CNN's Don Lemon goes to bat for Fetterman after interview on new show: 'I was expecting worse' at debate

Lemon expects people to be more empathetic to Fetterman than the media lets on

CNN host Don Lemon admitted that he was "expecting worse" from Pennsylvania Democratic Senate candidate John Fetterman's debate performance last week against Dr. Mehmet Oz. 

On Tuesday, Lemon conducted a pre-recorded interview with Fetterman, which was subsequently played on the network's new show, "CNN This Morning." The left-wing host, recently taken off primetime to anchor the replacement for "New Day," claimed that people he had spoken with thought that Fetterman’s recent health problems are not a "big deal," but admitted that it doesn’t necessarily mean people are going to vote for him. 

FETTERMAN AGAIN REFUSES TO ANSWER WHETHER DOCTOR WILL TAKE QUESTIONS, STUMBLES THROUGH CNN INTERVIEW

Don Lemon speaks with John Fetterman ahead of the midterm election on "CNN This Morning." (CNN)

Pennsylvania Democratic Senate candidate John Fetterman participates in a debate with his GOP challenger Dr. Mehmet Oz on October 25 in Harrisburg, PA. (NewsNation)

CNN's Don Lemon speaks at Harvard University Kennedy School of Government Institute of Politics in a program titled "Race, Media and Politics" on February 22, 2019 in Cambridge, Massachusetts.  (Photo by Paul Marotta/Getty Images)

"I always say that my mother is my one-woman focus group," Lemon said. "She said I was expecting worse having dealt with people who have strokes. I did not think he did badly at all as the press has been putting out."

Lemon also said that his mother thought Fetterman did "fine" given the circumstances, before revealing his own thoughts on the debate.

"I have to be quite honest—I didn’t have the same reaction as most people," he said. "Most people are like ‘oh my gosh I can’t believe it, you know Oz is doing such a great job’—Dr. Oz, of course, is a smart man and did a great job, but I actually thought—I was expecting worse from Fetterman. I was and I think people will be more empathetic than we in the media may be letting on because they have people who have dealt with these issues—again that doesn’t mean they would vote for him."

During the interview with Lemon, Fetterman would not commit to having his doctor answer questions from the press on the state of his health before Election Day. 

OZ TOUTS SURPRISE ENDORSEMENT FROM FETTERMAN'S HOME PAPER, SAYS 'THEY'VE HAD ENOUGH TOO'

While hosting a rally in Philadelphia on Saturday, Fetterman said his debate against Oz "wasn’t easy" and pinned his struggles on his continuing stroke recovery. 

"On a serious note, the debate wasn't easy, you know," Fetterman said to a crowd of his supporters. "It wasn't area [sic] five months after a stroke… After that stroke, I got knocked down, but I got back up because I had to. And that's really the core value of our campaign. We are running for anyone that ever got knocked down that had to get back up, too. Any forgotten communities or community's towns that got left behind, that got knocked down, because they have to get back up."

Pointing to his health, Fetterman, Pennsylvania's current lieutenant governor, said he would be better in January and claimed that Oz "will still be a fraud, though."

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Fetterman and Oz will go head-to-head in the state's November 8 Senate election.

Fox News’ Kyle Morris contributed to this report. 

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