Trump-Backed US Rep. Alex Mooney Wins W.Va. GOP Primary

In an early victory for a Donald Trump-endorsed candidate at the start of midterm season, Rep. Alex Mooney on Tuesday beat fellow incumbent Rep. David McKinley in West Virginia’s 2nd Congressional District Republican primary.

In an early victory for a Donald Trump-endorsed candidate at the start of midterm season, Rep. Alex Mooney on Tuesday beat fellow incumbent Rep. David McKinley in West Virginia’s 2nd Congressional District Republican primary.

“Donald Trump loves West Virginia, and West Virginia loves Donald Trump,” Mooney said in his victory speech.

McKinley was sharply criticized by the former president when he broke with his party as one of 13 Republicans to vote with the Democrats to support President Joe Biden’s $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill. Trump called McKinley a RINO, or “Republican in Name Only” and endorsed Mooney the day Biden signed the infrastructure law.

The two incumbents, who have taken dramatically different approaches to their time in office, were pitted against each other in the state’s 2nd Congressional District after population losses cost West Virginia a U.S. House seat.

McKinley, who has represented the state in the House since 2011, said in a statement Tuesday night that serving the people of West Virginia had been the honor of his life — and made a subtle reference to the infrastructure vote.

“I’m proud that I have always stood up for what’s right for West Virginia — even when it hurt me politically,” he said. “The groundwork we have laid over the last twelve years has paved the way for a more prosperous and diverse West Virginia economy.”

Mooney, who has served in West Virginia’s House delegation since 2015, gave his victory speech surrounded by supporters at a hotel watch party in Charles Town in West Virginia’s eastern panhandle, where he lives. McKinley was watching the results come in at home with his family.

West Virginia’s election was the first of five primaries in which two incumbent U.S. House members will compete against each other. It will be followed by similar contests in Georgia and Michigan and in two Illinois districts.

The race was one of the most-watched of the day. In Nebraska, another Trump-backed candidate, Charles Herbster, was in a crowded field of GOP contenders for governor. The contests came on the heels of a victory by Trump-endorsed conservative JD Vance, author of the bestselling memoir “Hillbilly Elegy,” who defeated six other candidates to win the Ohio Republican primary for U.S. Senate last week.

Earlier Tuesday night, Trump-endorsed incumbent U.S. Rep. Carol Miller breezed to the Republican nomination in West Virginia’s 1st District, defeating four little-known candidates and setting herself on a clear path to reelection.

Miller will vie for her third term in the House in the fall against Democrat Lacy Watson, who was unopposed in the Democratic primary. Watson, of Bluefield, lost in the 2020 Democratic primary in the former 3rd District.

In Nebraska’s 2nd Congressional District, in the Omaha area, three-term Republican Rep. Don Bacon won the primary over long-shot candidate Steve Kuehl, an Omaha consultant who got a shoutout from Trump when the former president visited earlier this month.

Trump blasted Bacon as a “bad guy” during a recent rally in the state and had criticized him previously for his support of a federal infrastructure bill that most GOP lawmakers opposed. Bacon also has been mildly critical of Trump in the past, saying the former president bore some responsibility for the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol.

Trump stopped far short of officially endorsing Kuehl, however, saying: “I think Steve will do well. Good luck, Steve, whoever the hell you are.”

Sen. Mike Flood, a former speaker of the Nebraska Legislature, won in the state’s 1st Congressional District over five other Republican candidates. Flood wants to fill the seat abandoned by Jeff Fortenberry, a Republican who resigned from office and ended his reelection bid after he was convicted of lying to federal authorities about an illegal campaign contribution. Fortenberry’s name still appeared on the ballot for the 1st Congressional District because he withdrew after a deadline to certify the ballot.

In the rural, geographically vast 3rd Congressional District, Republican U.S. Rep. Adrian Smith easily won his party’s nomination. Two Democrats were vying for their party’s nomination within the district, which is overwhelmingly Republican.

In West Virginia’s 2nd Congressional District, McKinley’s decision to support the infrastructure bill was on voters’ minds.

Susan Smith, a small-business owner in Valley Grove, voted for Mooney at a local elementary school Tuesday morning. She lives in McKinley’s former district and said she always voted for him in the past. But not in this election.

“When Mr. McKinley started voting with the Democrats and the current administration, that’s when things changed,” said Smith, who cited McKinley’s vote for Biden’s infrastructure bill and the Jan. 6 commission. “I’m sorry to be losing a congressman, but we cannot have a Republican congressman voting with the Democrats. West Virginia did not need the money from this un-infrastructure bill.”

