
.png)
Washington should work well,
even on Mondays.
Clearer rules. Less time wasted.
Practical ideas. Better leadership.
Vote November 5
Meet Scott Weldon
“This shouldn’t be this hard.”
Scott Weldon has spent years working in and around Washington. Long enough to know that not every problem needs a press conference.
Some problems just need someone to say, “Why are we doing it this way?” Scott has seen time lost to meetings that go nowhere, rules no one can read, and systems that forget there are real people using them.
He’s running for the U.S. Senate to fix the obvious stuff first.
Why I’m running!
Most federal frustrations aren’t dramatic.
They’re daily.
They don’t make headlines.
They make people roll their eyes.
And they pile up.
Scott believes governing should respect people’s time, attention, and common sense.


01
THE MEETING COULD HAVE BEEN AN EMAIL COALITION
Shorter meetings. Longer lives.
-
Default meeting length: 15-30 minutes (not 60)
-
“No PowerPoint Longer than 12 slides” rule
-
Friday afternoon meeting ban
02
THE FINE PRINT IS TOO SMALL PARTY
If it’s important, it should be readable.
-
Plain-language summaries on public notices
-
Big, clear boxes: What you need / What it costs / How long it takes
-
“No surprise fees” disclosure rule
-
Replace legal language with real examples
Clarity is a public service.
03
PAID BIRTHDAYS OFF
You were born. You earned a day.
-
One paid day off on your birthday.
-
Weekend birthday = weekday off
-
Applies to hourly and salaried workers
-
No guilt. No emails. No “quick call.”
Small Fixes. Real Impact.
Long meetings waste time.
Unreadable rules waste energy.
Never disconnecting wastes people.
None of this is partisan.
All of it is fixable.
Sometimes the best way to improve government is to make it a little more human.
_edited.png)


Make It Count
_edited.png)
If you think the federal government should work with less friction and more common sense, vote Scott Weldon for U.S. Senate.
Vote November 5

.png)