Physical Fitness and Sports Council chairman On June 20, 2002, President
George W. Bush appointed Swann as the chairman of the United States
President's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports during a Fitness Expo at the White House. Swann succeeded
Lee Haney, who had been appointed to the post by President Clinton. In 2003, President Bush and Chairman Lynn Swann launched presidentschallenge.org at the Lakewest Family YMCA in Dallas, Texas. Within the next year, 300,000 individuals registered on the website. Swann spoke at the National Press Club about the council's programs to help Americans "Be Physically Active Every Day," and introduced the Presidential Active Lifestyle Award. In 2004, Swann and President Bush declared May as an annual "National Physical Fitness and Sports" month, and created the annual HealthierUS Fitness Festival. They also enacted the Healthier Feds Physical Activity Challenge initiative for federal employees. On July 30, 2005, Lynn Swann retired as council chairman to explore a campaign for governor. He was succeeded by John P. Burke.
2006 candidacy for governor In December 2004, Swann, who resides in the Pittsburgh suburb of
Sewickley Heights, Pennsylvania, indicated that he was considering seeking the
Republican nomination for Governor of Pennsylvania in the
2006 election. On February 23, 2005, Swann filed papers with the state elections board stating his intention to run. On the same day, he formed a fundraising committee called Team 88 after his Steeler jersey number. On January 4, 2006, Swann formally declared his candidacy. Swann's opponents for the Republican
primary had initially included Jim Panyard,
State Senator Jeff Piccola and former
Lieutenant Governor William Scranton, III. After Swann received the endorsement of the Republican state committee on February 11, all three opponents quit the race, leaving Swann as the only Republican to have filed by the deadline of March 7. Swann chose
Montgomery County Commissioner
Jim Matthews as his running mate. Polls in early February showed Swann and
Ed Rendell in a statistical tie, though Rendell had the advantage of being the popular incumbent. Swann's campaign focused on reforming Harrisburg by addressing mass transit, property tax, law enforcement, the environment and the growing concern of obesity. He also supported giving the
Pittsburgh Penguins Pittsburgh's lone slots license so they could build a new arena, free of taxpayer money. Swann's momentum did not survive a barrage of advertising from Rendell in early spring, and had trouble keeping up with Rendell's effective fundraising. In the end, Swann lost the election with 40% of the vote to Rendell's 60%. Had Swann won, he would have been the first African American Governor of
Pennsylvania and only the third African American elected governor of a state in U.S. history. Of the three Republican African American gubernatorial candidates in 2006, all three of them lost;
Kenneth Blackwell lost in Ohio, and
Randy Daniels lost in New York.
2008 to present In 2008, Swann confirmed that he was considering running for the
United States House of Representatives from
Pennsylvania's 4th congressional district against Rep.
Jason Altmire. However, Swann did not file for the election and former congresswoman
Melissa Hart won the Republican nomination unopposed and then lost to Altmire in the 2008 general election. In the
2008 presidential election, Swann endorsed and campaigned with Arizona Senator
John McCain for the presidency, though Swann had remained neutral through the primaries. In
2012, he did the same for former Massachusetts Governor
Mitt Romney, once Romney had become the presumptive Republican nominee. In 2015, before the primary elections, Swann announced his support of former Florida Governor
Jeb Bush, while also criticizing
Donald Trump. ==Personal life==