Political Newcomer Takes On Republican Incumbent In Southern W.Va. Race For U.S. House

West Virginia’s Third District Congresswoman Carol Miller is up for re-election, and she’s running against Hilary Turner, a political newbie with progressive support.

The two women are squaring off in what was once a long-time Democratic stronghold. But even before its U.S. House seat recently shifted red in 2014, District 3 has always held a long history of extraction and social conservatism.

“Democrats in West Virginia, especially Southern West Virginia, consider themselves West Virginia Democrats, not national Democrats,” said former Democratic Congressman Nick Rahall — the state’s longest-serving House Representative, who represented southern West Virginia for almost 40 years.

“They don’t associate that much with the National Democratic platform,” Rahall said.

Since 2004, the southern counties have voted for a Republican presidential candidate in every election. But it wasn’t until Donald Trump’s victory in 2016, Rahall said, that local politicians began modeling their campaigns after his endorsement.

Enter Carol Miller, a former House Delegate, Huntington-area real estate agent and bison farmer, who tells voters that she’s pro-coal, pro-life, pro-border and pro-Trump.

“I mean, for every question she got asked there was a written statement response that always started out with how much she loved Donald Trump, loved the Bible and loved our country,” Rahall said of her campaign in 2018. “She was relying on Donald Trump’s coattails to get elected, and it worked. You can’t argue with success.”

Miller’s opponent Turner is banking on more progressive endorsements for her win, including support from the West Virginia Working Families Party and the West Virginia Can’t Wait movement. She’s campaigning on some of the same issues that the national Democratic party advocates for — universal healthcare, sustainable agriculture and a plan to address climate change.

“Far too long, we’ve had basically millionaire and billionaire politicians, buying their seats in office and catering to corporations,” Turner said. “And [they’re] leaving working people and working families behind. It’s just time for a huge shift.”

Going From Majority To Minority

Before Congress, Carol Miller served for about a decade in the West Virginia House of Delegates. Miller has lived in West Virginia for about 45 years, practicing real estate in the Huntington area and farming bison with her husband since the 1990’s. Her father was longtime Ohio Republican Congressman Samuel L. Devine.

While Miller’s win was one of several Republican victories in the West Virginia, she was the only newly elected Republican woman to win a race for the U.S. House in 2018 when that chamber flipped blue. At a bipartisan conference for women legislators, sponsored by Politico at the end of 2018, Miller said she looked forward to finding common ground solutions with lawmakers across the aisle.

“I have served in the minority before,” Miller said, referring to most of her time as a West Virginia House Delegate. “I knew even then that the most important thing is finding people of like mind in both parties, and working on policy that way. And that is the way I will continue to behave, and to learn.”

When it comes to legislation that Miller has co-sponsored, Govtrack reports Miller has been more centered than other members of her party.

However, FiveThirtyEight reported that in voting, Miller sides consistently with Trump on bills that he has publicly supported or opposed, while tracking from ProPublica shows that Miller has voted against her Republican colleagues less than 4% of the time.

‘You Need To Be Willing To Talk About Climate Change’

Miller declined requests from West Virginia Public Broadcasting for an interview through her campaign. Miller did agree to provide a few written responses over email.

Turner, meanwhile, agreed to an interview with WVPB, during which she said that she believes her stances on climate change during the June primary were far more advanced than that of her three Democratic opponents.

“I didn’t see a candidate that was talking about climate change,” Turner said. “That was a sign that maybe I needed to run for that seat, because I think running as a Democrat in 2020, you need to be willing to talk about climate change.”

Turner is a young mother who grew up mostly in Florida, but has deep roots in Greenbrier County, where her family has farmed for six generations. She taught abroad before moving to West Virginia, where she is a yoga instructor and has practiced massage therapy.

This is Turner’s first time running for public office, but she volunteered for the Bernie Sanders campaign in 2016. Turner said that she was inspired to run after watching a documentary on Netflix called “Knocking Down The House,” profiling four women running for the House in 2018 — including West Virginia’s Paula Jean Swearengin, this year’s Democratic nominee for Senate, and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a freshman House Representative from New York.

