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GOP Senate candidate Dr. Oz says America ‘in crisis’ but the ‘prognosis is good’

America is “in crisis,” but the “prognosis is good,” Dr. Mehmet Oz said as he appeared on Fox News’ “Hannity” to discuss his Republican bid for an open US Senate seat in Pennsylvania.

Oz, 61, announced his intention to run Tuesday after early GOP front-runner Sean Parnell suspended his campaign amid allegations he abused his estranged wife and three children.

The heart surgeon turned syndicated TV host frequently used medical language to explain why the COVID-19 crisis inspired him to enter the crowded primary field, in the brief interview, his first as a candidate.

“Flattening the curve metastasized into authoritarian overreach,” said Oz of the COVID-19 lockdown. “They’re treating the same overreach with the Omicron … I think these choices should be yours.”

Oz told host Sean Hannity the tenants to his politics were supporting capitalism and low taxes, energy independence, the constitution and small government.

“Any government that’s large enough to give you everything is large enough to take it away,” the candidate said.

The son of Turkish immigrants also promised to reinvigorate what he called the country’s “can-do spirit” and “divine spark,” which he said inspired him to live the “American dream.”

“I think this country has all the building blocks to be spectacular. The infighting is hurting our ability to do what is possible,” Oz said. “People with good ideas are shamed, they’re silenced, they’re canceled, they’re bullied.”

Oz was appointed to the Presidential Council on Sports in 2018 by former President Donald Trump.
Oz was appointed to the Presidential Council on Sports in 2018 by former President Donald Trump. Sony Pictures Entertainment via AP

Oz is a longtime New Jersey resident who registered to vote in Pennsylvania’s Montgomery County as a Republican last December, according to election records. He responded to carpetbagger accusations by saying that he has deep family ties in the state and moved back last year.

A total of 12 Democrats and 10 other Republicans are vying to replace retiring GOP Sen. Pat Toomey, according to Pittsburgh’s WTAE.

“With the leading candidate getting out, that’s certainly going to create a reshuffling of the race here,” Sam DeMarco, chair of the Allegheny County Republican Party, told the Associated Press.

Oz, who has an estimated net worth of $100 million, was named to the Presidential Council on Sports in 2018 by former President Donald Trump.