W.Va. Leaders React To Overturn Of Roe v. Wade

West Virginia’s elected officials and community leaders are reacting to the Supreme Court’s ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization.

**Note: This is a developing story and will be updated as more information becomes available.

Updated on Friday, June 24 at 3:40 p.m.

West Virginia’s elected officials and community leaders are reacting to the Supreme Court’s ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization. In a 6-3 decision, the court upheld a 2018 Mississippi state law that bans most abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy. The ruling overturns the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that previously protected a pregnant person’s right to an abortion.

However, as Sen. Shelley Moore Capito pointed out in her statement, the ruling does not create a federal ban on abortion, but returns the decision to the states.

“By overturning Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey, the Supreme Court has returned this issue to the states to make their own determination. I support this decision, and I would expect West Virginia to support this decision as well. This ruling does not create a federal ban on abortion, as has been suggested by some of my colleagues. Many feel strongly on this issue, but I condemn violent rhetoric and threats towards the Supreme Court Justices. I will continue to oppose extreme legislation at the federal level, and will follow debates in state legislatures, including in West Virginia, on this issue.”

Sen. Shelley Moore Capito

Sen. Joe Manchin expressed disappointment at the ruling and stated his support for legislation that would codify abortion rights.

“I am deeply disappointed that the Supreme Court has voted to overturn Roe v. Wade. It has been the law of the land for nearly 50 years and was understood to be settled precedent. I trusted Justice Gorsuch and Justice Kavanaugh when they testified under oath that they also believed Roe v. Wade was settled legal precedent and I am alarmed they chose to reject the stability the ruling has provided for two generations of Americans. “As a Catholic, I was raised pro-life and will always consider myself pro-life. But I have come to accept that my definition of pro-life may not be someone else’s definition of pro-life. I believe that exceptions should be made in instances of rape, incest and when the life of the mother is in jeopardy. But let me be clear, I support legislation that would codify the rights Roe v. Wade previously protected. I am hopeful Democrats and Republicans will come together to put forward a piece of legislation that would do just that.”

Sen. Joe Manchin

At the state level, Gov. Jim Justice applauded the ruling and said he will move to hold a special session to clarify West Virginia law on the issue of abortion.

“I applaud the Supreme Court’s courageous decision today. I’ve said many times that I very proudly stand for life and I am rock-solid against abortion, and I believe that every human life is a miracle worth protecting. “I will not hesitate to call a special session after consulting with the Legislature and my legal team if clarification in our laws needs to be made.”

Gov. Jim Justice

In his statement, Attorney General Patrick Morrisey expressed pride in supporting the ruling, and echoed Justice in a desire to see the state’s legislature act on the issue.

“This historic decision is long past due, although it took nearly 50 years to overturn several flawed Supreme Court decisions that have led to the tragic deaths of more than 60 million unborn children,” Attorney General Morrisey said. “I am proud to stand with those who agree that the law must afford the unborn the same rights as everyone, most especially the inviolable right to life. Our Constitution should never have been interpreted in a way that lets it override the states’ compelling interest to protect innocent life.” “In the next few days, I will be providing a legal opinion to the Legislature about how it should proceed to save as many babies’ lives as humanly and legally possible.”

Attorney General Patrick Morrisey

Katie Quinonez is the executive director of Women’s Health Center of West Virginia in Charleston, the state’s only abortion clinic. She issued a statement on the decision saying the clinic would stop providing abortions immediately.

Quinonez clarified that the Women’s Health Center of West Virginia remains open and provides reproductive health services such as birth control, breast and cervical cancer screening, gender affirming care, pregnancy and parenting support, STI testing and treatment, and wellness exams.

“Roe has never been enough, but in states like West Virginia, it was the only thing protecting abortion access. Due to the inaction of our lawmakers to repeal the crime of abortion in our state code, it is impossible for our clinic to provide abortion. This will force West Virginians to travel hundreds to thousands of miles away from their home to access healthcare and will harm marginalized communities the most.”

Katie Quinonez, executive director of Women’s Health Center of West Virginia

Mike Pushkin, West Virginia Democratic Party Chair, issued a statement along with two of his colleagues.

“Make no mistake about it, this decision will make all abortions illegal in West Virginia with no exceptions to protect the life and health of the mother and no exceptions for the victims of rape and incest. If the Governor and the legislature fail to act to preserve these common-sense exemptions, women will pay with their lives.”