“You know, I’m only one year older than AOC,” Turner said. “Just showing her victory and how she was able to do that with just a grassroots effort was extremely inspiring, for me.”

Turner is one of four women running for Congress in West Virginia through the movement West Virginia Can’t Wait. She’s also one of more than 40 members who advanced in the June primary.

All of the politicians in West Virginia Can’t Wait have pledged to reject corporate contributions. For the District 3 race, that means Miller has been able to outraise Turner by at least $550,000, according to data from the Federal Election Commission from January 1, 2019, through June 30, 2020.

On Renewable Energy And Economic Development

In Southern West Virginia, where the coal industry was once a major employer and still provides a hefty chunk of jobs, census data from 2010 note that the area holds low college graduation levels and a median household income that’s almost half the national average.

“You’ve got a lot of people who don’t have a highly diverse skill-set,” said MaryBeth Beller, an associate professor of political science at Marshall University. “We don’t have a terribly diverse economy in District 3, and people are hurting.”

The county’s largest coal miner’s union, the United Mine Workers of America, has declined to endorse either candidate for office.

The union has endorsed politicians from both parties this year, including Republican Sen. Shelley Moore Capito for Senate and Democrat Ben Salango for governor, but UMWA members across the southern counties, where West Virginia’s coal jobs are most abundant, will not throw their weight behind either House candidate for 2020.

Turner says that if elected, she would advance policies for a “just transition” — the idea that as the country transitions away from fossil fuels toward cleaner forms of energy, the federal government should ensure coal-dependent communities and workers’ livelihoods are secure, by investing in these opportunities and connecting them directly with jobs in the renewable energy sector.

“A politician can’t really come in and say ‘I’m gonna bring all the coal jobs back, and I’m going to change the direction of the economy,’” Turner said. “But, what we can do is make sure that we are looking at where communities have been hurt by this transition, and looking at [how we can] help communities by investing in our people.”

At the WVU Center for Energy and Sustainable Development, director Jamie Van Nostrand says the need for a just transition becomes more urgent as climate change in the Mountain State gets worse, and as the demand for nonrenewable energy across the country drops.

“We had some pretty serious flooding four years ago, which I think is pretty largely attributable to the impacts as the temperatures increase, as humidity increases,” Van Nostrand said. Miller referred to the same floods during a 2019 committee hearing on ways to enhance U.S. resilience to climate change.

“The climate crisis is urgent, and it needs to be addressed on a bipartisan basis,” Van Nostrand said. “The world doesn’t care whether you’re Democrat or Republican. Mother Nature doesn’t care, frankly.”

Miller is one of five Republican members in the Select Committee on the Climate Crisis, created in 2019. Theoretically, Van Nostrand said Miller’s minority position could lend a hand to the nuance of West Virginia’s situation and help find common ground solutions with legislators across the aisle.

Yet, Miller’s voting record suggests she opposes most Democrat-backed legislation to address climate change. Miller said in an email to West Virginia Public Broadcasting that she uses the position to “[hold] the line against many radical proposals that will accomplish nothing except kill jobs in West Virginia.”

Miller cited a bill in one email that she co-sponsored with Congressman David McKinley, to demonstrate her commitment to “promoting West Virginia energy.” The Energy Security Cooperation with Allied Partners in Europe (ESCAPE) Act would ensure that U.S. oil will be promoted to the country’s allies abroad, to reduce their reliance on Russian energy. The bill was introduced in late July and was referred to the Energy and Commerce committee.

To Van Nostrand, “you can’t really reconcile” the differences between what this ESCAPE Act offers, and broader actions by the mostly-Democrat House for renewable energy.

“Greenhouse gas is a global pollutant,” Van Nostrand said. “It doesn’t matter whether the natural gas is burned in the United States or exported and burned in Europe, it’s going to contribute to concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, which is going to contribute to climate change.”

Third District Race Results Could Boil Down To Voter Turnout

Political experts nationally expect the Third District race will be an easy win for Miller. At the University of Virginia, political scientist Larry Sabato of Crystal Ball predicts the Third District will remain safe for Miller, due to her own and the president’s incumbency advantages.

