Manchin, Leads Morrisey, Jenkins in Raising Funds in Senate Race

Democratic U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin reports raising about $900,000 in the past three months for his 2018 re-election campaign with about $4.1 million on hand.

West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey, seeking the Republican nomination to challenge Manchin, reports raising about $670,000 in his first reporting quarter since officially announcing his run, with $548,000 on hand at the end of September.

Congressman Evan Jenkins, another Republican who will face Morrisey in a primary, reported about $220,000 raised in the period with almost $1.26 million on hand.

Manchin, a former West Virginia governor, is seeking a second full six-year Senate term.

Jenkins, a former state lawmaker and former executive director of the West Virginia State Medical Association, is a second-term congressman.

Morrisey was re-elected last year to a second four-year term as West Virginia’s attorney general.

Poll: Manchin Leads Jenkins, Morrisey in 2018 Senate Race

A new poll puts Democratic incumbent Joe Manchin ahead of likely Republican challengers in the 2018 race for U.S. Senate.

The poll, sponsored by West Virginia MetroNews and conducted by Research America, Inc., puts Manchin 10 points ahead of Congressman Evan Jenkins (50 percent to 40 percent) and 14 points ahead of Attorney General Patrick Morrisey (52 percent to 38 percent). Both Jenkins and Morrisey have announced their candidacy for the Republican Primary slated for May 2018.

“Senator Manchin’s personality and message resonates with West Virginia voters,” said poll director Rex Repass in a news release. “He’s a former two term governor, has been in the Senate since 2010 and has a record in most cases aligns with West Virginia voters.”

Repass also noted President Donald Trump’s popularity in West Virginia and the turning of the political tide from Democrat to Republican over the course of recent elections.  He called Jenkins and Morrisey “potentially strong candidates” to oppose Manchin in 2018.

“Morrisey has run two successful statewide campaigns, and Jenkins, a former Democrat, is popular in his congressional district,” said Repass.

Results of the poll are based on interviews conducted between August 11 and 20, with a sample of 400 likely voters in West Virginia — including registered Democrats, Republicans, Libertarian, Mountain Party, and unaffiliated or independent voters. Researchers contacted respondents by landline, cell phone and an opt-in internet panel.

Manchin’s Democratic primary challenger, Paula Jean Swearengin, was not mentioned in the survey or polling results.

Congressman Evan Jenkins Holds Charleston Roundtable to Talk Addiction with Local Experts

U.S. Congressman Evan Jenkins visited Thomas Memorial Hospital in South Charleston today to hold a roundtable with local experts about how best to address addiction and neonatal abstinence syndrome.

The roundtable was attended by about 20 health workers and community members, most of whom deal with addiction, including neonatal abstinence syndrome on an almost daily basis.

“The disease, yes disease of addiction is our most challenging public health and safety issue of our time,” Jenkins said during an opening statement.

Jenkins said roundtables like this one help him identify the most pressing needs and challenges facing people who are actively dealing with the crisis.

“All of us see some patients with opioid addiction,” said obstetrician Bassam Shamma during the meeting.

“I mean it’s definitely getting worse, hepatitis C is getting really bad in this state,” he said. “I mean we’re screening everybody, all the OBs are screening everybody and we have new diagnosis on an almost monthly basis.”

Shamma said one thing that hospitals and doctors need is better reimbursements so they can take care of the patients that need medication assisted treatment and other resources that can be expensive to provide.

But it’s not just hospitals and doctors that are struggling.

Monica Mason is the Director of Community Paramedic for the Kanawha County Ambulance Authority. She said now, 75 percent of their medication budget, or around 60,000, goes to buying the overdose reversal drug Narcan.

She said the issue is not just the financial burden, but that sometimes it can be hard to actually access a big enough supply for the demand.

After the roundtable Jenkins told reporters he’s committed to developing health policy that will take concerns brought by Mason and Shamma into account.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, with support from the Benedum Foundation, Charleston Area Medical Center and WVU Medicine.

Jenkins Will Take on Manchin in 2018 Senate Race

Congressman Evan Jenkins has announced he’ll run against Sen. Joe Manchin in 2018. 

The two-term member of the U.S. House of Representatives announced he’ll run against Manchin for his seat in 2018 in a 3 minute video sent out by the Jenkins campaign Monday afternoon.

In the video, Jenkins claims Manchin has broken his promises to fight for West Virginia values in Washington.

A Republican, Jenkins was first elected to Congress to represent the state’s third congressional district in southern West Virginia in 2014 after defeating long-time Democratic member Nick Joe Rahall. Jenkins served three terms in the West Virginia House of Delegates and three terms in the state Senate as a Democrat before switching parties to run for Congress.

Manchin is a former governor, secretary of state, and member of the state Legislature. He was elected to the U.S. Senate in 2010 during a special election following the death of Robert C. Byrd.

State Lawmakers Vow to Fight Environmental Rules

West Virginia’s Republican congressional and state leaders vowed Monday to work with the incoming Trump administration to push back federal environmental regulations they say limit and threaten their state’s energy industry and jobs.

U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito said the Obama administration has overstepped its authority in the energy, financial and other sectors and they expect president-elect Donald Trump to undo many of those regulations with support from lawmakers.

She was joined at a news conference by Republican Congressmen Evan Jenkins, David McKinley and Alex Mooney and state Attorney General Patrick Morrisey, who is challenging pending smokestack-emission rules in court. They and other state Republican officials met earlier before talking to reporters.

“Basically we have such a great opportunity here,” Capitol said.

Republicans control both West Virginia legislative houses, both houses of the U.S. Congress and soon the presidency. She said their goals include creating jobs, improving infrastructure, replacing “Obamacare” and “attacking the regulations that have basically weighted down our ability to create jobs and grow.”

Capitol says replacement of the Obama administration’s federal health care law will happen soon.

Trump has criticized the law that extended insurance coverage or Medicaid to almost 20 million people. He has praised its guaranteed insurance coverage of people with pre-existing conditions and letting young adults remain on parents’ policies until age 26.

U.S. Rep. David McKinley said pending federal regulations on stream protection particularly threaten coal’s future. “Some 45 to 85 percent of coal will no longer be available … if that were to go into effect,” he said.

Trump in his campaign promised vowed to undo looming federal rules concerning coal mining and said President Barack Obama had been “ridiculous” to the industry.

McKinley also predicted significant federal tax reform for the overly complex system in the coming year.

Capito and the congressmen say they didn’t know Monday whether Republican House leaders’ funding resolution will continue health care and pensions for thousands of retired union miners facing the loss of benefits. She said the West Virginia delegation, including Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin, has been pushing for full benefits.

Capito said the House funding resolution now is expected Tuesday, and it’s up to that chamber’s leadership to decide exactly what’s in it.

Challengers' Finances Trail West Virginia Congressmen

New campaign filings show West Virginia’s three Republican incumbents with far more money than Democratic challengers in their campaign accounts.

Filings show Rep. David McKinley’s campaign received almost $241,000 from July through September, spent more than $157,000 and still had $705,000 on hand.

His challenger Mike Manypenny reports raising almost $8,000 and spending slightly more than that with a deficit of about $7,400.

Reports show Rep. Alex Mooney raised more than $191,000 and spent almost $140,000 with about $527,000 left in his campaign fund.

Challenger Mark Hunt reports raising about $231,000 and spending almost $125,000 with about $155,000 on hand.

Rep. Evan Jenkins reports about $199,000 raised and almost $120,000 spent with nearly $712,000 left.

Challenger Matt Detch’s campaign shows $40 raised, nothing spent and almost $10,500 on hand.

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