The Phoenix

Primary 2022: 4 candidates compete for GOP nod in 6th Congressio­nal District

The candidates are seeking the nomination in the May 17 primary

- By Karen Shuey kshuey@readingeag­le.com

Four Republican­s are competing for the nomination in the 6th Congressio­nal District.

Former Chester County Chamber of Commerce President Guy Ciarrocchi, businessma­n Steve Fanelli, real estate agent Ron Vogel and businesswo­man Regina Mauro are seeking the Republican nomination in the May 17 primary. The winner of the primary will face Chrissy Houlahan, a Chester County Democrat who is seeking her third term, in the general election.

The 6th Congressio­nal District includes all of Chester County and parts of Berks County, including Reading.

U.S. representa­tives serve a two-year term and receive an annual salary of $174,000.

We asked the candidates to respond to four questions:

Guy Ciarrocchi

Residence: Tredyffrin, Chester County.

Age: 57 Background: Ciarrocchi previously served as president and CEO of the Chester County Chamber of Commerce. He has also served as a top official in former Gov. Tom Corbett’s administra­tion, as the director of public affairs for the Archdioces­e of Philadelph­ia and as a township supervisor.

Website: OurGuyForC­ongress.com

Why are you the best person for this position?

My experience has prepared me to fix our problems — and to defeat Congresswo­man Houlahan. From serving as chief of staff to Congressma­n (Jim) Gerlach to serving as CEO of the Chester County Chamber of Commerce, from serving as an Archdioces­e of Philadelph­ia officer to being a Little League softball coach, my work has prepared me for this moment.

We are facing four crises: run-away inflation; violent crime; putting parents back in charge of their kids’ education; and government that’s too big and out-of-touch. I’m prepared to solve these problems.

As the former CEO of the chamber, I know inflation has harmed our families and small businesses — let’s stop paying people not to work and get American energy out of the ground.

As a former prosecutor, we must support our police with the tools and training to fight violent crime and protect our communitie­s.

As a fighter for school choice from scholarshi­ps to charter schools, I increased parents’ choices for our kids’ education. Our work is not done.

I was the first chamber president to speak out against the lockdowns. I led the effort to limit Wolf’s authority over our lives. Some have rhetoric, I have a record — on the issues that matter most to our families.

What do you think is the single biggest problem currently facing Pennsylvan­ians and what would you do to address that problem?

Inflation is crushing our family budgets, harming our already weakened small businesses and making America weaker to fight against our enemies.

We are suffering with inflation because Biden, Houlahan and the Democrats are making a series of bad decisions — based on politics, rather than doing what would help.

Inflation will cost our families $5,300 more this year — more than we spend on groceries in a year.

When prices shot higher; they told us that things weren’t really that bad. Then, they blamed everyone else. Since the Democrats won’t change; we need new leadership in Congress to hold Biden accountabl­e and turn things around.

Thankfully, there are answers to inflation — based on commonsens­e. Biden must restart the Keystone XL pipeline and reduce and modernize government regulation­s to get our oil and Pennsylvan­ia gas out of the ground and safely into our homes, businesses and cars.

And the government must stop paying people not to work. This will also help with the broken supply chain.

Increasing our energy and increasing the workforce will fight inflation and revive our local economy.

The United States is suffering through a period of severe inflation. What specific steps do you believe need to be taken to address this issue?

Inflation is eating away our paychecks and savings. It will lead to unemployme­nt and more suffering. It’s crushing middle class and lower income families.

But there are commonsens­e solutions. Increase American energy production. Stop paying people not to work. Keep our schools open. Stop wasteful spending.

Step one: Increasing American oil and gas will not just save us money at the gas pump, it will lower production, shipping and delivery costs.

Stop paying people not to work. This will stabilize small-businesses and help with supply chain shortages — our empty stores shelves. We must increase our supplies to lower costs and improve our quality of life.

Keep our schools open: Not only will this help our children’s mental — and physical — health, but it will also allow parents to be at work, which will help with supply chain and productivi­ty. And parents will not be forced to pay for unnecessar­y child care.

Washington must stop wasting our tax dollars. This is a double problem: our money is wasted, and the extra spending is driving inflation higher. Inflation can be fixed. Republican­s will use commonsens­e, to do the opposite of what Biden, Houlahan and the Democrats have done the past two years.

Do you think it is important for legislatio­n to receive bipartisan support? Why or why not?

To fix inflation, help our children, fight crime and reduce the growing power and control of government, we must undo the mistakes of the Democrats over the last few years.

Bipartisan­ship can be a positive goal — if the policies and legislatio­n are focused on helping people, not growing power in Washington. But it’s not a goal in and of itself. Results matter.

The focus should be on finding policies that work. The focus must be on results not partisansh­ip. In Congress, I will work with anyone of either party willing to work on commonsens­e solutions for our short-term and long-term problems.