Beller from Marshall University adds that Turner won her primary election in June with a slim 67-vote lead over three other Democrats. This might negatively affect Democrat turnout.

“What typically happens is that a lot of people whose initial candidate doesn’t win tend to not want to participate as much in the general election,” Beller said. “It actually is going to come down truly to voter turnout and party loyalty as to whether or not this is a competitive race.”

Election Day is Nov. 3, with early in-person voting from Oct. 21 to Oct. 31. Registration forms and absentee ballots can be requested from each county’s clerk. The Secretary of State’s office lists each clerk’s contact information on its website.

Emily Allen is a Report for America corps member.

The Battle for W.Va.’s 3rd House District: Ojeda v. Miller

Shortly after the teacher strike, Andrew Thomas stood before his fifth-grade social studies class at Mullens Middle School in Wyoming County, lowered the lights and showed his students a video of state Sen. Richard Ojeda. 
A conservative Republican who voted for Donald Trump, Thomas was fired up, much like the man on the screen. One of Ojeda’s latest commercials in his run for the state’s 3rd Congressional District includes footage from the strike at the Capitol in Charleston. Thomas is in for a few seconds — right in front.  

But when Thomas voted early last week, he didn’t settle on Ojeda after all. Once stirred by Ojeda’s support for teachers, Thomas thought he had instead started using teachers to gain the votes he needs to get to Congress, where he thinks he will forget about them. He thought he could be too aggressive on social media. He also didn’t like Ojeda’s vote last legislative session against the constitutional amendment that would move the state one step closer to banning Medicaid-funded abortions.

“I’m for a woman’s right to choose, but not funded by my tax dollars. That really was an issue for me personally, for my moral stance,” Thomas said. “I couldn’t vote for him solely because he backed my profession. I had to look at the whole picture.”

Though she’s a fellow Republican, House of Delegates member Carol Miller member wasn’t an option either, Thomas said, because she’s received money from the pharmaceutical lobby. He left the race blank — a decision he knows some teachers find shocking — but he thinks others might be similarly stuck. 

“What is he gonna do for teachers? He’s not gonna be a state rep anymore. He can make a bigger impact as a state rep,” Thomas said. 

Remember in November?

There are some, though, who are still energized by Ojeda’s campaign, like Matt McCormick, a Mountain Party voter, social studies teacher at Princeton Senior High School, in Mercer County, and an adjunct instructor at Wytheville Community College in Virginia. McCormick, who’s originally from Boone County, and his wife are both teachers and local union leaders, and they already voted for Ojeda.

“I think he really has a fundamental understanding of what we face in this state in terms of health care and lack of competitive pay,” McCormick said. 

Ojeda, of Logan, is an Army veteran and Democratic state senator representing Logan, Boone and Lincoln counties and parts of Wayne and Mingo counties. In office since 2016, he emerged as an advocate for striking teachers demanding better pay and a fix to their health insurance program during the last legislative session. 

Miller, his opponent, is the current state House Majority Whip representing parts of Cabell and Lincoln counties, but she’s been a state delegate since 2007. A bison farmer and small business owner, Miller is from Huntington and has the backing of Trump and his famiy.

Eyes on the 3rd District
This race is among the most closely watched U.S. House contests in the country, and a lot of money has poured in. As of Sunday, Miller has raised $1.6 million and Ojeda has raised $2.2 million, according to the Federal Election Commission.

Miller’s team has turned down or not responded to interview requests from several news outlets, and Ojeda’s campaign has said she won’t debate him. Nick Rahall, a Democrat who used to represent this House district, is closely watching this race, and he said he’s dismayed by her approach.

“This is not what the people deserve for those seeking their trust in public office,” Rahall said.  “They need to see the candidate, they need to hear directly from the candidate, and they need to be able to question candidates who seek their trust.”

This district voted for Trump by a 50-point margin. Polling generally has Miller slightly ahead of Ojeda in this race, but Ojeda has support from several labor unions.

