Capito Among Latest to File For 2014 Races

U.S. Rep. Shelley Moore Capito is officially in the race for the U.S. Senate.

Capito filed her candidacy papers this morning. The seven-term Republican is seeking to fill the Senate seat being vacated by retiring Sen. Jay Rockefeller.
 
Another Republican, Larry Eugene Butcher of Washington in Wood County, also filed today to run for the U.S. Senate.

Williamstown Democrat David Walmsley and Parkersburg Republican Matthew Dodrill filed to run for the U.S. Senate last week.

Four Republicans and two Democrats have filed to run for Capito’s House seat in the 2nd District.

Meanwhile in the 1st District, State Auditor and Democrat Glen Gainer III filed papers on Tuesday to run for the House, while incumbent Republican Rep. David McKinley filed last week to run for re-election.

If you’re not wired yet, you may be soon

West Virginia Internet providers say they're working hard to reach the nine percent of people who lack broadband access, but hurdles remain.The internet…

West Virginia Internet providers say they’re working hard to reach the nine percent of people who lack broadband access, but hurdles remain.

The internet providers spoke Monday at the third Discover the Real West Virginia Foundation Broadband Summit in Morgantown.

The Foundation was formed by Sen. Jay Rockefeller who noted when the last broadband summit was held four years ago, less than 72 percent of West Virginians had access to broadband. Today, 91 percent have access.

Frontier’s Kathleen Quinn Abernathy said Connect America Fund grants help extend service to rural areas, and more than 60,000 people will get service soon. She said it will take much longer to reach the remaining 20,000 households.

Suddenlink spokesman Michael Kelemen said it’s hard to reach everyone when coverage maps are incomplete. And he calls 100 percent a “lofty goal” when water and sewer service doesn’t even reach 90 percent of homes.

Mark Reilly of Comcast said tougher regulation won’t help either. He noted telephone service has yet to reach every U.S. resident.

Other speakers at the event included Jessica Rosenworcel, a commissioner with the Federal Communications Commission, and Mohammed Gawdat, a vice president at Google.

Rosenworcel talked about broadband as both a technology and a platform for opportunity, and its importance as essential infrastructure for the 21st century.

Gawdat’s remarks focused on innovative ideas for the future, including Google’s Project Loon, which has experimented with using high-altitude balloons to bring Internet access to remote communities.

How did West Virginia's delegation vote? Congress re-opens government and raises debt ceiling

From the Associated Press: Congress has passed legislation to reopen the partially-shuttered federal government and avert a potentially disastrous default on U.S. obligations, clearing the measure for President Barack Obama’s promised signature.

Passage of the bill late Wednesday in the House and Senate ended a Washington-created crisis that closed much of government for 16 days. It came on the eve of the date the Treasury Department warned it would no longer be able to borrow to pay the government’s bills.

The legislation was carried to passage in the House by strong support from Democrats and 87 yes votes from majority Republicans who had originally sought to use the measure to derail Obama’s three-year-old health care law.

The legislation will reopen the government through Jan. 15 and permit Treasury to borrow normally through Feb. 7.

Reaction from West Virginia’s delegation and how they voted:

From the House:

The bill passed the House by a vote of 285-144 with all three of West Virginia’s Representatives voting in favor.

Rep. Nick Rahall (D-W.Va.)

“For now, we can breathe a collective sigh of relief, but this is a temporary respite,” Rep. Nick Rahall (D-W.Va.) said in a news release. “We should hope and pray that cooler heads will prevail before we must revisit these issues early next year, and that the Majority in the House of Representatives will not revive the threat of a shutdown and default to extract political concessions.”

“Such tactics are reckless and completely at odds with the Constitutional oath to which every Member has sworn,” Rahall said. “And I hope that my colleagues from both sides of the aisle will stand up to those extremists who would put their personal political fortunes above the collective well-being of the Nation.”

Rep. David McKinley (R-W.Va.)

Rep. David McKinley (R-W.Va.) issued a new release saying: “The American people deserve a solution that ends the partisan bickering, opens the government and ensures we pay our bills on time.”

