PA Press Club with Andrew Lewis, President & CEO at The Commonwealth Foundation at the Hilton Harrisburg
00:06 - Good afternoon.
00:07 - I'm Francine Scherzer, senior vice president of politics and policy at PCN.
00:12 - President of the Pennsylvania Press Club and your host for today's luncheon.
00:17 - Joining me at the head
00:17 - table is David Taylor of the Pennsylvania Manufacturers Association.
00:21 - Thank you for your support and thank you for being here.
00:24 - The Pennsylvania Press Club luncheon series could not be possible
00:27 - without the support of the generous organizations listed on our sponsor
00:30 - banner.
00:31 - Today's program is streaming live on PC and select
00:34 - and airing live across the state on PC and TV.
00:38 - Our speaker
00:38 - today is Andrew Lewis, president and CEO of the Commonwealth Foundation.
00:43 - As a former state legislator, business executive, entrepreneur,
00:46 - and decorated Army combat veteran, Andrew brings a wealth of diverse
00:50 - experience to his role leading Pennsylvania's free market think tank.
00:54 - Andrew is a tireless champion of individual liberties, free markets
00:57 - and limited government.
00:59 - During his two terms in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives,
01:02 - he led the fight to pass universal school choice and empower parents.
01:06 - He actively advocated for the Taxpayer Protection Act, which would have limited
01:10 - the growth of state government spending through constitutional amendment.
01:14 - In the private sector, Andrew spearheaded the growth of two small businesses
01:18 - into successful companies before leading a key division
01:20 - at one of the premier regional home building companies in the United States.
01:25 - Andrew is an Iraq War veteran,
01:27 - almost ten years of active duty in Army reconnaissance and counterintelligence.
01:32 - He received five Commendation Medals, and his assignments
01:35 - include a post in South Korea and at the white House Military Office.
01:39 - He currently serves in the Army Reserve as a civil Affairs officer.
01:43 - He holds a B.A.
01:44 - in Political Science from Thomas
01:45 - Edison State University, an MBA from Temple University,
01:49 - and a master's in legislative affairs from George Washington University.
01:53 - In addition, he's a graduate of the Institute for Veterans
01:56 - and Military Families entrepreneurial Boot Camp at Syracuse University.
02:00 - Andrew and his wife Renee, and their three boys reside in State College area.
02:05 - Andrew Lewis, thank you for joining us.
02:12 - Well, thank you, Francine, and thank you to PyCon
02:15 - for inviting me and the Press Club for inviting me to this event.
02:19 - We know that a free press is foundational to a free society, but we also know
02:25 - that the local press is so important because they tell the stories that matter.
02:29 - When I was, shortly after I graduated boot camp, I was assigned to Fort Stewart,
02:33 - Georgia, and Savannah.
02:34 - My cousin, who's just a couple years older, graduated college
02:37 - around the same time.
02:38 - She was a local journalist,
02:39 - and she was posted at savvy, Savannah, the local affiliate there.
02:43 - And I'll never forget, you know, we were always in touch.
02:46 - And, with the hard work and the passion with which she approached her job
02:50 - as a local journalist.
02:51 - That's something I've carried with me.
02:52 - And so to those who do report the news and to the press club that represents them,
02:56 - you have our gratitude.
02:58 - I am privileged, as of Friday, to be entering my 20th month as president
03:03 - and CEO of the Commonwealth Foundation, and I will say that, KfW,
03:08 - under the leadership of incredible predecessors,
03:12 - has become the leading policy organization, sorry, chamber in the state.
03:17 - And I would say,
03:18 - we have an incredibly dynamic team, many of which are here today,
03:22 - and we have two of my predecessors in the room, Charles Mitchell and Matt.
03:27 - It's like the ghosts of Commonwealth past, present and future in the room.
03:31 - So it's good to hear haunting. Yeah.
03:33 - It's fantastic.
03:33 - So it's good to have you here.
03:36 - As Francine kind of talked about, my journey
03:38 - to this role is is an unconventional one.
03:42 - So I grew up in a.
