The lion's eye. ([Chester, Pa.]) 1968-????, October 23, 2006, Image 3

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    October 23, 2006
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The Lion's Eye
Page 3
Democratic PA 7th District Candidate Sestak Visits
By JOHN MILLER
Staff Writer
jmm833@psu.edu
"I will not make a single stop
in this campaign season that
means more to me than this one-
not one," said former President
Bill Clinton on Oct. 12 at a fund-
raiser at the Valley Forge
Military Academy.
It was all for his former National
Security Council Director of
Defense Policy, Joseph Sestak,
who is running for the
Pennsylvania 7th Congressional
House seat currently held by
GOP incumbent Curt Weldon.
Weldon is a career politician.
He's been this district's congress-
man since 1986 and before that
mayor of Marcus Hook. Sestak
grew up in Springfield, PA. He
spent thirty-one years in the
Navy and retired as Vice Admiral
in Jan. in order to run for office.
Republicans have a different
opinion. They contest that Sestak
"very publicly fired".
At Penn State Delco, Joe
Sestak spoke to a crowed Commons Building conference room on Oct. 3rd of students
and members of the community. They wondered who this guy was and why does he
want to oust Weldon. His answer surprised a lot of them. Sestak began by summariz-
ing his service to his country which included being the director of "Deep Blue", the
Navy's anti-terror task force, and commanding an aircraft carrier group at the start of
the wars in Afghanistan and later Iraq.
"I'd do it all over again," he remarked.
So most would think that after three decades in the service this man would feel
"we the people" owe him a debt of gratitude, right? "My country doesn't owe me. I
owe my country," he said. :
Vice Admiral Sestak feels that he has a debt to repay to the people that he grew up
with in the Delaware Valley. The people he wants to represent saved his five year old
daughter Alexandra from brain cancer by paying their taxes. Their civic duty helped
supply his first class Navy health benefits which allowed him to bring his daughter to
the Philadelphia area to receive the best treatment available.
"I had no idea how fortunate I was. I live
with great people and I always intended to
come back and serve them," he told his audi-
ence.
As far as his agenda for Washington is
concerned, Sestak could describe it in just
one word: it. That's right. "It" could mean
anything, he said. To him, "it" means the
four pillars of national security: health secu-
rity, education security, economic security
and defense security. First, he answered
many questions about defense including what
- he thinks of the war in Iraq.
"Iraq was a tragic misadventure. There was no clear and present danger," he
said.
Economically, the former three star admiral feels the federal government has done
very little to combat the fact that the Bush Administration has turned a record $5 tril-
lion surplus under Clinton into a record $8.5 trillion deficit in just six years in office.
"We need a cap on discretionary spending," he proposed.
Other startling facts the candidate mentioned revolved around education and
healthcare. According to Sestak, health insurance premiums have risen 70 percent in
recent years leaving 46 million Americans currently uninsured (15 percent of the pop-
ulation). Also college tuition in Pennsylvania is rapidly rising and Sestak announced a
plan that calls for a $3,000 tax credit to help families pay for their children's "higher
education". :
Joe, as he likes to be called, concluded his visit by making one thing clear: he
thinks Curt Weldon has forgotten who he serves. Despite that accusation he stills has
respect for his opponent.
"I have nothing personally against Curt Weldon. I just don't agree with his vote,"
Sestak said.
FBI Rekindles Rep. Weldon Investigation
By JOHN MILLER
Staff Writer
Jmm833@psu.edu
On Tuesday Oct. 17th, The Philadelphia Inquirer
along with many other newspapers across the country
broke the story that local PA 7th District Congressman
Curt Weldon is under FBI investigation.
The Justice Department issued warrants to search the
homes of Weldon's daughter, Karen, and her business
partner, Charles Sexton Jr. All six homes were searched
in Pennsylvania and Florida. Sexton is not only the top
gun of the GOP in these parts but he is also Weldon's
campaign manager, at least he was.
The allegations are that Weldon, by using his posi-
tion as Vice Chairman of the House Armed Services
Committee, helped his daughter Karen, a 29 year old
"powerbroker", gain favors from several Russian corpo-
rations, the most prominent being The Itera Group,
whose US offices are in Jacksonville, FL.
In September 2002 Weldon put together a benefit for
Itera at the Library of Congress to honor its CEO Igor
Makarov. Not long after that generous gesture, Itera
paid half a million dollars to Karen Weldon's and
Sexton's firm.
Weldon's opponent, retired Vice Admiral Joe Sestak
has not said much since the public became aware of this
inquiry.
"We'll just have to wait and see," a campaign
spokesman commented.
Now the strange thing about this whole situation is
that these allegations are not new. The Inquirer, for
instance, ran a story about this questionable behavior on
Weldon's part as far back as two years ago, one of them
in February 2004 with "Weldon Backed Causes as
Daughter Got Clients" as a headline.
"The stuff I've done with these companies is docu-
mented and substantive. I have nothing to apologize
for," Weldon said in 2004.
The Republicans’ response to the latest allegations
has been the same as many prominent issues like terror-
ism and North Korea; it must be the Democrats who
want to gain control of the Congress on November 7th.
"They (GOP) are probably concerned about the tim-
ing of this, three weeks before the election, as he
(Weldon) 1s," says Michael Puppio Jr., the new cam-
paign manager.
Weldon's re-election campaign has been hard enough
with poll numbers saying the race between him and Joe
Sestak 1s a dead heat, now he's facing possible criminal
charges and being in violation of Congressional ethics.
Coincidently, the day his news made the papers,
Weldon was supposed to be here at PSU Delco talking
about National Security. He obviously had more impor-
tant things on his mind.
hide from
the truth
forever,
Curt!
Art by Christina Felizzi
RAS