“While I would prefer a plan that makes more substantial reforms to grow the economy, address our excessive spending, and fix the broken health care law, this agreement will allow us to move forward,” he said.

Rep. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.)

“It is time to reopen the government, and it is clearly not in our country’s best interests to default on our debts,” Rep. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.) said. “This legislation will protect the full faith and credit of the United States, bring government employees back to work for the American people, and start a larger discussion on our nation’s fiscal issues. West Virginians expect nothing less.”

From the Senate:

Before the House took up the measure, the Senate passed it 81-18. Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D-W.Va.) and Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) voted for the measure.

Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.)

“I am pleased that our leaders could put politics aside and come together in a bipartisan way to reach a deal that reopens the government and prevents a first-ever default on our debt,” said Manchin, who was active in working on a compromise. “I thank Senator Susan Collins and our group of fourteen bipartisan senators, seven Republicans, six Democrats and one Independent, who helped draft the template of the final budget deal.” 

“The bottom line is that we managed to avoid this self-inflicted wound to the national and global economy, but it is past time for America to get its financial house in order,” he said. “We need a bipartisan, big fix like the Bowles-Simpson template that focuses on spending, revenue and reform.”

Manchin said he’s hopeful the bipartisan, bicameral budget committee required under the agreement will be a first step in reducing the deficit and balancing the budget.

Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D-W.Va.)

“The deal we agreed to today is not perfect, but it’s a step forward,” Rockefeller said.

“It will get MSHA personnel back on the job so our miners’ safety is no longer at risk. It will provide security for our veterans who need and deserve access to VA services,” Rockefeller said.

“It will get our intelligence analysts back to work so they can resume their critically important work that prevents terrorist attacks and thwarts attempts to breach our national security. It will begin to repair the loss of confidence in our economy,” he added.

What does the Robert C. Byrd Center director think of government shutdown?

As the wrangling between the House and Senate, Democrats and Republicans over whether to fund the budget and whether to tie changes in the Affordable Care Act to that funding continues, the Director of the Robert C. Byrd Center for Legislative Studies at Shepherd University, Ray Smock, is appalled at the way Congress is handling the appropriations process.

Smock oversees the library that houses the late Senator Byrd’s papers and Smock can’t help but see this government shutdown through the eyes of Byrd, who served on the appropriations committee, which is charged with funding the federal government. Smock said Byrd was not happy the last time there was a major government shutdown, in 1995 and 1996.

“In fact one of the things he wrote in ’95 was ‘in all my years of public service I have never before witnessed such a politically motivated and potentially disastrous intransigence as that which characterizes the current majority in Congress,” Smock said.

Byrd was the ranking Democrat on the Senate Appropriations Committee during that shutdown, which occurred because then House Speaker Newt Gingrich and President Bill Clinton disagreed over the extent government funding should be cut. Smock said there is one major difference that makes this shutdown worse.

“Back then about half the appropriations bills had already been passed and so it was a partial shutdown,” he said. “And this time around, and the reporters don’t seem to be focusing on this very much, no appropriations bill has been passed and so the government does not have funds to operate anything except those parts that have been declared to be essential.”

Some Republicans in congress blame President Obama for the shutdown, saying he refuses to negotiate. But Smock said the Constitution does not assign the duty of funding the government to the president. He said the president’s job is to put a budget proposal together and submit it to congress.

“Congress then is supposed to go through a process of breaking that budget up into 13 major appropriations bills, holding hearings, having debates and each of those appropriations bills eventually comes to the floor of the house and senate and they’re passed,” Smock said.

“And they’re all supposed to be passed by October first of every year” he said. “That’s the way it’s supposed to work.”

Smock said the president’s budget is always considered dead on arrival when it gets to congress.

“And congress has the power of the purse; the president can’t spend a dime unless congress passes it first,” he said.

Over the past week the U.S. House and Senate have sent continuing resolutions to fund the government back and forth. The house bills have included amendments to cut money from the Affordable Care Act, delay its implementation or change provisions in the bill. The senate has stripped these amendments from sent the bills back to the house.