Mike Pushkin, West Virginia Democratic Party Chair

Danielle Walker, Democratic Party Vice Chair said simply,

“This decision is just radical and wrong.”

Danielle Walker, Democratic Party Vice Chair

Delegate Kayla Young, D-Kanawha, echoed Walker’s statement.

“This draconian decision puts women's healthcare on the ballot in November. We need to elect legislators who understand that reproductive decisions are best made by a woman and her physician, rather than the government.”

Kayla Young, D-Kanawha

In a quote tweet of Del. Young, Walker asked her followers to think of patients and victims, and said bodily autonomy did not belong to the government.

In a joint statement, Senate President Craig Blair, R-Berkeley, and Speaker of the House Roger Hanshaw, R-Clay, said attorneys for the state legislature prepared for the decision for weeks, and will work to review existing statutes in the new context.

“We applaud the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision today to affirm that every human life is precious. We stand strong with the majority of West Virginians who have shown us and told us they believe unborn children are entitled to the same rights as everyone, and we are ready to expeditiously take any necessary steps to ensure we continue to save and protect as many innocent lives as possible in West Virginia. Our legislative attorneys have been preparing for this decision for weeks. Abortion is addressed in numerous statutes in West Virginia Code, and now our attorneys will need to further review those statutes to determine how they apply in light of this decision. We will work with the executive branch to address any needs relating to our state’s abortion laws that may arise from today’s opinion.”

Senate President Craig Blair and Speaker of the House Roger Hanshaw, via joint statement

In a Tweet, Rep. Carol Miller said she was pleased to see the Supreme Court overturn Roe v. Wade.

Senator Mike Caputo, D-Marion, expressed disappointment in the Supreme Court, and said he remained proudly pro-choice.

I am so, so bitterly disappointed in our United States Supreme Court. The courts should be a place devoid of politics, but this decision and its majority opinions—both leaked and published—are overtly political. Protections that have been in place for women and pregnant people for fifty years have been overturned. We have lost legal protections from government control of personal medical decisions and a person’s right to choose their own future. Being a parent and a grandparent has been one of my greatest joys in life. It is one of the best choices my wife and I ever made. But it was just that—a choice. I believe everyone should have the opportunity to decide for themselves whether or not to be a parent. I believe every person should be able to control what happens to their body, and that decision should be made with a sober heart in the consultation of medical professionals—not politicians. I am proud to remain pro-choice. I encourage constituents who are angered, saddened, or moved by the SCOTUS decision to take those emotions to the polls in November.

Mike Caputo, D-Marion

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Bill Crane Takes Over As Adjutant General For W.Va. National Guard

The West Virginia National Guard announced its newest leader Monday, while honoring its outgoing adjutant general of the last decade.

Brig. Gen. William E. “Bill” Crane will lead the state’s 6,500-member guard, consisting of citizen soldiers and airmen. Crane’s new role will include supervision of the guard’s day-to-day operations, in addition to the overall management of resources and personnel.

“We have a tremendous team,” Crane said during a virtual Change of Command ceremony Monday. “During this pandemic response, I’ve seen the Army and the Air Guard come together as one guard, one guard that includes our service members, their families, our retirees [and] our civilian workforce, both state and federal.”

Crane joined the National Guard in 1984, through the ROTC program and West Virginia University. He was promoted to Brigadier General in March, having started 36 years earlier as a vehicle driver for the 1092nd Engineer Battalion.

Crane is taking over after Maj. Gen. James Hoyer, who announced his own retirement in November. Hoyer promoted Crane to his latest rank in March.

Hoyer joined the West Virginia National Guard in 1983 through a joint ROTC program with West Virginia State University. Hoyer was promoted to adjutant general in 2011.

During Monday’s ceremony, Gov. Jim Justice thanked Hoyer for leading the state’s response to rebuilding hundreds of the homes lost to the 2016 floods, which killed 23 West Virginians and destroyed more than 1,500 homes and businesses.

Justice also awarded Hoyer with the West Virginia Distinguished Service Medal during Monday’s online event.

“It’s been an honor and a privilege to serve with and lead each one of the men and women of the National Guard,” Hoyer said Monday. “I would ask the men and the women of the National Guard to continue to lead by example, follow the Army and Air Force values. Our nation needs it more than ever before.”

Hoyer said he looks forward to helping the state “in a different uniform,” as he will remain on the governor’s COVID-19 task force and work for West Virginia University as senior associate vice president.