03:43 - But that unconventional journey has given me unique,
03:47 - perspectives into the policy impacts, the impacts of public policy
03:52 - from a myriad of different perspectives and so I grew up, as some of you
03:56 - know, in Perry County across the river, and my dad is a drywall finisher.
03:59 - So I grew up in a small business family watching firsthand, a solopreneur
04:04 - build a business from scratch and the challenges that that entailed.
04:07 - And then I went to the military and was able to live in multiple states
04:11 - across the country and then around in countries around the world.
04:14 - And those experience showed me what public policy looks like
04:17 - outside of Pennsylvania.
04:18 - And so when I came back home and helped my brother Ben
04:21 - build a small drywall team into a multimillion dollar construction
04:24 - contracting company, I was able to see another
04:26 - perspective of how policy impacts the business community.
04:30 - And then finally, during two terms in the in the state House,
04:32 - I was able to travel to the state and get to know a ton of different people
04:36 - and hear their stories and talk to entrepreneurs and watch
04:40 - legislation get shaped on the House floor and ultimately become public policy.
04:44 - And so all of those experiences shaped my understanding
04:47 - of the impact of public policy in a very unique way.
04:51 - And having lived
04:53 - in nine total states and in four countries,
04:56 - I can tell you that one thing that I've learned definitively
04:59 - is that Pennsylvania has the greatest potential
05:02 - to be the top opportunity state, not just on the East Coast,
05:07 - not just in the Mid-Atlantic region, but also in the country.
05:10 - And I'll tell you why.
05:12 - If you had just one of our advantages as a state, you could lead,
05:15 - you could lead the way.
05:16 - We are geographically in the precise center of the East Coast,
05:21 - which gives us this incredible advantage for moving commerce,
05:25 - for for transportation and logistics. That's number one.
05:28 - If you just had that, you'd have an advantage relative to the other states.
05:32 - In addition to that, we have Marcellus and Shale under our Marcellus and Utica.
05:37 - Shale under our feet, which is incredible for energy and natural resources.
05:41 - So the natural resources we have gives us is an extreme competitive advantage.
05:45 - We have leading institutions of higher learning that have created
05:49 - some of the greatest innovations of our day.
05:51 - We have a workforce that, in my biased view, is the greatest in the country.
05:55 - We have motivated students graduating from college and going into the workforce.
05:58 - We have an incredible workforce.
06:00 - And finally, our history is so rich as the birthplace of American freedom.
06:05 - We if you look at where we're celebrating America 250 this year,
06:09 - and you're never going to hear a 250th anniversary speech anywhere in the country
06:14 - without Pennsylvania being talked about, because in Philadelphia,
06:16 - we gave birth to the country,
06:18 - where the Declaration of Independence was read for the first time.
06:21 - And so it's exciting, but
06:23 - though we should be the top state for opportunity,
06:26 - the reality on paper, the what's on paper, that's what we should be.
06:30 - The reality on the ground is sadly, much different.
06:33 - And the reality that we face is that every 24 minutes
06:36 - someone else moves out of Pennsylvania.
06:38 - They choose another state to call home.
06:40 - Just in the last decade, we lost 92,000 people out of Pennsylvania.
06:44 - We have a census coming up in a couple of years,
06:46 - and we're on track to lose yet another congressional seat.
06:49 - So the state
06:49 - that is the center of the East Coast, the state that gave birth to the country,
06:53 - the state that has so much innovation and trade,
06:54 - and the greatest workforce is losing people at an astounding rate.
06:59 - In fact,
07:00 - there's a report, rich states, poor states, the tracks economic performance
07:03 - in the states.
07:04 - And in 2026 they rank US 43 out of 50.
07:08 - In economic performance, it's astounding.
07:11 - And there's a huge problem.
07:12 - So you have to ask yourself, why is this?
07:13 - Why are people moving out of the greatest?
07:15 - What could be the greatest opportunity state?
07:16 - They're moving to states like Florida and Texas and Ohio and North Carolina.
07:21 - And the answer is simple.
07:23 - If you look at all the states they're moving to,
07:26 - they all have a four part formula that they've employed over
07:29 - the last few years that have created such opportunity in these states.