Smock said passing the bill back and forth is the result of house members’ refusal earlier this year to agree to a conference committee to work out the difference between the two houses. From a constitutional perspective, Smock doesn’t believe amendments changing Obamacare belong in an appropriations bill.

“Which was a totally ridiculous effort, the law has already been passed, already been upheld by the courts, how could it possibly have anything to do with a continuing resolution which is an appropriations bill to fund the government,” he said. “In fact the rules of the house and senate say there should not be extraneous matters that are not related to the actual budget that are on these bills.”

Smock said there have been times in the past when members have attached unrelated amendments to an appropriations bill.  

“But I’ve never seen in the history of the country anybody try to shut down the government because they didn’t like an existing law that was already funded and was already on the books,” he said.

And Smock said it’s highly unusual for one senator to have so much influence over what goes on in the house.

“Ted Cruz (R-Texas) in the senate is dictating to the house, this is unprecedented too, the idea too that someone in the senate would be riding rough shod over the speaker of the house who is the elected leader of his party in the house and a first term senator is calling the shots in the House of Representatives,” Smock said.

And Smock takes issue with members who are unwilling to compromise.

“Compromise is the art of politics; compromise is the essential feature of any government of any political system,” he said.

Smock emphasized that as a long-time public servant who worked on Capitol Hill as Historian for the House of Representatives from 1983 to 1995, he’s approached his job in a nonpartisan manner.

“But my personal views on this are that there’s no question about who is at fault and it is the substantial number of Republicans in the House, most of who have identified themselves as Tea Party members, and that group has managed to stifle and hog tie the rest of the Republicans in the House, including the speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio),” Smock said.

While constituents in the districts represented by these members might very well hate the government, President Obama and the Affordable care Act enough to want the government shut down and these representatives may believe that voters will blame the President for the shutdown Smock believes that won’t happen. He said history may prove him wrong, but he doesn’t believe the President will bear most of the blame.

While much attention is being paid to this week’s government shutdown and the arguments in congress over who is responsible, Smock said a much more serious battle looms on the horizon because house members who insist on tying changes to the Affordable Care Act to funding the government have threatened to do the same thing when the debt ceiling has to be raised in a couple of weeks.

“That’s unprecedented, never has happened in history.  Alexander Hamilton would be turning in his grave,” Smock said. “He was the great first treasury secretary. He’s the one who said that if this country’s going to be a great country it’s got to have full faith and credit, it’s got to be able to borrow money.”

Smock said congress has an obligation to increase the debt ceiling in order to pay bills the government has already accrued and failure to do so could damage the country’s credit and the economy.

Manchin won't support a strike on Syria

With a vote expected in Congress next week, Senator Joe Manchin says he will not support a U.S. military strike over alleged chemical weapons attacks by…

With a vote expected in Congress next week, Senator Joe Manchin says he will not support a U.S. military strike over alleged chemical weapons attacks by President BasharAl-Assad on the people of Syria.

 

In a news release, Manchin said he has attended hearings before the Senate Armed Services Committee, of which he is a member, and the Senate Foreign Relations Committees, of which he is not. He said he has also attended classified briefings with the Obama Administration and has met with national security and foreign policy experts with hopes to seek more information on a potential attack on Syria. 

 

“The decision to use U.S. military force is one of the most serious decisions I have ever made,” said Manchin in the release. 

 

Manchin said he cannot support the Senate Foreign Relations Committee’s resolution passed on Wednesday that calls for a “limited and tailored” strike.  That resolution would limit a strike to 60 days with an option to be extended another 30 days after a consultation with Congress. It would also block the use of U.S. troops on the ground.  

 

Despite these limitations, Manchin said he does not support a strike on Syria.

 

“In good conscience, I cannot support the Senate Foreign Relations Committee’s resolution and will be working with my colleagues and the administration to develop other options,” he said.  

 

Manchin said he believes the U.S. should exhaust all diplomatic options and have a comprehensive plan for international involvement before a strike occurs.

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