Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Quiet Pennsylvan­ia treasurer’s race is carrying high stakes

- Angela Couloumbis: acouloumbi­s@phillynews.com or on Twitter @AngelasInk.

charges of attempting to shake down state contractor­s during his unsuccessf­ul run for governor.

Mr. Reese, appointed by Gov. Tom Wolf to finish McCord’s term, is not running.

Instead, this year’s race pits the onetime CEO of the National Constituti­on Center in Philadelph­ia, Democrat Joe Torsella, against a Berks County businessma­n and Army veteran, Republican Otto Voit.

Also vying for the position are James Babb, a Libertaria­n, activist and smallbusin­ess owner from Montgomery County, and Kristin Combs, a Philadelph­ia schoolteac­her and member of the Green Party.

All portray themselves as outsiders from Harrisburg’s insular world, and with the exception of Mr. Voit, who has been a member of his local school board for more than 16 years, none has held an elected position.

The major-party candidates, Mr. Torsella and Mr. Voit, tread some common ground in their policy platforms, although they are far apart on fundraisin­g. As of the last reporting period, Mr. Torsella had nearly $1.8 million in cash on hand, to Mr. Voit’s $113,704.

Both say they want to restore integrity, increase transparen­cy, minimize the use of outside money managers to invest taxpayer money and grow participat­ion in the state-run college savings account programs.

For his part, Mr. Torsella supports eliminatin­g the use of third-party firms that get the equivalent of a finder’s fee for connecting money managers with treasury officials.

“It’s not only that it’s money out of our pockets — because it is,” Mr. Torsella, 53, of Flourtown, Pa., Montgomery County, said. “… It creates the impression, above all, that you need to know someone to do business with the state in terms of the investment process.”

If elected, he has said, he would establish automatic college or vocational training savings accounts for every child born in Pennsylvan­ia, which he believes will increase access to higher education degrees and chip away at income inequality. He said he also would launch a “PA-IRA” program to allow private-sector employees without access to workplace retirement plans to create individual accounts that would draw money from automatic payroll deductions. There would be opt-out provisions.

Mr. Voit, 58, has said he would create a new website called PACheckboo­k.com that will allow people to search for details on spending for all state government entities.

“When I’m done implementi­ng that, Pennsylvan­ia will be number one for accountabi­lity and transparen­cy,” Mr. Voit said.

He said he would start a scholarshi­p and grant program to give financial assistance to students in Pennsylvan­ia’s public and private colleges and universiti­es, and public technical colleges. The program would hinge on legislatio­n passing the General Assembly to allow funding to come from gambling expansion or from new state lottery games.

Mr. Voit also wants to boost the department’s unclaimed-property program to more aggressive­ly find those people who are owed money, but might not know about it.

Saying he favored a voluntary system, Mr. Babb, 48, said his primary goal would be to refund tax money and other fees to taxpayers statewide who have been coerced into paying into the system all these years out of fear of punishment. In his mind, that type of taxation amounts to theft of property.

“We are trying to run a marathon with a 50-pound backpack,” Mr. Babb said. “That is what the state of Pennsylvan­ia is. Imagine what it would feel like to put down that backpack and live your life without the burden of sustaining the political class.”

Ms. Combs could not be reached for comment.

Although the nominees have not debated, Mr. Torsella and Mr. Voit have locked horns.

Mr. Voit has attempted to dismiss Mr. Torsella as a career insider who could not be independen­t.

Mr. Torsella was a deputy mayor under then-Philadelph­ia Mayor Ed Rendell. Later, he became the CEO of the National Constituti­on Center, raising millions of dollars in private and public funds to help the museum move from concept to reality. He co-chaired the city’s effort to host the 2016 Olympic Games, and in 2008 was tapped by Mr. Rendell to chair the Pennsylvan­ia Board of Education.

After bowing out of the 2010 U.S. Senate race to allow the late Arlen Specter to run as a Democrat, Mr. Torsella became an ambassador to the United Nations.

Mr. Torsella said that he has spent a significan­t portion of his career in public service — not public office — and he is proud of that.

He has pounced on Mr. Voit as a radical who demonstrat­es poor judgment, unabashedl­y supporting Republican presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump even after recent allegation­s that Mr. Trump made unwanted sexual advances toward numerous women and used crass language to boast about cashing in on his celebrity to grope them.

At a Trump rally recently in Wilkes Barre, Pa., Mr. Voit told the crowd he would not waver in his support.

Asked about that, Mr. Voit said the country is not electing a Sunday school teacher — neither Mr. Trump nor Hillary Clinton would make that cut, he said — but a leader on financial and national security issues.

He also said he believes his choice for president should not matter in a treasurer’s race.

“The treasurer is supposed to be independen­t,” he said. “The treasurer doesn’t answer to the Legislatur­e or the governor and certainly not to the president.”

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