07:32 - The formula is very simple.
07:33 - Number one,
07:34 - they empower and they
07:35 - encourage their job creators to come in and build businesses and create jobs.
07:39 - That's number one.
07:40 - Number two,
07:42 - they ensure that the people working in those jobs can keep
07:45 - more of the tax dollars that they earn, and they're not oppressed by a government
07:49 - that taxes them to death. That's number two.
07:52 - Number three, they ensure that more graduates of school
07:56 - can qualify for those great jobs
07:58 - because they can learn in an environment that works best for them.
08:02 - And finally, they're not afraid to leverage
08:03 - their natural resources in those states.
08:05 - They go out and they leverage their resources.
08:08 - If Governor Newsom was the governor of Texas, I'm
08:10 - sure he would ban all drilling in the Permian Basin.
08:12 - But the reality is these other states are leveraging their natural resources.
08:16 - So when you see states like Ohio, where a business that wants to get started
08:21 - is being welcomed by policymakers,
08:23 - they're being welcomed and said, thank you for doing business in our state.
08:25 - You apply for a permit in Texas and you get it in 30 or 60 days
08:29 - instead of 12 to 14 months.
08:31 - That's what's happening in these states.
08:32 - There's this four part formula
08:34 - that has worked incredibly well and has driven people to these states
08:37 - in record numbers.
08:38 - And so how do we apply that formula here in Pennsylvania?
08:40 - That's what I want to talk to you about, is going to be a great discussion.
08:43 - Well, here's how.
08:43 - Let's just start at the end and work our way backwards.
08:46 - So if we start with tapping into our natural resources,
08:49 - as I alluded to, we've got Marcellus in Utica Shale.
08:52 - It's an incredible natural resource that we have here.
08:55 - Few people know this, but we and actually many in this room probably do.
08:59 - But few people in the public know this.
09:01 - But we have enough natural gas and energy resources under our feet
09:06 - to power the internet, not just the state.
09:07 - With the entire electric grid for the country for decades, if not a century.
09:12 - And there's untapped and undiscovered resources under our feet,
09:16 - we need to tap into that and leverage that.
09:18 - Now, unfortunately, we've had two governors, current and former,
09:22 - who have tried to get the state into the regional greenhouse.
09:25 - Gas Initiative, which is essentially a carbon tax.
09:28 - It would have cost taxpayers in Pennsylvania $1.6 billion
09:32 - every single year in additional tax burden in Pennsylvania.
09:36 - It's a construct.
09:37 - It's a made up program that actually doesn't help reduce any emissions.
09:40 - It just penalizes states.
09:43 - And now we see Virginia entering that compact.
09:45 - Now, thanks to the chamber, Commonwealth Foundation, legislative
09:49 - allies and others, state has withdrawn from that as of last year.
09:53 - But the effects are staggering because in the multiple years
09:56 - that we looked at getting into that,
09:57 - there were many investors who chose to go to Ohio or other states instead.
10:01 - So we've got to rebound.
10:03 - Well, now the governor is proposing the lightning plan.
10:06 - The lightning plan
10:07 - both creates yet another carbon tax, but it also seeks to manipulate the portfolio
10:11 - by mandating a certain amount of unreliable energy sources.
10:14 - As part of our portfolio, we have this incredible natural resource
10:18 - in Pennsylvania.
10:19 - And if you're going to mandate that
10:21 - 50% plus of our portfolio comes from these renewable sources,
10:25 - that's like owning a basketball team and having Michael Jordan in his prime
10:28 - play on it and telling him he can't play more than 50% of the time.
10:32 - It's lunacy.
10:34 - Yet we still have these mandates being pushed on Pennsylvania,
10:37 - and so we have to get away from those mandates.
10:40 - I spoke with a young woman named Roxana about a week and a half ago.
10:44 - She runs a policy organization in Spain,
10:47 - and what she will tell you is that they have mandated solar
10:50 - as a significant part of their portfolio there.
10:51 - It's 50 plus percent.
10:53 - They had a national blackout last year.