In the general election, Mooney will face openly gay former Morgantown city councilor Barry Wendell, who bested security operations manager Angela Dwyer during Tuesday’s Democratic primary.

Mooney enters the general election as a heavy favorite to win. West Virginia hasn’t elected a Democrat to the House since 2008.

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Associated Press writer Grant Schulte in Omaha, Nebraska, contributed to this report.

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Follow AP for full coverage of the midterms at https://apnews.com/hub/2022-midterm-elections and on Twitter at https://twitter.com/ap_politics.

W.Va. Congressional Redistricting Map Sent To Governor

A congressional redistricting map that would pit two incumbent U.S. House members from West Virginia in the 2022 Republican primary has been sent to Gov. Jim Justice.

The House of Delegates passed the map 84-12 Thursday with four members absent. The state Senate approved the map Wednesday.

After the 2020 census, West Virginia lost one of its three U.S. House seats. The approved map would combine most of the current districts of U.S. Reps. David McKinley and Alex Mooney into the new northern 2nd District. Rep. Carol Miller would be in the new 1st District. All three are Republicans.

The map deviates from the ideal population of 896,858 in each new district by about 1,500 people, placing more residents in the northern district.

The new 2nd District would run from Wood County along the Ohio River to the Eastern Panhandle and include the Northern Panhandle.

Miller’s new district includes the southern part of the state and takes in north-central Gilmer County from McKinley’s former district. From Mooney’s old district it grabs the Charleston area and several surrounding counties along with Pendleton County along the Virginia line.

McKinley is in his sixth term and Mooney his fourth. McKinley, 74, founded a Wheeling architectural and engineering firm and is a former state GOP chairman and a seventh-generation West Virginian. Mooney, 50, is a former Maryland state senator and Maryland Republican Party chairman who moved about 25 miles (40 kilometers) in 2013 from Frederick, Maryland, to Charles Town, West Virginia.

Miller, a 70-year-old Huntington resident, is in her second term. She previously served in the House of Delegates for 12 years and is the daughter of the late Ohio U.S. Rep. Samuel Devine.

On May 19, 2021, McKinley was one of 35 Republicans who joined all Democrats in voting to support an independent commission on the deadly Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol. Mooney and Miller voted against the legislation, which was later blocked by Republicans in the U.S. Senate.

The House later approved its own 13-member special committee to probe the violent attack. McKinley, Miller and Mooney voted against the committee’s formation.

In other action, the Senate postponed a third reading of its 17-district redistricting bill until Friday. The Senate also must take up the House’s redistricting map. The House passed a new single-member district system for all 100 delegates on Wednesday, a change mandated by 2018 legislation. Currently, there are 67 districts and more than half of the House is elected from multiple-member districts.

New River Gorge National Park Gets New Signs

The New River Gorge became a national park in December. On Friday, state and local officials unveiled the new highway signs that will direct visitors to it.

On Monday, the West Virginia Department of Highways began placing 87 signs in three counties.

The old signs said “New River Gorge National River,” a designation it received in 1978. The new signs reflect the change to the New River Gorge National Park and Preserve.

The 7,000-acre park and 65,000-acre preserve stretches more than 50 miles from Hinton to Hawks Nest State Park.

At the park’s visitors center at Sandstone, Gov. Jim Justice, Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, Rep. Carol Miller and other dignitaries spoke of the park’s significance to West Virginia.

“This day marks an incredible day,” Justice said. “So many good things are happening in West Virginia, it’s off the chart.”

The New River and nearby Bluestone and Gauley rivers, which are part of the same unit, brought more than 1.3 million visitors to the state in 2019, according to the National Park Service. They contributed nearly $70 million to the state’s economy.

State officials expect the national park designation will draw even more visitors. The state welcomed a record 3 million visitors in June, according to the state Office of Tourism.

“It was a dream of this region of West Virginia,” Capito said. “It was a dream of those who love the river and love our beautiful landscapes who came to both me and Senator (Joe) Manchin and said, ‘Can you make this happen?’”

Capito and Manchin introduced the bill that led to the national park designation in October 2019. Miller introduced the companion bill in the House of Representatives.

The park made Time Magazine’s 100 of the World’s Greatest Places.

“Because we have the bragging rights here in West Virginia,” Miller said. “This is such a beautiful, beautiful spot.”

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.

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