— PA GOP (@PAGOP) May 16, 2018
Republicans later said they stand by their opinion of the word. Wolf described Fetterman as a "fine person" and said he and the mayor had lunch after the election. They talked about Fetterman's desire to expand the role of lieutenant governor. Fetterman has said he would use the position to champion progressive causes including legalizing marijuana, addressing the opioid problem and expanding health care. "The constitution is fairly silent on the role of a lieutenant governor and in fact what happens is the role of lieutenant governor is whatever the governor and lieutenant governor make it," Wolf said. "I think John's a fine person ... and I look forward to working with him." He said he and Fetterman share the same policy preferences. In other matters, Wolf said he was surprised Commonwealth Court issued an injunction Monday putting a halt to the licensing of medical marijuana research facilities. He said he plans to figure out how to work around the injunction. He also promised to pump $130 million into pothole repairs and work to increase nurse staffing levels. Nurses from the region who met with Wolf described how one nurse could be in charge of as many as 50 patients at a time in an extended care facility. "This has been a tough winter throughout Pennsylvania and road surfaces are as bad as I've ever seen them," the governor said. I want to accelerate this and I think we're focused on getting everything done by September." Bob Bauder is a Tribune-Review staff writer. Reach him at 412-765-2312, bbauder@tribweb.com or on Twitter @bobbauder.Copyright ©2025— Trib Total Media, LLC (TribLIVE.com)