10:55 - The entire country was blacked out
10:58 - because they relied so heavily on an unreliable source.
11:02 - Pennsylvania, as we know, has some pretty severe winters.
11:04 - And we also have one of the largest, aging populations.
11:07 - And so when you combine those two things
11:09 - with an unreliable grid source, you actually put lives in danger.
11:12 - It's not sustainable, certainly not affordable.
11:15 - So we've got to make sure the lightning plan
11:17 - that Pennsylvania doesn't need a lightning plan, Pennsylvania needs a power plan.
11:20 - We need a plan
11:21 - that that produces the power that is abundant, affordable and reliable.
11:25 - You need to hit all three.
11:27 - So once you get energy squared away and we unleash our natural resources,
11:31 - let's move back.
11:32 - What's the next component of the formula?
11:35 - Well, let's talk about education.
11:37 - You've got to have a workforce that is qualified to go out there
11:40 - and get these jobs.
11:41 - You have to if you don't have a workforce that's qualified,
11:44 - you're not going to be able to unleash your economy.
11:45 - We must unleash the potential of our workforce.
11:48 - And I will tell you that in Pennsylvania, despite our opportunity, despite,
11:53 - the incredible innovations we see in our institutions of higher
11:57 - learning, in secondary education, we see some very troubling facts.
12:01 - One of those facts is let's just zoom in to the Philadelphia school District
12:04 - in Philadelphia today.
12:06 - If you were in the eighth grade, for every 100 students,
12:09 - 85 of them will not be proficient in math at grade level.
12:13 - 82 of them will not be able to read at grade level.
12:16 - In the eighth grade period.
12:18 - If you're a mom that has two kids
12:20 - going to school in Philadelphia, by the time they graduate school,
12:23 - the government will have spent over $700,000 to get them through school.
12:27 - And at the eighth grade, there's an 80 plus percent chance
12:30 - that they will not be proficient in reading or math at the eighth grade.
12:33 - It's a crisis.
12:35 - It is a state crisis, and it should be talked about every single day.
12:39 - So how do we fix this?
12:40 - Well, the conventional path you would think is,
12:41 - well, let's just dump more money into the schools.
12:43 - And if we can get the funding up, we can fix the problem. Right.
12:46 - And and that was the message and that was what was tried for decades.
12:50 - But now we have record funding for these schools.
12:52 - And I remember back in 2019 and 2020 being in the House and voting for record
12:56 - funding, 30 plus thousand dollars per student per year in Philadelphia.
13:01 - And yet we don't see a correlating increase in student outcomes, period.
13:04 - We don't.
13:06 - So we have to look at making sure kids
13:08 - have the opportunities to learn in an environment that works best for them.
13:12 - Well, one of the great programs enacted about 15 years
13:14 - ago is the ITC program, the Education Improvement Tax Credit Program.
13:18 - It allows charitable people to give a donation
13:21 - and get a portion of that donation back through a tax credit.
13:24 - And those donations help kids get out of schools that are failing them.
13:28 - And by the way, there are many schools.
13:30 - We published a report last year that are persistently dangerous schools.
13:34 - There are kids in these schools getting bullied,
13:36 - their kids in these schools exposed to high crime rates.
13:38 - We owe them an opportunity to be rescued from those schools.
13:42 - And so as of last year, 101,000 kids now depend on the ITC program
13:46 - to have a shot at a future so they can pursue their American dream.
13:50 - But there's 70,000 kids
13:53 - who applied that were turned away because there's income, there's caps.
13:56 - There's caps set for for how many kids can be on the program.
13:59 - So 70,000 were turned away.
14:01 - Now, thankfully, last year as part of the federal
14:04 - omnibus bill, the federal scholarship tax credit was passed.
14:07 - This tax credit would give
14:10 - another 100,000 kids in Pennsylvania an option to add, at a minimum,
14:14 - an opportunity to be rescued from a school they're trapped in.
14:18 - That is not working for them.
14:20 - And the only thing that has to happen for those dollars to come to Pennsylvania
14:23 - is for Governor Shapiro to opt in.
14:25 - It's a one page document.