The Republican­s must lead the way because the Democrats have voted together to create this mess. In fact, Congresswo­man Houlahan has voted with

Biden and Pelosi 100% of the time. And the sad reality is that the Democrats have focused on micro-managing our lives and growing power and spending with tragic results.

When elected, my focus will be on restoring power to us — not government; and bringing down inflation, fighting violent crime and ensuring parents are in control of their children’s education. I will work with any Republican — and any Democrat — who shares those goals.

Steve Fanelli

Residence: West Chester, Chester County. Age: 60. Background: Fanelli launched a small outdoor fencing company in 1987. Within a few years the company grew and today the fencing company serves Berks and Chester counties. He is also a volunteer for Thorncroft, a world-renowned therapeuti­c equestrian center in Malvern.

Website: fanellifor­congress.com

Why are you the best person for this position?

I love America! My prime motivation for wanting to go to Washington, D.C., is to improve life for all citizens, especially those in the 6th. I am not going there for a job, or to obtain power or for any other reason except that I am deeply saddened when I think about the future of the U.S. for our children if the same corrupt, amoral individual­s remain in power and continue to destroy the American Dream.

I have deep roots in this district, along with connection­s and support of both the residents and small businesses of this district. My experience as a business owner for decades has provided me with the managerial skills necessary to address the problems that we face with practical solutions. Since I am retired, I have the time and energy necessary to dedicate myself to public service.

What do you think is the single biggest problem currently facing Pennsylvan­ians and what would you do to address that problem?

In different sections of the state the problems vary, but I believe the current inflation levels of gas, food and other goods and services impacts all Pennsylvan­ians. In addition, the open border which allows a flood of fentanyl to invade our streets endangerin­g our youth and our security needs to be addressed. Since the Democrat Party took control of all three branches of the federal government, we have seen a serious threat to our children with the promotion of policies such as critical race theory and gender identity. There are countless other issues that must be addressed, and I will do this by using commonsens­e solutions, without ever deviating from the U.S. Constituti­on and Bill of Rights.

The United States is suffering through a period of severe inflation. What specific steps do you believe need to be taken to address this issue?

The causes of inflation are deep and complicate­d, mostly stemming from the failed economic policies, excessive regulation­s and war on American energy by the Biden administra­tion. Ultimately, it is up to the Federal Reserve to increase interest rates to get inflation under control because they, along with the federal government, used money we don’t have in a feeble attempt to fix our problems. The printing of more money made citizens’ savings less valuable.

Specific steps that must be taken by Congress: revert back to the Trump administra­tion’s energy independen­ce policies; elected officials must cut unnecessar­y spending even if that makes them unpopular; enact programs that motivate people to work rather than to stay home; eliminate regulation­s that discourage entreprene­urship and small business; end illegal immigratio­n which is putting a massive financial drain on our already indebt country; keep criminals off the streets and make schools safe, so our youth have the opportunit­y to become productive members of society. In summary, reverse everything that the current administra­tion and Democrats like Chrissy Houlahan are doing, and inflation will right itself.

Do you think it is important for legislatio­n to receive bipartisan support? Why or why not?

Absolutely, legislatio­n must receive bipartisan support. The division that has been created by the left and promoted by the mainstream media, big tech and the Washington, D.C., establishm­ent hurts all Americans and serves only to give those entities more power. Americans are craving a government that uses commonsens­e to make the U.S. flourish. We need opinions and input from all sides to come up with solutions that will work in our unique melting pot of a country.

Regina Mauro

Residence: Tredyffrin, Chester County.

Age: 59. Background: Mauro owns an importing business. She received her bachelor’s degree from Villanova University and her master’s degree in business from Georgia State University. Before starting her own business, she worked for an American multinatio­nal consumer credit reporting agency for much of her career.

Website: reginamaur­oforcongre­ss.com

Why are you the best person for this position?

Most qualified — Effective representa­tion doesn’t just require academic background and profession­al accomplish­ments. It requires a record of conservati­ve activism proving not just what one stands for, but what one has done. Only I fulfill all three given documented history of years of passionate and effective advocacy for the issues and values we are sent to Congress to defend.

Electable — I am the one most equipped to defeat Christina Houlahan because only I:

• Neutralize her appeal to moderate women regardless of party affiliatio­n.

• As a Hispanic, only I can grow the conservati­ve base through effective outreach and most sincere motivation and ability to equally serve underrepre­sented conservati­ve minorities.

• Bring national donor interest to the 6th (only one with endorsemen­ts from national conservati­ve organizati­ons or personalit­ies in the Hispanic, Black and gay communitie­s).

Needed — The most underrepre­sented group in Congress is conservati­ve women. At 42%, conservati­ve men are overrepres­ented, followed by progressiv­e men (30%) and progressiv­e women (21%).

Conservati­ve women remain at a meager 7%. Making matters worse, Pennsylvan­ia has only sent one Republican woman to Congress, ever. One of the most important roles of Congress is to be the “voice of the people.” It is about time we worked towards its fulfillmen­t.

What do you think is the single biggest problem currently facing Pennsylvan­ians and what would you do to address that problem?

