Improving Schools, Holding Social Media Accountable On House Docket

From improving schools and learning, to providing guidance on social media and political campaign ads, along with harsher penalties for the sexual assault of a minor the House of Delegates had a wide range of bills on third reading Friday.  

From improving schools and learning, to providing guidance on social media and political campaign ads, along with harsher penalties for the sexual assault of a minor the House of Delegates had a wide range of bills on third reading Friday.  

Local school improvement councils are one way the legislature hopes to improve academic performance. 

Senate Bill 172 would revise the requirements of those councils to include teachers, staff, parents and students in grades seven or higher. Council members would be trained in school and community engagement, transparency and more.

The bill passed 93-4 and now goes to the Senate.  

House Bill 4191 is intended to prevent corruption and provide transparency of election-related content on social media websites. 

Key to this bill would be to hold social media platforms, like Facebook or X for example, responsible if found to cause any increase in online visibility or attempt by the social media platform to modify and influence a user’s understanding or opinion regarding any candidate, party, or political party in the State of West Virginia. Enforcement would be through the Secretary of State and Attorney General’s office. 

The bill passed 61-35 and goes to the Senate

House Bill 5235 would double the criminal penalty for anyone found guilty of the sexual assault on a minor. 

Del. Joey Garcia, D-Marion, had concerns over unintended consequences of the bill. He recalled from testimony in committee that double penalties could suppress plea agreements and adversely affect juvenile victims having to go to trial.

“If somebody is unwilling to take a plea, and they’re going to roll the dice on the trial, you have to prepare the victim, you have to have the victim testify and have to go through really the trauma, the trauma of that situation all over again,” Garcia said. “And there’s a possibility that they would lose, which can always happen at trial, and that somebody who may have committed an act like this gets off.”  

But Del. Todd Kirby, R-Raleigh, voiced a different perspective. He noted that a large percentage of the cases that are tried in his district involve child sexual abuse.

“And the reason is, the penalties are already extremely high as well, they should be,” Kirby said. “But if we’re going to have the people that are victims of these horrible crimes come forward and express their story and tell their story to a jury, often in an open courtroom, we should allow them to secure a sufficient penalty for the perpetrator. And so I think that I don’t disagree that there may be some instances where this could keep a defendant from pleading guilty. So be it, let him come in and defend himself and let the victim tell the court and the jury exactly what happened. And when that happens, they should be rewarded with a stiff penalty of 40 years, and a doubling of all the other penalties.”

The bill passed 98-0 and also goes to the Senate.

Moore Capito Resigns From House Of Delegates

In an unusual departure from administration news, Del. Moore Capito, R-Kanawha, joined Gov. Jim Justice’s regular briefing Thursday to announce that he would be stepping aside from his elected position as delegate and chairman of the Judiciary Committee to focus on his campaign for governor.

In an unusual departure from administration news, Del. Moore Capito, R-Kanawha, joined Gov. Jim Justice’s regular briefing Thursday to announce that he would be stepping aside from his elected position as delegate and chairman of the Judiciary Committee to focus on his campaign for governor.  

“I have informed the Speaker of the same, that I will step aside from my role in the House of Delegates so that I can focus my full attention on the people of West Virginia,” Capito said, referring to Speaker Roger Hanshaw, R-Clay.

Capito has endorsed Justice in his run for the U.S. Senate, but the governor says giving Capito this platform to campaign and make a resignation announcement is not an endorsement.

“We’ve got multiple candidates and everything,” Justice said. “I’ll make a decision as we go forward.”  

The regular session of the West Virginia Legislature begins Jan. 10. The vice chairman of the House Judiciary Committee has been Delegate Tom Fast, R-Fayette,

Capito is the son of U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito and the grandson of the late Gov. Arch Moore. He announced his campaign for governor last year.

Capito was first elected to the House of Delegates in 2016. He was named  House Judiciary Committee Chairman in 2020. 

The 2024 West Virginia Legislature regular session begins Jan. 10. The House Judiciary Committee Vice-Chair is Del. Tom Fast, R-Fayette.

Justice said Capito came to him requesting this announcement platform Wednesday night. 

“He’s done a heck of a nice job and he’s a great young man and has an incredible family,” Justice said. “I have not given any thought on who’s going to replace his House seat.”  

W.Va. State Auditor McCuskey Exits Governor’s Race, Enters 2024 Attorney General Campaign  

State Auditor J.B. McCuskey announced Monday he has dropped out of the governor’s race and is now running for attorney general.

State Auditor J.B. McCuskey announced Monday he has officially dropped out of the governor’s race and is now running for attorney general. 

In changing campaigns, the former delegate and two term state auditor said he realized he was behind in the polls and fundraising in a primary race for governor that included a U.S. Senator’s son, Del. Moore Capito, R-Kanawha, businessman Chris Miller, current Attorney General Patrick Morrisey and current Secretary of State Mac Warner. McCuskey said seeking the AG’s office was a better goal.  