Ojeda says he’s pro-coal and says he wants the state to be an energy leader again. He doesn’t support repealing the Affordable Care Act, but says he would introduce a public insurance plan that would also mean bigger tax credits for families. He supports legalizing medical cannabis, which he says could be instrumental in fighting the opioid epidemic, and he was the lead sponsor of the state’s medical marijuana law. 

Ojeda is more accessible to prospective voters. He gives out his phone number in one of his ads, and says he’ll answer himself. He’s held Facebook Live town halls. McCormick said he talked to him at a concert.

“I do not agree with everything that Ojeda says,” McCormick said. “I don’t really agree with him on his support of Trump’s coal policy, because I feel like it’s a detriment to the health of West Virginians. But he’s out there and he will tell you to your face exactly what he feels and what he believe, there’s no secrets with him regarding what he wants to do.”

Mum Miller
Carol Miller is more of a mystery. On her website, she says she wants to protect gas and coal,
fund education, create jobs, end the opioid epidemic and support Trump. But she doesn’t offer details. She recently appeared on WOWK-TV for a candidate profile, where she repeated a familiar refrain: “I am pro-life, pro-Second Amendment, pro-America, pro-God.”

Like Ojeda, she has said she wants to protect people with pre-existing conditions if the Affordable Care Act is repealed. Appalachia has some of the highest rates of pre-existing health conditions in the nation. Trump has said they’ll be protected if Republicans repeal the ACA, but Democrats are worried that ultimately won’t be the case. West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey and other GOP officials have sued the federal government to repeal it.

That issue “hits home to me,” said Joe White, a Democrat and the head of the West Virginia School Service Personnel Association, a union of 8,000 West Virginian. White, his wife and their son all have pre-existing conditions, he said. 

White, of Chapmanville, Logan County, described himself as an early supporter of Ojeda when the state senator sponsored a bill in early February that would have used some natural gas severance taxes to help fund the Public Employees Insurance Agency. In addition to a raise, teachers and school service personnel asked for a fix to that health care system. 

“He took it, run with it – now it didn’t see the light of day – but … he was a very strong supporter of that, and he’s been a strong supporter of education and labor,” he said. “I think they will remember in November.”

Election Day is Tuesday. Polls are open from 6:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. 

Trump Supports Miller in West Virginia's 3rd District House Race

President Donald Trump’s campaign has announced support for Republican Carol Miller in West Virginia’s 3rd Congressional District race.

The Trump Campaign said in a statement this week that Miller is “pro-coal, pro-Second Amendment, and pro-Trump” and encouraged people to vote for her.

Miller is the majority whip in the state House of Delegates. Her opponent is Democratic state Sen. Richard Ojeda

The 3rd District, whose voters strongly backed President Donald Trump in 2016, is being vacated by Republican Rep. Evan Jenkins, who ran for U.S. Senate and lost in the May primary.

Crowded Field Seeks 3rd District House Seat in West Virginia

Rep. Evan Jenkins’ dream of a U.S. Senate seat has opened a door for other ambitious West Virginia politicians, prompting a rush of contenders for his congressional seat and giving Democrats their best chance for a pickup in the Mountain State.

Eleven candidates are on the ballot in Tuesday’s primaries for the 3rd Congressional District seat Jenkins is vacating, including six current or former state legislators.

Democrats controlled the seat for nearly 40 years under Nick Rahall, who was defeated by the Democrat-turned-Republican Jenkins in 2014. Now four Democrats want to turn that red seat blue, and seven Republicans want to keep it GOP.

West Virginia Wesleyan political history professor Robert Rupp said the 3rd District will be the Democrats’ best chance to pick up a U.S. House seat in West Virginia.

“We’re talking about an open seat now that Evan’s left,” Rupp said. “So that’s automatically attractive.”

The top fundraiser by far among Democrats in the race is state Sen. Richard Ojeda. Rupp calls him a “charismatic candidate” with a powerful story.

A retired Army major, Ojeda’s facial bones were broken when he was attacked at a Logan County political cookout days before the 2016 primary. Jonathan Porter of Holden, was sentenced to up to five years in prison after authorities said he hit Ojeda from behind with a pipe and brass knuckles, then tried to run him over with a pickup truck.