14:26 - You got to sign it and you got to file it,
14:29 - and then those dollars will flow to Pennsylvania.
14:31 - Now the program's in existence already.
14:33 - It relies on charitable giving.
14:35 - It does not take a dime from the state budget.
14:37 - It does not take a penny from public schools.
14:40 - It is a no-brainer.
14:41 - And it's already been appropriated.
14:43 - So as of January next year, taxpayers are going to start
14:46 - donating to scholarship organizations.
14:48 - Like it or not, they're going to get the tax credit.
14:50 - And what determines if those dollars stay in Pennsylvania
14:52 - or get sent to other states is Governor Shapiro's signature.
14:56 - Now, I know there are those
14:58 - on the National Front that would say these programs are bad.
15:01 - I don't understand why.
15:03 - I suspect it's because they would care more about
15:07 - adults getting better pay and pension than they would about students
15:10 - getting a better education.
15:11 - But there are special interests that are very powerful and influential.
15:14 - And for people like Governor Beshear in Kentucky,
15:16 - who has presidential aspirations and chose to try
15:20 - to opt to stayed out and thankfully was overcome by his legislature, I get it.
15:23 - You know, he's trying to position for those support by those special interests.
15:28 - Now, early signals suggest that our governor may be eyeing a presidential run.
15:32 - We don't know. We can only surmise.
15:36 - But it's
15:37 - my hope that he doesn't fall into that camp of politicians
15:41 - who would put political aspirations ahead of the futures of our kids.
15:45 - In fact, I would hope that he places a greater weight on the hopes,
15:49 - dreams and aspirations of 100,000 Pennsylvania kids
15:53 - than he does on his own aspirations to live at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.
15:57 - That's our hope.
15:59 - So once you get your state opportunities like we can do
16:03 - with the federal scholarship tax credit program,
16:05 - from there, you got to talk about a tax, making sure that there's reasonable
16:08 - competitive tax rates so people can thrive and keep more of their money.
16:11 - We've got a simple way to do that this year is
16:14 - we have a budget proposal on the table.
16:16 - We're all following it. Some are reporting on it.
16:19 - We got a budget proposal on the table that sets us up.
16:21 - Unfortunately for a budget deficit that is being covered by a rainy day fund
16:26 - savings account,
16:27 - it's not sustainable because next year we won't have the balance
16:30 - of that rainy day fund, but we'll still have the deficit.
16:33 - So as having been in the legislature, I didn't learn all things, but what I did
16:36 - learn is that when you have a deficit, you only have two ways to close it.
16:39 - You can either dramatically cut spending or you can increase taxes.
16:42 - Those are the only two options you have after next year with no rainy day fund.
16:46 - So this budget does set us up for a tax hike
16:49 - despite claims to the contrary, and we must reject it.
16:52 - It also relies on revenue from two streams marijuana
16:55 - and skill games, which the policies haven't even been enacted yet.
16:59 - So imagine buying a truck on a credit card based on a part time job.
17:03 - You think you're going to have next year,
17:04 - and you haven't even interviewed for it yet.
17:06 - That's that's what we're doing.
17:07 - It's not wise.
17:09 - It sets our people up for a tax hike and it's unsustainable.
17:12 - We can't do it. So we got to reject that.
17:14 - And then finally, we've got to encourage and empower businesses and job creators
17:17 - to come into our state.
17:19 - On this front, I would applaud the governor
17:21 - for his rhetoric to speed up permitting to do things like that.
17:24 - I think that's important.
17:25 - We also, though, need those those programs to apply to more permits.
17:29 - Right now, those programs apply to less than 10%
17:31 - of the permit applications being submitted.
17:32 - We've got to expand the programs.
17:34 - We got to get more businesses in business quicker.
17:36 - We got to cut the red tape that prevents them from doing so.
17:39 - And at that point, you're going to have people choosing Pennsylvania over Ohio
17:43 - in these other states.
17:44 - So with those four things, we can make Pennsylvania the leading state
17:47 - for opportunity and prosperity, not just on the East Coast
17:51 - or the Mid-Atlantic, but across the country.
