tell you the president is definitely fond of Oz, for sure,” he said.
Oz and his wife, Lisa, had dinner with the former president and Melania Trump on March 16, a meal at Mar-a-Lago that lasted several hours, according to a person aware of the meeting.
Three days later, while speaking to an American Freedom Tour crowd in Ft. Lauderdale, Trump brought up the Pennsylvania Senate race and mentioned the celebrity television doctor.
“Does anybody like Dr. Oz?” Trump asked the crowd gathered in Florida, receiving cheers and applause.
But other Trump allies are using their platforms to criticize Oz.
Steve Bannon, a former White House chief strategist to Trump, ripped into Oz on his podcast recently: "How does Dr. Oz, probably the most anti-MAGA guy, and you got Fox nonstop pimping this guy out and Newsmax pimping this guy out, and that's what it is — how does Dr. Oz, from New Jersey, [Turkish President Recep Tayyip] Erdogan's buddy, floating in from Jersey, how does he become a factor in a Senate race in the commonwealth of Pennsylvania?"
Jack Posobiec, a far-right personality who was a guest on Bannon's show at the time, responded: "This guy wasn't around in 2020, and he certainly wasn't around in 2016. But suddenly he found his road to Damascus conversion, and he's been this conservative in hiding the entire time? Wow, that's news I think to everybody else in the entire movement."
As host of “The Dr. Oz Show,” Oz in 2016 had then-candidate Trump onto his program to conduct a health check-up, a decision criticized by some as a political stunt and a favor to Trump, who received a mostly positive report.
McCormick and Trump met at Mar-a-Lago this past week for an hour, and had a “very productive” meeting that touched on his fundraising, polling and ads, according to a person familiar with their talk. Rob Gleason, a McCormick supporter and former chair of Pennsylvania’s Republican Party, also met recently with Trump at Mar-a-Lago, a source said.
Dina Powell, McCormick's wife, served as Trump's deputy national security adviser. McCormick also hired former Trump White House staffers Hope Hicks and Stephen Miller, and ex-Trump campaign adviser David Urban and Trump White House lawyer Jim Schultz helped McCormick launch his Senate bid.
On Oz's side are Fox News host Sean Hannity and casino mogul Steve Wynn, who have both actively lobbied for Trump to endorse the celebrity doctor, according to people familiar with their efforts. And, perhaps most notably, Melania Trump is a supporter of Oz in the Senate race.
A person close to Trump, discussing the former president’s thinking on the Pennsylvania endorsement, noted a phrase that Trump has often repeated when talking about Oz: “He’s been on TV in people’s bedrooms and living rooms for years.”
Trump at times has used a variation of that phrase, emphasizing in conversations that Oz has “been in women’s bedrooms” for years as they watched his daytime television program, something Trump believes would help Oz win suburban voters.
“There’s a certain level of trust usually associated with that,” the person said of Oz’s TV career. “Something the president understands intimately because it was key to his rise.”
Melania Trump’s support for Oz “reinforces that belief and the value of those intangibles” that a celebrity like Oz has, despite McCormick “in some ways being the more impressive candidate,” according to the person.
Conservative commentator John Fredericks, a Trump friend who served as his Virginia campaign chair in 2016 and 2020, had the former president on his radio show Wednesday. Fredericks, who met Oz at CPAC in February and just endorsed him, opened the interview with a question about whether Oz is a “MAGA candidate.”
“He’s a good man, too,” Trump said, describing his positive experience appearing on Oz’s television show for a health check-up during the 2016 election.
“He’s a high-quality guy, he is,” Trump continued. “I’ll be making a decision on that one.” Trump said a decision would come “maybe fairly soon.”
In an interview, Fredericks declined to provide details on any private conversations he had with Trump ahead of their talk. He said he expected Trump to make a decision within the next week or two.
Fredericks said that Trump’s endorsement decision would be based on “what’s best for the country” and which candidate was most closely aligned with “America First policies,” before ripping into McCormick for his work as a hedge fund executive and his ties to the George W. Bush administration. McCormick served as under secretary in Bush’s Department of Treasury.
Not everyone who has discussed Pennsylvania with Trump is convinced Oz has it in the bag. A McCormick supporter who talked with Trump recently said they would be “surprised” if Trump endorsed Oz.
“It’s understandable that Trump views Oz’s name ID and celebrity status as positive attributes since he launched his 2016 presidential campaign in the same way,” added a former Trump campaign aide. “However, the major difference is that no candidate, especially one like Oz with an extensive anti-MAGA track record, will be able to galvanize grassroots voters like Trump has done in epic fashion.”
“President Trump’s continued popularity across Pennsylvania is undeniable, and Dave is proud to be aligned with his America First agenda,” said McCormick spokesperson Jess Szymanski.
With the primary contest still unsettled, any decision by Trump to endorse is a potential risk.
While Oz started the primary with a clear lead and officially announced his candidacy a month and a half ahead of McCormick, several surveys show the dynamics of the race have since changed.
An early March Fox News poll had McCormick winning 24 percent and Oz at 15 percent, but another recent poll found a dead heat.
Jim McLaughlin, McCormick’s pollster, said the campaign’s latest internal poll found the former business executive at about 25 percent and Oz at 14 percent. He also said Oz has an unfavorable rating of 51 percent.
“Republican primary voters in Pennsylvania have totally seen through him. They understand he’s not a Pennsylvania conservative,” he said. “You ask them, ‘What do you know about Mehmet Oz?’ They’re telling you he’s a Hollywood liberal.”
However, Oz’s campaign released an internal poll showing a different result, with him at 24.8 percent and McCormick at 21.6.
Other candidates in the Republican primary include Carla Sands, a former ambassador under Trump; Kathy Barnette, a conservative commentator; and Jeff Bartos, a real estate developer.