Mac Warner, Natalie Tennant Debate, Hosted By WVPB, Airs Sept 17 At 6 PM

West Virginia Public Broadcasting will air a debate between secretary of state candidates Natalie Tennant and incumbent Mac Warner on Sept. 17 at 6 p.m.

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The hour-long debate will be simulcast statewide on WVPB television, radio and digital networks. Senior reporter Dave Mistich hosts the event, which was taped online today, Sept. 10.

Warner, the Republican candidate, has served one term as secretary of state. He ousted Tennant, a Democrat, in 2017 after the former broadcaster had served two terms as secretary of state, starting in 2009.

Tennant, 52, is a native of Fairmont and a graduate of West Virginia University where she received a bachelor’s in journalism and a master’s in corporate and organizational communication. She was the Democratic nominee for U.S. Senate in 2014, but lost her election bid to Sen. Shelley Moore Capito.

Warner, 65, is a Morgantown native and graduate of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point and West Virginia University’s law school. He received an LLM degree from the University of Virginia. He served in the U.S. Army’s Judge Advocate General Corps.

“We are eager to offer an opportunity for these candidates to share their positions with West Virginia voters,” said Andrea Billups, WVPB’s director of news and public affairs. “We look forward to an informative and spirited exchange on important state issues.

WVPB Automation Error Caused Biden Speech To End Abruptly

A West Virginia Public Broadcasting automation error caused the PBS satellite feed of Joe Biden’s speech at the 2020 Democratic National Convention to end 15 minutes early on local stations.

“We sincerely apologize for the mistake,” said Executive Director Chuck Roberts. “We are providing a variety of viewing options to make sure you have an opportunity to see the speech in its entirety.”

The speech will air on WVPB’s main channel again today at 6:30 p.m. before PBS NewsHour. If that time is inconvenient for viewers, PBS NewsHour has provided WVPB the following links to the speech to share with those who prefer to watch it on their own time.

Viewers also may access the transcript of the speech here.

COVID-19 Could Lead To Highest Absentee Ballot 'Turnout' In W.Va. History

Days after the governor issued a stay home order on March 23, Secretary of State Mac Warner announced his office was opening absentee voting to all of the state’s roughly 1.2 million registered voters. 

Since then, nearly 18 percent of those registered so far, or 214,852 people, have requested an absentee ballot from their county clerks. 

That’s 206,873 more requests than county clerks received during the last presidential primary in 2016. Already, more than 86,000 absentee ballots have been cast statewide, compared to the 6,567 that were submitted four years ago.

Historically, the Warner’s office reports less than 3 percent of voters cast an absentee-by-mail ballot, a method usually reserved in West Virginia for those with a serious medical condition, or residents who are out of state due to work or military service. 

“We normally don’t have a lot of absentee ballot requests,” Wirt County Clerk Marolyn Baldridge said. “And so, you know, this year, it’s a whole different ball game.” 

County clerks who send out and accept these ballots, in small and big counties alike, are noticing the uptick. Some are working overtime to keep up.

In Wirt County, home to roughly 3,000 registered voters, there already has been 725 requests. In 2016 Baldridge said there were 21 total ballots cast for the primary election.

Cabell County Clerk Phyllis Smith estimates there is roughly 55,000 registered voters in her county. As of Wednesday, she said she had received 11,016 requests.

“And we have received back 4,121,” she added. Normally, she said her office will see 500 to 1,000 in a presidential primary. 

Roger Toney is the Boone County clerk. His staff of five have received more than 2,400 requests already, from among 15,000 registered voters.

“Before we would have between 50 and 100 absentee ballots, in a whole year for an election,” Toney said.

The Challenge of Absentee Ballots

Absentee ballots require a lot of work. The county clerk’s office must verify signatures. Staff have to make sure people are registered according to the party ballot they requested.

“The work has basically consumed everyone here,” Toney said.

While workers across the state are being encouraged to work from home, and thousands of others have lost their jobs, Toney said his staff have been at the courthouse most days. 

“We were operating on a rotational basis because you know, COVID-19,” Toney said. “Three or four weeks ago, I had to basically call everyone and tell them, ‘you’ve got to come back to work full time.’” 

The Boone County Clerk’s office has lost staffing positions over the years, which Toney says is due to years of declining coal severance taxes that the county uses to fund itself. 

For overtime and other voting costs related to running an election during the COVID-19 pandemic, the Secretary of State’s office has said it will use federal dollars for voting aid to reimburse the counties.

West Virginia received $3.8 million for voting from the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, which included $400 million in emergency funds to the Help America Vote Act. 

West Virginians have until Tuesday, May 19, to register for the 2020 primary election. Early in-person voting runs from May 27 to June 6. The Secretary of State moved election day from May 12 to June 9. Absentee ballot applications are due June 3.

Emily Allen is a Report for America corps member.

Battery Charges Dismissed Against Marion County Delegate Mike Caputo

Misdemeanor battery charges against Del. Mike Caputo, D-Marion, for an incident that happened toward the end of the last legislative session were dismissed on Monday, Jan. 27. 

Almost a year ago Caputo, now a candidate for state Senate, kicked open House chamber doors, allegedly injuring a doorkeeper on the other side.

When he admitted to the incident shortly after it happened in March, Caputo told reporters he had been bothered by an anti-Muslim display outside the chambers.

Caputo’s attorney requested in December that a Kanawha County magistrate dismiss the charges, which were filed by the Capitol police in September. The lawmaker’s attorney argued that Caputo was entitled to legislative immunity.

According to state code, lawmakers are allowed such immunity — from civil and criminal prosecution — while the Legislature is in session.

“[The] defendant was trying to enter the House chamber in an effort to carry out his privileges as a member of the House of Delegates,” Judge Tod Kaufman wrote Monday in Kanawha County Circuit Court. “Because this legislative act committed within the legislative sphere is statutorily protected activity, defendant cannot be prosecuted criminally and will be shielded from the issuance of extraordinary writs with respect to his legislative acts.” 

The Department of Military Affairs and Public Safety, which leads the Capitol Police, did not respond immediately to a request for comment Monday evening, nor did the prosecutor’s office.  

Caputo, who was absent from the House floor Monday morning, said in a typed statement that day he was pleased by the news.

“I hope this matter is finally over,” Caputo said. “I apologized before, both to the House publicly and the young man personally, and I’m still sorry for my actions. But I can say without reservation that I had no intention of hurting anyone.”

Emily Allen is a Report for America corps member.

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