17:53 - We are the Keystone State.
17:54 - We will get it done.
17:56 - And with that, I welcome your questions. Thank you.
18:05 - Governor Shapiro has a large campaign War chest.
18:08 - IBEW is the top in the top five contributors.
18:12 - How will Shapiro make it worth their while?
18:14 - It's a it's such a great question I think.
18:16 - And one I would note I represent a 501 C3 nonpolitical nonpartisan organization.
18:21 - And we we we are very careful, in our commentary on political fronts.
18:26 - But I will say that, look,
18:28 - when politicians are funded by certain groups,
18:31 - you got to look at who's funding them and look at what those groups demand.
18:33 - And are they on the side of taxpayers or on are they on the side of adults
18:37 - who want bigger paychecks and pensions?
18:39 - That's what you have to look at.
18:41 - Do Donald Trump's poor poll ratings indicate
18:43 - difficulty in electing conservative candidates in November?
18:47 - Well, such a good, good, good slew of political questions here.
18:50 - So again, on the five and one C3,
18:53 - I think polls come and go, but I love to talk policy.
18:57 - I would love to talk about Pennsylvania policy.
19:00 - What experiences or skills from your time in the House
19:02 - help your new role at the Commonwealth Foundation?
19:04 - Well, you know, that was a great question.
19:06 - Thank you to whoever.
19:07 - But that one.
19:08 - And so it's a good that's a that's a fair that's a really solid question.
19:12 - You know, I would say,
19:14 - being in the legislature is a unique experience.
19:15 - And I know we have some in this room, Steve and others who've who've served,
19:19 - but it teaches you to understand the process.
19:24 - Number one,
19:25 - you've got to understand the process of getting an idea from an idea into a law.
19:29 - And secondly, it teaches you you have to work with others to get it done.
19:31 - So you can't just unilaterally decide you want a new law.
19:34 - You've got to understand there's many,
19:36 - many people that it takes to get that law done.
19:38 - And you've got to work with those people to get it done.
19:39 - So I think those things, understanding that and then being willing
19:42 - to work through that process.
19:44 - The mission of Commonwealth Foundation is to transform free
19:46 - market ideas into public policy, empowering all Pennsylvanians to thrive.
19:50 - And you can't do it
19:51 - if you're not able to transform an idea into a law through advocacy
19:54 - and through the proper
19:56 - legislative channels. And so I think having worked in
19:58 - that environment has helped me learn that process.
20:01 - Pennsylvania has the opportunity to opt in to receiving
20:04 - federal matching scholarship money through the Freedom Education Tax Credit.
20:07 - Can you talk about how this differs from the ITC
20:10 - and how do you respond to people that are concerned
20:12 - that the Trump administration wants to dismantle the Department of Education?
20:15 - It's a great question.
20:16 - So the ITC program is a state program in Pennsylvania.
20:18 - We have over 250 scholarship granting organizations in the Commonwealth
20:22 - that already benefit.
20:23 - And all right, well, not that they distribute ITC scholarships.
20:26 - It's a Pennsylvania specific program.
20:29 - It's a Pennsylvania tax credit program.
20:31 - So they're a portion of the dollars you contribute as a donor come back to you.
20:35 - The federal scholarship tax credit program,
20:38 - also known as the Education Freedom Tax Credit Program.
20:40 - There's a couple of different names being being pioneered on this thing,
20:43 - but basically it's a federal program and it's a 100% of a tax credit.
20:47 - And it caps out at $1,700.
20:49 - So you can give up to $1,700 to an sgo to a scholarship granting organization.
20:55 - You get 100% of that back, and it's administered by those same sgo.
20:59 - So it's not like the feds are coming in
21:01 - giving the money and controlling where it goes.
21:02 - It's still administered
21:03 - locally through the same scholarship granting organizations.
21:07 - The concerns on what was the final part of the question, the Trump
21:11 - administration, saying that they want to dismantle the Department of Education.
21:14 - Oh, I see, yes.
21:16 - So my my focus in the role I'm in is, is always going to be on the state
21:20 - level, on the state, landscape and on state policy.