Ojeda defeated a Senate incumbent in that primary and won his seat that November.

This past January, Ojeda’s passionate Senate speech in favor of teachers foreshadowed the fight they would wage over pay and benefits. “When I said that a volcano was about to erupt, we are in that situation,” Ojeda told lawmakers.

West Virginia teachers ultimately won a 5 percent pay increase after a nine-day strike, and their success ignited similar teacher walkouts in other states.

“Ojeda not only made his opinion known, he made his presence known,” Rupp said. “Rather than just saying ‘I’m for the teachers,’ (he’s) there fighting for them.”

Other current state lawmakers in the 3rd District field are Democratic Delegate Shirley Love and Republican Delegates Marty Gearheart, Rupie Phillips and Carol Miller. Former Delegate Rick Snuffer is on the GOP ticket. Snuffer won the 2012 GOP 3rd District primary over two others before losing to Rahall in the general election.

Miller, a bison farmer, small business owner and daughter of the late Ohio Congressman Samuel Devine, raised the most money among the Republicans, doubling the hauls of Phillips and former state Republican Party Chairman Conrad Lucas.

Republicans are outnumbered by Democrats in every county in the 3rd District, which stretches from the Ohio River through the southern coalfields to the Greenbrier Valley. But when President Donald Trump overwhelmingly won West Virginia, he also won a majority of the vote all of these counties, some as high as 84 percent.

Rupp doesn’t see support for Trump or the GOP waning in West Virginia, but he sees an “era of uncertainty” among voters. Their misgivings about career politicians might mean voters are “ready to try something else, and that’s a national angst,” he said.

Congressmen David McKinley from the 1st District and Alex Mooney from the 2nd District are unopposed in the GOP primary.

The 1st District Democratic primary includes Keyser attorney Tom Payne, retired international law firm CEO Ralph Baxter of Wheeling and West Virginia University law professor Kendra Fershee. Federal Election Commission records show Baxter’s campaign has raised $623,000, 10 times more than Fershee. Payne has not submitted a finance report.

Mooney will face either Aaron Scheinberg of Hedgesville or former Hillary Clinton state presidential campaign director Talley Sergent of Charleston in the general election. Scheinberg’s campaign raised $534,000 through mid-April, compared to $256,000 for Sergent.

Tomblin Says He Hasn't Decided on Possible Congressional Bid

Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin says he has been asked about running for Congress, and hasn’t decided either way yet.

The Logan County Democrat told The Associated Press he has been approached about vying for the 3rd Congressional District seat next year. The southern West Virginia seat is currently filled by freshman Republican Congressman Evan Jenkins.

Tomblin said he hasn’t made “any final decisions on anything yet,” adding that he’s keeping the door open.

Tomblin cannot run for re-election because he is reaching his term limits. The opening for governor is expected to draw a competitive field.

Tomblin won a special election for governor in 2011 and was re-elected in 2012.

Tomblin was appointed acting governor in November 2010 to replace Democratic U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin when he headed to Washington.

Jenkins Takes Congressional Seat in Monumental Win Over Rahall

After switching parties in the spring, Evan Jenkins will now head to D.C. after pulling off what could be called a monumental upset.  

Jenkins unseats Nick Rahall from the 3rd congressional district seat after a reign that lasted 38 years. Jenkins began his political career as a member of the House in 1994 and elected to the Senate in 2002. Even though he defeated a long time member of Congress, in his victory speech Jenkins says he appreciates what Rahall did for the state.

Jenkins was initially a republican, and switched to the Democratic Party in 1993 to run for the House of Delegates. In July of 2013 he announced he was switching back to the Republican Party to run against Rahall. And that switch and subsequent win will put Jenkins on the majority side.

The victory means Rahall for the first time in almost 40 years will no longer represent southern West Virginia in Washington D.C.

Around 10 o’clock, the 19 term member of the U.S. House of Representatives spoke to supporters and reporters. He thanked his family, friends and volunteers.

The 65-year-old Rahall was first elected to congress in 1976, at the age of 27, making him one of the youngest members to serve in the U.S. House of Representatives. 

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