“I looked at the offices,” McCuskey said. “I believe that the combination of my experience as the executive of one of the largest constitutional offices in the state of West Virginia, with my extensive legal background, makes me an ideal candidate to be the next attorney general.”

McCuskey says his nearly $700,000 campaign war chest stands strong in running against the other republican AG candidates, State Sens. Ryan Weld, R-Brooke, and Mike Stewart, R-Kanawha. He came in fourth in fundraising for the governor’s race, showing $412,083 cash-on-hand. 

That’s a good deal more than his two AG primary opponents. 

Stating he’s a strong and principled conservative, McCuskey said the AG’s office acts as the state’s lawyer for all of the agencies, all of the boards and commissions, and all the constitutional officers.

“As the person that managed all the finances for every single one of those agencies,” he said. “Often dealing in the legal realm as to what is legal and what is possible, I think that being the state’s lawyer with all those relationships is going to be a huge help.”

McCuskey said he wants “to continue what Patrick Morrisey has accomplished over his time as attorney general that has been wildly successful.”  He said his campaign will focus on being a consumer protection advocate, civil rights protector, criminal justice reformer and empowering the state’s public defender service.

“We have worked long and hard in our office to make sure that they’re getting paid very quickly,” McCuskey said. “We need to make sure that we’re paying them appropriately so that we can have a great public defender’s office to ensure all of those duties are running smoothly.”

J.B. McCuskey lives in Charleston, with his wife Wendy, and daughters Martha and Charlotte. 

Public Integrity Investigation Unit Formed in West Virginia

Federal prosecutors in southern West Virginia say multiple agencies are forming a unit to investigate public corruption and suspected violations of campaign and election laws.

U.S. Attorney Mike Stuart and other agencies announced Tuesday the formation of a Public Integrity Special Investigations Unit.

Among the agencies involved in the unit are the FBI, the IRS, the U.S. departments of Veterans Affairs, Defense and Homeland Security, state police and the state auditor’s office.

Stuart says the secretary of state’s office will help investigate campaign and election law violations. Other investigations that the unit will handle are the misuse of public funds and suspected criminal activity.

He says the unit will focus on potential illegal activity involving both elected officials as well as federal, state and municipal employees.

Stuart calls public corruption “a cancer on our system of government.”

Convicted Ex-Coal CEO to Start US Senate Bid with Town Hall

A former coal company CEO who served a one-year prison term on charges related to the deadliest U.S. mine disaster in four decades is kicking off his U.S. Senate campaign with a town hall meeting for voters.

Ex-Massey Energy boss Don Blankenship is scheduled to attend the meeting Thursday night at the Chief Logan Lodge, Hotel and Conference Center in Logan. Blankenship has said he wants to tell voters why he’s the best candidate. A news conference is planned afterward.

Blankenship will face U.S. Rep. Evan Jenkins and West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey in the GOP primary on May 8. Democrat Joe Manchin is seeking re-election.

Blankenship has said President Donald Trump “needs more than just another vote. He needs input as to how West Virginia can improve its citizens’ quality of life.”

The 67-year-old was released from a federal prison in California last year. He is currently serving one year of supervised release scheduled to end on May 9 — one day after the primary.

Blankenship received approval last August to have his supervised release transferred to federal officials in Nevada, where he has a home in Las Vegas.

He was sentenced in 2016 for a misdemeanor conviction of conspiring to violate federal mine safety standards at Massey’s Upper Big Branch Mine in southern West Virginia, where 29 workers died in a 2010 explosion. He was acquitted of felonies that could have stretched his sentence to 30 years.

The U.S. Supreme Court rejected Blankenship’s bid to appeal. He has insisted he’s innocent, and that natural gas and not methane gas and excess coal dust caused the explosion. He has blamed Manchin for helping create the public sentiment against him and challenged the senator to a debate.

“I know who I am and what I am,” Blankenship said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press in May after leaving prison. “And I’m more than 100 percent innocent, and the charges were ridiculous. And all the emotion and all the publicity about it was just incorrect, which has been the case with me for years and years.”

Authorities have long dismissed Blankenship’s argument. Manchin, who was West Virginia’s governor during the time of the mine explosion, has said he hoped Blankenship would “disappear from the public eye” after his prison release.

Morrisey Says Anonymous Election Materials Should be Legal in W.Va.

West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey says a state law prohibiting anonymous election pamphlets is unconstitutional.

Morrisey issued the opinion Tuesday in response to a request by Secretary of State Mac Warner. Both are Republicans.

Morrisey says the state law quote “violates the First Amendment because it is overbroad and not narrowly tailored to a compelling state interest.” Morrisey says a federal court decision in West Virginia in 1996 found an older version of the same law about freedom of expression prohibitions concerning anonymous pamphlets was unconstitutional.

Secretary of State spokesman Steven Allen Adams says residents and political candidates had raised concerns about 2017 municipal election campaign materials such as yard signs, pamphlets and placards that didn’t indicate who paid for them.

Exit mobile version