21:24 - And anytime I look at education and the role of policymakers
21:27 - when it comes to education,
21:28 - it's always first and foremost got to be centered on the students.
21:31 - So every time you enact an educational policy,
21:33 - every time you make a decision on budgeting,
21:35 - it's always got to fixate on students, not adults.
21:38 - We have a habit of always saying, hey, we want to fixate on the adults,
21:40 - get a bigger pension, the paychecks
21:41 - we first and foremost have to make sure we focus on the students and get them
21:44 - the education they need so they can pursue and access their American dream.
21:48 - When we're question on education, for those of us
21:50 - not focused on education in the room, why should we care about it?
21:54 - Yeah, that's a that's a great question.
21:57 - Because the future of the present and future of the country
22:01 - depends on an educated workforce.
22:02 - We can't have jobs and we can't have goods and services.
22:06 - We can't have basic transportation.
22:08 - You can't do anything if you don't have an educated workforce
22:11 - who can access the jobs and can deliver those goods and services.
22:15 - The whole economy screeches to a halt.
22:16 - So if you care about
22:18 - getting up in the morning and be able to get in a car that works and get gas
22:21 - and it pumps and go to your job
22:23 - and earn a living and someone processes the paycheck,
22:25 - all that stuff requires an educated workforce.
22:27 - So if you don't care about education, I would say you may not have a good one.
22:33 - And you should probably understand how a good education leads
22:36 - to a thriving economy.
22:38 - Is in Pennsylvania a leading exporter of energy?
22:41 - Do we really need incentives
22:42 - to push more carbon energy sources and turn our backs on the devastating
22:45 - effects of global warming? You know, it's really interesting.
22:48 - This is such a good question because I don't think the facts have gone
22:51 - and you'll be
22:52 - whoever asked this will be encouraged to know that as nat natural gas,
22:55 - which is one of the cleanest forms of energy production, and as natural
22:58 - gas output has increased, gas emissions have actually decreased.
23:02 - So there's a decrease. It's lower than ever.
23:05 - These are clean energy sources.
23:06 - And especially when we talk about nuclear and small modular reactors
23:10 - and the things happening with the
23:11 - the energy market, incredible advances to reduce emissions.
23:15 - Yeah, that's a great question.
23:17 - Does Governor Shapiro have a problem when it comes to his record
23:20 - on government transparency?
23:22 - You know, if I were on the governor's team or advising him,
23:26 - I think I would say hire less TikTok experts and hire
23:30 - more people who are both good at math and good at actual transparency.
23:34 - I think there may
23:35 - I would be concerned,
23:36 - I would be kind of concerned about some of the things we've seen.
23:39 - But ultimately it's more the math I worry about when we talk about
23:42 - these unsustainable budgets.
23:45 - Do you ever miss your
23:46 - days of being a state legislature legislator,
23:49 - and do you see yourself running for elective office in the future?
23:52 - If so, what position?
23:53 - That's a great question.
23:55 - One yes, I do miss my days sometimes.
23:57 - Sometimes I do.
23:58 - I think there was a camaraderie in the house.
24:00 - You get to, you know, you actually get to get up every morning
24:02 - and like fight the fight, right?
24:04 - You get to introduce legislation, you get to try to get it through committee.
24:07 - And I think there's something very fulfilling about that.
24:09 - So I'd be lying to say I don't miss it.
24:11 - I have no plans at this point to run for office.
24:13 - I'm very committed to my role at, Commonwealth Foundation, and that's
24:17 - where my focus is.
24:19 - We'd like to thank Andrew Lewis and wish him well.
24:21 - We have some momentous for him.
24:22 - These are gifts, compliments of the World.
24:24 - Affairs Council, Harrisburg PCN and the Pennsylvania Press Club.
24:28 - In closing, we want to thank you for being with us.
24:30 - Our next luncheon is Monday, May 18th.
24:32 - Our guests will be US Senator Dave McCormick.
24:34 - For scheduling information, visit our website.
24:36 - Press club.org.
24:37 - Thank you so much.
24:38 - Thank you.
25:00 - It's. You.