COVID-19 Remembrance: Wade Shaffer

Charleston, West Virginia resident Wade Shaffer, was described as “passionate” and “kind,” the type of person who was the life of the party and always the first to lend a hand. The 42-year-old died last month from COVID-19.

His friend Mindy Parsley has this remembrance. 

 

This story was produced by Brittany Patterson. Music from Blue Dot Sessions. 

If you have lost a family member or close friend to the coronavirus and would like to share their story, we would like to help. Please fill out our Google form and a reporter will be in touch. 

Groups Call on Capitol Building Commission To Remove Stonewall Jackson Statue

A group of 30 organizations across West Virginia is calling on the Capitol Building Commission and Gov. Jim Justice to take down a statue of Stonewall Jackson from the state Capitol grounds.

In an open letter, the groups including the ACLU of West Virginia, the NAACP of West Virginia, WVU Black Law Students Association, and the West Virginia Center on Budget and Policy, criticized the commission for meeting this week without discussing the matter.

“Although state and local governments across the country, including in our own capital city, are finally taking rightful action to remove statues and monuments that glorify some of the most shameful periods of our country’s history, the Commission’s reasoning for not addressing the statue’s continued presence on state grounds is because they had not received any requests to do so,” they wrote in the letter.

“Chairman [Randall] Reid-Smith and members of the Capitol Building Commission: Consider this a formal request,” they wrote to the panel who oversees structures on the grounds of the state capitol complex. 

Thomas Jonathan “Stonewall” Jackson was a Confederate general and slave holder, who was born in 1824 in what is now Clarksburg, West Virginia. 

Earlier this week, the school board in Kanawha County voted to rename the former Stonewalll Jackson Middle School. And last week, the City of Charleston removed a bronze plaque from a memorial at one of its parks. It lists the names of local men who fought for the Confederacy during the Civil War.

Last month, Justice said whether the memorials at the state Capitol should remain are a matter for the Legislature to consider. He avoided saying whether he wants to see them taken down. But state code gives the Capitol Building Commission, which the governor partially appoints, authority to decide on the future of statues on Capitol grounds.

“I don’t think I have any right to make a decision. I think that’s a legislative right,” Justice said. “From the standpoint of my personal beliefs, I don’t feel like — that — anyone should feel uncomfortable here. This is our capitol. This is our state. This is our people.”

Kanawha School Board Votes Unanimously To Rename Stonewall Jackson Middle School

The Kanawha County school board voted unanimously to remove Stonewall Jackson’s name from a Charleston middle school.  

Before the 5-0 vote Monday, more than a dozen speakers asked the Board of Education to change the school’s name, including middle school student Camdyn Harris.

 

“I’m speaking for myself, my family, future generations, the West Side and the greater Charleston community as a whole. We are not trying to take away history, but we are moving forward starting today, starting now, for my future, my classmates’ future and future generations,” he said.

Born in 1824 in present-day Clarksburg, Thomas Jonathan “Stonewall” was a Confederate general who owned slaves and became one of the most recognizable figures of the Civil War. Sites in more than a dozen states bear his name, including several in West Virginia. 

Nearly half the students at Stonewall Jackson Middle are Black. Discussions are ongoing about renaming the school after influential Black educator Booker T. Washington, a Virginia native, or NASA mathematician Katherine Johnson, who was born in West Virginia, but the board has until October to formally decide.

The vote came one week after the City of Charleston quietly removed the face of Riflemen Memorial at a park Downtown. The bronze plaque listed the names of local men who fought for the Confederacy during the Civil War.

But in Clarksburg, Jackson’s birthplace, the Harrison County Commission rejected a motion last month to remove a statue of him in front of the downtown courthouse.

Across West Virginia, roughly 20 statues, memorials and other markers still stand, honoring Confederate generals and soldiers, according to data compiled by the Southern Poverty Law Center

Even two weeks ago, it was unclear whether the school board’s vote would be unanimous. Member Becky Jordon last month said “maybe this is a knee jerk option,” when asked about the proposal. But on Monday, she acknowledged that “times are changing,” while imploring the community to invest time and resources into the school.  

“I had been the most vocal about not wanting this change, I know that,” she said.  Later she added, “let’s step up what’s inside that building. Yeah, we’re gonna change the outside of the name, but we have a lot more changes to do, and you all need to step it up.”

 

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