Fresh­man Focus: Repub­li­can Rob Bres­na­han, who oust­ed six-term House Demo­c­rat, reveals how he did it

Vot­ers in Penn­syl­va­ni­a’s 8th Con­gres­sion­al Dis­trict gave six-term incum­bent Rep. Matt Cartwright, D‑Pa., the boot last month in favor of a young, ener­getic and suc­cess­ful busi­ness­man who says he’s ready to defend their inter­ests in the nation’s cap­i­tal.

Repub­li­can Rep.-elect Rob Bres­na­han, 34, tells Fox News Dig­i­tal in an inter­view that “kitchen table issues” helped him con­nect with north­east­ern Penn­syl­va­ni­ans and oust Cartwright, a pro­gres­sive who had served in Con­gress for more than a decade. 

“When we were knock­ing on doors and talk­ing to peo­ple every sin­gle day over a peri­od of 13 months, the first thing any­one had to say was, ‘I can’t afford my bills. I can’t afford rent. I can’t afford my mort­gage. I can’t afford school prop­er­ty tax­es. I can’t afford gro­ceries,’ ” Bres­na­han said. 

Ris­ing prices for food and gas have made liv­ing costs unaf­ford­able for Penn­syl­va­ni­ans, he explained. And as vot­ers have watched ille­gal immi­grants over­run the south­ern bor­der and be pro­vid­ed free food, hous­ing and ben­e­fits, while bil­lions in for­eign aid flows out from the U.S. to oth­er coun­tries, they felt that for­eign­ers were being treat­ed bet­ter than Amer­i­cans by their gov­ern­ment, said Bres­na­han. 

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“We’re look­ing around at our neigh­bors say­ing, ‘hey, what about us here?’ And they could­n’t help but feel that they have been put sec­ond for a long time.” 

Bres­na­han was a suc­cess sto­ry before he won elec­tion to the House of Rep­re­sen­ta­tives. A fifth-gen­er­a­tion native of Luzerne Coun­ty, at just 19 years old he was entrust­ed to be CFO of his grand­fa­ther’s con­struc­tion com­pa­ny, which builds elec­tri­cal infra­struc­ture for munic­i­pal­i­ties and high­ways through­out Penn­syl­va­nia. 

He spent his col­lege years at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Scran­ton dash­ing back and forth between the office and class as he worked to help the busi­ness recov­er from the glob­al finan­cial cri­sis. His hard work paid off, the busi­ness grew and Bres­na­han became CEO after grad­u­at­ing in 2013.

“I was still liv­ing at home with my par­ents and I was in and out of a dorm room and run­ning a com­pa­ny with 58 employ­ees even though I couldn’t legal­ly drink a Coors Light yet,” he told the Cit­i­zen’s Voice in 2021. “The com­bi­na­tion was a heavy work­load but it was a sac­ri­fice that I would make again in a sec­ond.” 

But as the years passed, Bres­na­han, like many Amer­i­cans, felt the coun­try was head­ed on the wrong track. The deci­sions com­ing from Wash­ing­ton, D.C., were bad for his busi­ness, his employ­ees and the peo­ple they serve. And so, he decid­ed to enter pol­i­tics to make a dif­fer­ence.

“I felt that the coun­try was not head­ing in the right tra­jec­to­ry with what is hap­pen­ing on our south­ern bor­der. We had life essen­tial­ly unaf­ford­able for the aver­age per­son. And I’ve always been a per­son to roll up my sleeves and throw myself into fire,” Bres­na­han said.

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His win­ning con­gres­sion­al cam­paign focused on secur­ing the bor­der, cut­ting tax­es and trim­ming gov­ern­ment spend­ing, cre­at­ing “fam­i­ly-sus­tain­ing jobs” in the Key­stone State and sup­port­ing law enforce­ment. In April, Bres­na­han received an endorse­ment from Pres­i­dent-elect Don­ald Trump.

“A suc­cess­ful Busi­ness­man, Rob has worked hard to Cre­ate Jobs and Grow the Econ­o­my, unlike his oppo­nent, Matt Cartwright, who is com­plete­ly behold­en to Nan­cy Pelosi and the Rad­i­cal Left,” Trump post­ed on Truth Social.

With the cam­paign behind him, Bres­na­han says he and the oth­er mem­bers of the incom­ing Repub­li­can major­i­ty in Con­gress are ready to hit the ground run­ning with a pro-growth agen­da in Jan­u­ary. 

“Secur­ing the bor­der. That needs to be done day one, Jan. 3 at 12:01 p.m., the day after we are all sworn in,” he told Fox News Dig­i­tal. “I think there’s going to be a big play­book, but that is a tan­gi­ble win right off the bat.”

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On infla­tion, Bres­na­han says Con­gress and the Trump admin­is­tra­tion can tack­le unaf­ford­able prices by low­er­ing ener­gy costs. “Talk­ing about just Penn­syl­va­nia alone, 52% of homes are heat­ed from nat­ur­al gas. $45 bil­lion a year are gen­er­at­ed from the nat­ur­al gas indus­try, and $76 bil­lion in GDP comes out of the frack­ing and nat­ur­al gas indus­try,” he said, insist­ing that pol­i­cy­mak­ers must stop “vil­i­fy­ing nat­ur­al resources.” 

The ris­ing nation­al debt, at $36 tril­lion, is anoth­er bur­den on the econ­o­my Bres­na­han says Con­gress must address. “We’re spend­ing more on debt ser­vic­ing – just our nation­al debt and the inter­est – than we are on our nation­al defense bud­get.”

