Pennsylvania Rep. Conor Lamb says primary will offer 'lessons' for Dems
With primary day underway in some of the hottest races of the year, Rep. Conor Lamb, a moderate two-term Democrat vying for the U.S. Senate nomination in Pennsylvania, told ABC News' Senior Washington Reporter Devin Dwyer that results in the state Tuesday could be a key bellwether for the future direction of the party and control of the Senate.
"I think the Democratic Party is going to have to, you know, think really hard about how we're going to succeed and what is a very, very challenging political environment -- and today is going to have some lessons," Lamb said outside a polling place in his district.

Lamb, who has been trailing progressive Lt. Gov. John Fetterman in recent polls, acknowledged that Democrats face a choice between "two very different paths based on two different sets of experience and two different personalities," as many in the party view the race as their best shot at flipping a Senate seat.
Asked by ABC News whether he thinks Fetterman's hospitalization for a stroke will have any impact on the race, Lamb said "I don't know" and then offered what seemed to be criticism of his rival for "very little information about it [his condition] much like the rest of the general public."
"I wish him well, but I really can't forecast that and people are just got to make up their own minds," he said.