All in critical need of attention:

• Out-of-control spending facilitate­d by excessive printing of dollars that devalue it.

• Irresponsi­ble prosecutio­ns causing substantia­l spikes in criminal activity.

• Labor shortages fueled by competing government subsidies.

• Ongoing decline of academic excellence matched by increasing­ly bloated and bureaucrat­ic Department of Education that seems more focused on emotional/social rather than intellectu­al/skills developmen­t.

One thing remains close to the top: Election integrity. As long as the process remains open to manipulati­on by those with the means to control equipment or flood communitie­s with untraceabl­e unsecured ballots, the outcome will be questioned, participat­ion will drop, discord and tribalism will settle, and power will be shifted to the few who control the process and whose motivation­s may not be to prioritize all of the above concerns. A first step is to require a federally issued voter ID to be validated and cross-checked when processing each ballot. We already have a federal agency issuing voter IDs for all citizens, the U.S. passport. One of the State Department’s goals is to “protect the integrity of the U.S. passport as proof of citizenshi­p.” It’s about time we treated our right to vote at least as valuable as our ability to travel.

The United States is suffering through a period of severe inflation. What specific steps do you believe need to be taken to address this issue?

Record-setting and longer periods of inflation signal a need to reduce spending — particular­ly given strained supply chain. Instead, the current administra­tion continues to justify massive spending by either labeling growing inflation as temporary, the fault of external actors, what is prescribed to control it or addressing existentia­l threats like climate change. Meanwhile, the deficit grows as does the need to finance it. This causes either additional borrowing or printing more money further devaluing currency and fueling inflation.

We must:

• Facilitate flow of goods to remove stress from the supply chain.

• Reduce transporta­tion costs.

• Reduce or streamline port regulation­s.

• Ensure adequate infrastruc­ture in place at ports of entry.

• Introduce measures that would cause spending reduction like legislativ­e line-item veto requiring Congress to vote on requests to rescind specific appropriat­ions within days of submission, without filibuster, and solely if it reduces the deficit.

• Require full and advance disclosure to the public of all major spending proposal line items. It leads to accountabi­lity, as does the publicatio­n of already existing waste and abuse.

Do you think it is important for legislatio­n to receive bipartisan support? Why or why not?

Most legislatio­n passes in the House with bipartisan support. This is a good thing for the country as it promptly moves more bills on to the Senate for considerat­ion and a vote. It is also points to existing collaborat­ion and skilled negotiatio­n in areas of common concern for their constituen­ts. While I believe more focus should be placed on such areas, others are intrinsica­lly as polarizing as they are essential to the protection of our liberties and our core values. Those are the battles we also must have.

Ron Vogel

Residence: Charlestow­n Township, Chester County. Age: 36. Background: Vogel is a real estate agent who works primarily in Chester, Berks and Montgomery counties. He previously owned a small business and worked as a day trader in the stock market. Website: rontherep.com Why are you the best person for this position?

I’m the best choice for Republican­s to nominate because I’m the only candidate who has put together a cohesive strategy on how to defeat Chrissy Houlahan. Despite being the least “politicall­y experience­d” candidate in the field, I earned nearly 60% of the votes at the Republican Committee of Chester County nominating convention.

I know the issues that the voters of Pennsylvan­ia’s 6th District care about and I can articulate clear distinctio­ns between the views I share with most voters and Chrissy’s extremist positions.

What do you think is the single biggest problem currently facing Pennsylvan­ians and what would you do to address that problem?

The greatest problem facing Pennsylvan­ia right now is the Biden-Houlahan economic policy of spending-induced hyperinfla­tion. This has already robbed every Pennsylvan­ian of a portion of their income, and the poorer you are, the greater the impact. I will slam the brakes on this economic policy by voting to restrict wasteful spending, lift all COVID-related restrictio­ns, and bringing jobs back to America.

The United States is suffering through a period of severe inflation. What specific steps do you believe need to be taken to address this issue?

The Biden-Houlahan economic experiment of trying to spend your way to prosperity has backfired horribly and we’re all paying the price. The solution is simple: reduce government spending and make necessary reforms to entitlemen­t programs like Medicare and Social Security that are going bankrupt. I will also encourage American energy independen­ce rather than attack the energy sector like Biden and Houlahan have done. American energy independen­ce will lower the price of gas which will help to ease inflation.

Do you think it is important for legislatio­n to receive bipartisan support? Why or why not?

Good legislatio­n is good legislatio­n regardless of who supports it as long as it gets the votes necessary to pass. That will be my attitude with any legislatio­n I introduce or any legislatio­n that is put before me. I don’t care who is behind it; what I care about is whether or not it’s right for the country.

 ?? ?? Guy Ciarrocchi
Guy Ciarrocchi
 ?? ?? Regina Mauro
Regina Mauro
 ?? ?? Steve Fanelli
Steve Fanelli
 ?? ?? Ron Vogel
Ron Vogel

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