Sunday, May 19, 2013
Sunday, May 19, 2013

Welch best among GOP Senate hopefuls

The blog of The Philadelphia Inquirer's Editorial Board.

2 comments

Welch best among GOP Senate hopefuls

POSTED: Sunday, April 8, 2012, 4:00 AM
Steve Welch

In the Republican primary for U.S. Senate, polls show voters don’t know the candidates’ names, let alone their positions on issues or qualifications for office.

None of the party’s better-known politicians even tried for a chance to take on Democratic U.S. Sen. Robert Casey, perhaps remembering that Casey ousted former Republican U.S. Sen. Rick Santorum by 18 points in 2006. In the Republican primary field of five, the two most credible candidates are largely self-funded millionaires: Steve Welch and Tom Smith. STEVE WELCH, however, is a better fit to carry the party’s flag.

Welch, 35, of Malvern, is an entrepreneur whose ideas fly like sparks off an anvil. He has the potential to bring some fresh and creative thinking to the campaign trail and, maybe, Washington. He speaks with the wisdom of a man who has actually started businesses from scratch, and has the humility to admit he made mistakes on the way to his considerable fortune.

Welch’s first successful company developed patents to make flu shots more efficient. Another company looks for innovations in education. A self-described problem solver, he runs an incubator for fellow technology entrepreneurs. He calls himself a wonk, perhaps a sign that he won’t pander to the anti-intellectuals who seem to have his party’s ear.

Smith, 64, of Plumcreek Township, in Armstrong County, was a coal miner who started his own coal company. He credits his success to hard work and good employees. He is a grain farmer who owns car washes and a trucking company. While his life story is remarkable, Smith doesn’t seem as open to closing the party divide in Congress, which is essential to curing government of its paralysis.

Welch, who was once a Democrat, does need to flesh out his predictable party-line stands on the issues. He wants to cut government spending and simplify the tax code. Who doesn’t? He hits all the Republican Party’s notes on the social issues. He opposes abortion and gay marriage, but sides with the gun lobby.

 Like many self-made and self-funded candidates, Welch seems to think his business success has prepared him for one of the most intellectually demanding and powerful offices in the nation. But he has to make the case to voters that he can quickly learn how to become an effective advocate for Pennsylvania, and not disappear on the Senate’s backbench.

Also running in the Republican primary are former State Rep. Sam Rorher; Marc Scaringi, an attorney who worked for Santorum as a Senate aide; and David Christian, an executive at a hydraulic equipment company. Smart and personable, Welch is the superior candidate.

1  |  2  |  3  |  4  |  5  |  6  |  7  |  8  |  9  |  10
Inquirer Editorial Board @ 4:00 AM  Permalink | 2 comments
2 comments
Comments  (2)
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:51 AM, 04/08/2012
    Welch voted for Obama and gave money to Joe Sestak. David Christian is one of America's greatest War Heros and the Inquirer brushes him off as merely a manufacturing exec. Nice!
    downtownRM
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 5:08 PM, 04/09/2012
    I appreciate the Inquirer Editorial Board providing this useful service to Republicans, by telling us clearly who NOT to vote for in the primary. Consider, like his policies or not, Obama has done more or less what he said he would--spend our great-great grandchildren's money on bailouts of has been companies like GM, socialize what was left of the medical system in this country, impose industrial policies that benefit his allies and supporters (like Solyndra), . Any sensible person knew all this 4 years ago. Which leads me to ask the question that the Inquirer does not. Just how ignorant of public affairs is Mr. Welch that he thinks Obamaism in practice is different than the Obamaism that he voted for and helped finance in 2008? The communists had a term for people like Mr. Welch, useful idiot. It is no wonder the Inquirer would salivate over such a morsel.
    InquiringMindz


About this blog
Welcome. You're reading the Inquirer Editorial Board's Say What? opinion blog. We hope you enjoy commentary from the Editorial and Commentary pages, in addition to up-to-the-minute opinion postings that appear here for the first time, including occasional Letters to the Editor. Here are thumbnail bio sketches and contact information for the editors and writers who produce the newspaper's opinion pages. Inquirer subscribers can also use their account sign-in information to access the new inquirer.com website, with every article from the newspaper posted along with breaking news, blogs, and Twitter feeds. See promo code FAQ. (Our blog roll follows the ad below.) (Our blog roll follows the ad below.)

The Inquirer Editorial Board
Blog archives:
Past Archives: