
The
son of an Army officer, Joe spent several years of his youth
living in the Philippines. He attended Asbury College in Kentucky and received his
Master’s Degree from West Chester University in Pennsylvania. He served in the United States Air Force from 1963 to 1969,
rising to the rank of Captain and flying 116 combat missions as a navigator and
electronic warfare officer in Vietnam.
After leaving the Air Force, Joe returned to teaching math and science and coaching basketball at Great Valley High School, near Malvern College in Chester County, Pennsylvania.
In 1972, Joe began his service in the Pennsylvania state legislature. During his 24 years in Harrisburg, he served as chairman of the Labor and Industry Committee. He was then chosen by his colleagues to chair the powerful House Appropriations Committee for eight years.
In 1997, Joe was sworn into Congress, replacing Congressman Bob Walker as representative of Pennsylvania's 16th Congressional District.
During his first term, Joe served on the Budget, Transportation, and Small Business committees, working hard to balance the federal budget and acquire much-needed and long-overdue funding for highway safety improvements in Lancaster and Chester counties.
In his second term, he moved from the Transportation Committee to the Armed Services Committee, where he became a champion of electronic warfare technology. During his third and fourth terms, Joe moved to the Energy and Commerce and Foreign Affairs Committees. On each committee, Joe established himself as a leading conservative voice. During his sixth term, Joe took leave from the International Relations Committee to focus his efforts on the powerful Energy and Commerce Committee, the oldest and most prestigious committee in Congress.
Now in his seventh term, Joe continues to serve exclusively on the Energy and Commerce Committee. He will continue his service on the the Commerce, Trade, and Consumer Protection Subcommittee, as well as the Health Subcommittee, and has been added to the important Energy and Environment Subcommittee where he will play a role in crafting legislation to strengthen our nation's energy infrastructure. Joe is recognized as a leader on wireless privacy issues, medical devices and medical imaging technology, as well as oversight of federal agencies that fall within the committee's jurisdiction.
Since he came to Congress in 1997, Joe has been a staunch fiscal conservative and promoter of traditional family values. He is chairman of the Central Asia Caucus, the Electronic Warfare Working Group, the Fatherhood Promotion Task Force, the Religious Prisoners Congressional Task Force, the Values Action Team, and the Wilberforce Group. He belongs to the Alzheimer’s Caucus, the Air Force Caucus, the Fire Caucus, the Helsinki Commission, the Human Rights Caucus, the Pro-Life Caucus, the Republican Study Committee, the Steel Caucus, and the Congressional Caucus on the Western Sahara.
Both as a member of the Foreign Affairs Committee and apart from it, Joe worked hard to champion human rights and humanitarian efforts around the world. He has coordinated humanitarian aid to Western Sahara, Pakistan, and many other countries. He regularly advocates for people who have been imprisoned for their religious beliefs.
Joe is active with many organizations at home in Pennsylvania as well, including the Brandywine Valley Association, Bridges of Peace International, Crosslinks, Eastern College, the Keystone State Games, the Po-Mar-Lin Fire Company, the Retired Officers Association, Rotary Club International, HOPE International and the Veterans of Foreign Wars.
Among the many awards and honors he has received are the Award for Manufacturing Legislation Excellence from the National Association of Manufacturers, the Guardian of Small Business Award from the National Federation of Independent Business, the Spirit of Enterprise Award from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the William Wilberforce Award from Prison Fellowship Ministries, the Taxpayer Hero Award from Citizens Against Government Waste, and the Hero of the Taxpayer Award from Americans for Tax Reform.