Advocates for Electronics: A Government Relations Team Puts Muscle Behind Your Hustle
August 18, 2025 | Michelle Te, Community MagazineEstimated reading time: 1 minute
When Steve Lechtenberg, president and partner of Mectronx in Wisconsin, needed guidance about how PFAS regulations could affect his business, he sent an email to a member of Congress representing his state.
That email later resulted in a two-hour in-person meeting with Scott Rausch, one of Sen. Ron Johnson’s team members.
“We discussed everything from how the Global Electronics Association helps Mectronx to how small contract manufacturers can compete in today’s global marketplace,” Steve says. “The discussion was genuine and refreshing.”
Mectronx is just one of many companies in the industry working with Rich Cappetto, senior director of North American Government Relations for the Global Electronics Association, to help members of Congress better understand the need for more decisive U.S. investment. He connects with Association members to help them be heard in Congress, where possible tax incentives and legislation could bolster U.S. electronics manufacturing.
“Our Government Relations team is committed to serving our members with timely, actionable information on public policies coming out of Washington that may impact their businesses,” Rich says. “Ultimately, our advocacy priorities are driven by member input. It’s essential that we hear from companies across all segments of the industry on the public policy challenges they’re facing. No matter the issue, member voices are often the most powerful way to make a compelling case to policymakers on Capitol Hill and in the White House.”
John Hauschild, managing director of TCLAD in Prescott, Wisconsin, has participated in multiple advocacy activities with help from the Global Electronics Association. “We have made good connections with most of our congressional representatives,” he says. “We need support from Congress to invest in the future of the PCB supply chain and the associated job and manufacturing footprint, to ensure businesses can grow and support next-generation needs for the U.S. defense and commercial sectors to remain at or ahead of our global competition.”
Continue reading this article in the Summer 2025 issue of Community Magazine, a joint effort with the Global Electronics Association and I-Connect007.
Editor’s note: Rich Cappetto contributed to this article before leaving the Global Electronics Association for a new position in the U.S. government.
Testimonial
"We’re proud to call I-Connect007 a trusted partner. Their innovative approach and industry insight made our podcast collaboration a success by connecting us with the right audience and delivering real results."
Julia McCaffrey - NCAB GroupSuggested Items
Electronics Manufacturing Needs Your Voice: Global Sentiment Survey Now Live
04/30/2026 | Global Electronics AssociationThe latest monthly Global Sentiment Survey from the Global Electronics Association is now open. At a time when demand uncertainty, policy shifts, energy costs, and supply chain recalibration are pulling the industry in multiple directions, the survey captures something macroeconomic data often misses: how manufacturers are actually experiencing conditions on the ground.
EPTAC Expands. New HQ in Salem, NH, Draws Industry Leaders
04/30/2026 | EPTAC CorporationEPTAC, a global leader in electronics manufacturing training, has opened its new corporate headquarters and training facility in Salem, New Hampshire, expanding its capacity to support workforce development across North America.
Global Electronics Association and CalcuQuote, an Elisa Industriq Business, Launch Joint Supply Chain Intelligence Initiative
04/29/2026 | Global Electronics AssociationThe Global Electronics Association and CalcuQuote, Elisa Industriq today announced a partnership to deliver timely, actionable supply chain intelligence for the electronics industry.
AI Reshaping the Memory Market; Effects Spreading Across Industries
04/29/2026 | Dr. Shawn DuBravac, Global Electronics AssociationArtificial Intelligence is often framed as a software story focused on algorithms and models. But beneath that narrative lies a more fundamental shift rooted in hardware. AI is not just changing what technology can do; it’s changing how the physical components behind it are produced, allocated, and priced. One of the clearest examples of this shift is now emerging in the global memory market.
Global Sourcing Spotlight: Building a Supply Chain That Bends, Not Breaks
04/29/2026 | Bob Duke -- Column: Global Sourcing SpotlightThe global supply chain is a complex, interdependent, and shifting organism. In the past few years, pandemics, tariffs, wars, natural disasters, and transportation chaos have tested it like never before, revealing that fragility is expensive. The companies that survive do so not through luck but through resiliency. For decades, companies built sourcing strategies around the illusion of stability—one supplier, region, and price. It worked until a port closed, a single supplier went down, or a production line froze.