The young law­mak­er said there will be “tough votes” on dis­cre­tionary spend­ing when Con­gress con­venes in Jan­u­ary. But two of the largest con­trib­u­tors to the fed­er­al debt and deficit will remain untouched.

“Obvi­ous­ly, we can’t cut Medicare. We can’t cut Social Secu­ri­ty. We have to pre­serve that for our cur­rent gen­er­a­tion, and we have to find ways to pre­serve it for our gen­er­a­tion and the next gen­er­a­tion. But I don’t believe that there’s a one-size-fits-all pol­i­cy on any cir­cum­stance, let alone the nation­al debt and the expen­di­tures of the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment,” Bres­na­han said.

How­ev­er, he added that ille­gal immi­grants should not ben­e­fit from pro­grams that Amer­i­cans have paid in to, includ­ing Social Secu­ri­ty and Medicare.

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Repub­li­cans are expect­ed to extend the 2017 tax cuts that became law dur­ing Trump’s first term in office. Bres­na­han says he sup­ports those tax cuts and insists that eco­nom­ic growth spurred by dereg­u­la­tion and invest­ments in infra­struc­ture and Amer­i­can jobs can make up for any poten­tial rev­enue loss­es.

“We have to get peo­ple back to work,” he said. “We have to cre­ate eco­nom­ic cli­mates that are con­ducive to the Amer­i­can peo­ple to incen­tivize them to go to work.” 

Part of that is to sup­port jobs that don’t require a col­lege degree, such as car­pen­ters, plumbers or elec­tri­cians. “These are great, fam­i­ly-sus­tain­ing careers with annu­ities start­ing on day one, with health insur­ance for your fam­i­ly, and you’re earn­ing while you learn.” 

Turn­ing to for­eign pol­i­cy, Bres­na­han said the Unit­ed States must remain a glob­al super­pow­er and pur­sue “peace through strength.” 

“But we have to be strong as the Unit­ed States,” he added. Asked about grow­ing GOP oppo­si­tion to for­eign aid, includ­ing to Ukraine, Bres­na­han empha­sized that he sup­ports efforts to push back against Russ­ian aggres­sion – but he wants to do so respon­si­bly.

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“Putin is a war crim­i­nal and needs to be stopped,” he said. “I am all sup­port­ive of pro­vid­ing weapons, mis­siles, rock­ets – actu­al­ly, there’s a big man­u­fac­tur­ing facil­i­ty inside of my dis­trict. But where I do want account­abil­i­ty is the raw, hard dol­lars that have been sent. I want audits done on those to ensure they’re going to the right caus­es.” 

Echo­ing Trump’s beliefs about putting Amer­i­ca first, Bres­na­han said there is a point where “enough is enough” and that Europe has to match U.S. con­tri­bu­tions to for­eign aid. 

“Again, I’m look­ing at, you know, 25% of my bridges are struc­tural­ly defi­cient. We have aging infra­struc­ture lev­ees that pro­tect over $1 tril­lion of prop­er­ty here in the Unit­ed States. You’re talk­ing about pow­er dis­tri­b­u­tion grids that haven’t been re-invest­ed in since the 1950s with 50 years of usable life. And, you know, we were with­out pow­er for mul­ti­ple days now, going on which could pos­si­bly be a week (Edi­tor’s note: A bliz­zard in Bre­shanan’s dis­trict had post­poned this inter­view). Europe did­n’t come and send over trucks to help us rebuild our grids.”

“Ukraine obvi­ous­ly has a lot going on, but we need to take care of our own peo­ple. We have to take care of our own Amer­i­cans. And I believe Don­ald Trump had that nar­ra­tive and that’s why he just won an elec­tion in a land­slide, because it’s about us,” he added. 

Bres­na­han hopes to bring “com­mon sense” solu­tions to the com­plex prob­lems fac­ing Amer­i­cans. He has pledged to work with whomev­er has a good idea, Repub­li­can or Demo­c­rat, and has earned endorse­ments from both No Labels and the mod­er­ate Prob­lem Solvers Cau­cus. Though he calls him­self a “fis­cal con­ser­v­a­tive,” he rejects polit­i­cal labels because “I don’t think con­fir­ma­tion bias is the right way to solve any issue.”

“I believe most chal­lenges can be over­come through healthy and sol­id debate,” he added.

And what about those issues that inflame pas­sions on both sides? Before this inter­view, Rep. Nan­cy Mace, R‑S.C., made nation­al head­lines after she put for­ward a res­o­lu­tion that would bar Rep. Sarah McBride, D‑Del., a trans­gen­der law­mak­er who is bio­log­i­cal­ly male, from using the wom­en’s bath­rooms in the capi­tol. 

Bres­na­han said that while he believes bio­log­i­cal men should not play in wom­en’s sports or use their facil­i­ties, the flare up between Mace and McBride dis­tracts from oth­er impor­tant issues fac­ing Amer­i­cans – like crum­bling infra­struc­ture and expen­sive liv­ing costs. 

“I don’t want the 119th Con­gress to be hijacked by what bath­rooms we should be using when we have been elect­ed to pro­vide real solu­tions for the real Amer­i­can peo­ple. And that’s what I’m going down to Wash­ing­ton, D.C. to do.” 

Fox News Dig­i­tal’s Emma Colton con­tributed to this report.

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