More than 100K West Virginians Cast Early Ballots

The Secretary of State’s Office is reporting record high numbers of voters casting ballots during the state’s early voting period. 
 
The Secretary of State’s Office announced Monday more than 100,000 West Virginians in all 55 counties cast early votes. The early voting period was from April 27 to May 7.

Another 5,000 ballots have been cast through the absentee voting procedure, according to the office. Absentee ballots are valid in the race as long as they are posted marked by May 10, the same day as West Virginia’s primary election.

 
Early voting began in West Virginia in 2002 when just 14,000 people cast ballots. During the last presidential election cycle in 2012, some 57,000 West Virginians voted early.

 
The early voting record totals come two years after the state experienced one of the worst voter participation rates in the nation. In 2014, voter turnout was 37.3 percent.

 
The following are the number of early votes cast by party affiliation in 2016:

  • Democrat: 49,570
  • Republican: 33,935
  • No Affiliation: 11,228
  • Other: 3,677
  • Libertarian: 99
  • Mountain: 44

Sanders: West Virginians Want Government for the People

After holding three events in West Virginia Thursday, Vermont Senator and presidential hopeful Bernie Sanders said he is focused on winning West Virginia because the hardworking people deserve a government that represent all people, not just the interested of billionaires. 

“It’s a state of tough people, people who are fighting back against difficult odds today,” Sanders said Friday afternoon. 

“I do believe that the people of West Virginia want a government that represents all of us and not just the wealthy campaign contributors or just the 1 percent.”

Sanders shared his message of pushing the interests of the top 1 percent of earners in the nation out of politics during all of his stops in West Virginia. It’s a message he touts on the campaign trail across the country to the crowds he draws with his message of equality. 

Sanders also speaks candidly about climate change, saying the issue is often controversial in West Virginia during his Huntington rally last month.

He has spoken out against the use of coal and fracking of natural gas, two industries West Virginia depends on, but the senator said climate change is real and while he believes the nation should stop burning fossil fuels, he won’t leave the state behind.

“The cause of that problem is not the coal miner, it is not the people who are working in the fossil fuel industry,” Sanders said, “and that’s why we have put $41 billion into making sure that if people lose their jobs they will be able to get the extended unemployment they need, the job training they need, and why we are going to reinvest heavily into those communities.”

Sanders pointed to McDowell County, where he visited a food bank Thursday morning, as the perfect example of a community that has been left behind in the transition away from fossil fuels.

As for apparent Republican nominee Donald Trump’s comments about voting shared with a crowd of thousands Thursday evening, comments directing West Virginians not to vote in West Virginia’s May 10 primary, Sanders called them disrespectful.

“Well, that’s a wonderful thing to say about democracy,” Sander said. “People fought and died to make sure that all of us have a right to determine the future of this country. I think that is an absurd remark and an insult to the people who put their lives on the line.”

Sanders said he hopes all West Virginians turn out to vote because, as he’s mentioned at many other rallies across the country, when there’s high voter turn out, his campaign is more likely to win.

Early Voting Totals Reach New High

More West Virginians have voted early this election year than in any of the past four election cycles.

The Secretary of State’s Office reports more than 63,000 West Virginians cast early ballots in just the first seven days of early voting this year. That number is up by some 40,000 votes from 2014 and about 30,000 from the previous presidential election cycle in 2012.

The ten day early voting period began April 27 and ends Saturday, May 7.

Most counties are using county courthouses to host the early voting booths, but your local voting location can be found on the Secretary of State’s website.

Early voting has been an option for West Virginia voters since 2002.

West Virginia’s primary election day is Tuesday May 10.

Polls will be open in every county from 6:30 that morning until 7:30 that night. 

Sanders Finds Receptive Audience in Morgantown

Vermont senator and Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders held three campaign events in West Virginia on Thursday, May 5. At his final stop in Morgantown, Sanders’ focus on student loan debt was well-received by the many college students in the crowd.

As the crowd of several thousand people made its way into the Morgantown Event Center Thursday night, it was striking how wide a cross-section of society was represented – young and old, black and white, dreadlocked and clean cut.

Credit Jesse Wright / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
A man holds up a sign that reads, “Republicans for Bernie.”

One man was holding a “Republicans for Bernie” sign.

Megan Collins’s glitter-filled sign read “Bernie in, BS out.”

She says Sanders’ message resonates with her on a very personal level.

Credit Jesse Wright / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Megan Collins (top row, holding highest sign) stands behind Bernie Sanders’ podium Thursday, May 5, at the Morgantown Event Center.

“For me, Bernie’s not a politician, he is a person. And to me, that’s what could best represent America,” She said. “We don’t need someone who’s feeding us what we need to hear. We need someone who has their opinion, feels that they’re representing the people and wants to listen to the people.”

Collins was with a group of social work students who stood behind Sanders during his speech.

They, like many of the young people in the crowd, responded enthusiastically when Sanders talked about taxing Wall Street to make college tuition free in the U.S.

“It seems to me now, in 2016, that it is absolutely appropriate that we impose a tax on Wall Street speculation,” Sanders said. “And that tax would more than pay for making public colleges and universities tuition-free and substantially lowering student debt.”

Sanders also touched on many of his other campaign-trail standbys. He talked about closing America’s income gap, the urgent need to deal with climate change and getting help for those who have lost jobs during coal’s decline.

He also discussed America’s opioid epidemic and his belief that addiction should be treated as a mental-health issue, not a criminal one.

Credit Jesse Wright / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Sen. Bernie Sanders gets the Morgantown Event Center crowd pumped up during his Thursday, May 5, campaign stop.

Former State Legislator & Longtime Attorney, Wooton Runs for W.Va. Supreme Court

Bill Wooton is a former legislator who held office for 26 years, but has been a practicing attorney for almost 45. Now he wants to add the title of Supreme Court Justice to his name.

Wooton’s resume is a long one. Raised in Beckley, he graduated from Marshall University in 1966 and got his law degree from West Virginia University in 1971.

Wooton became a clerk for a judge on the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the fourth circuit, then an assistant attorney general, followed by nearly 3 years as a prosecutor.

Wooton resigned from his job as prosecutor to run for the West Virginia State Legislature.

“I served in the Legislature a total of 26 years,” Wooton said, “Ended up being majority leader at one time in the House of Delegates and I served as chairman of the Judiciary Committee in the Legislature for 10 years. My service began with the 1976 election, and I was last in the Legislature in 2010.”

Wooton has also spent years in private practice, where his work continues today. But it was during his time as a lawmaker that Wooton realized being a judge was his dream.

“A friend of mine told me I acted more like a judge than a legislator. I was chairman of a committee, and in that role, you pretty well try to achieve some measure of fairness; let people have their say in favor of a measure or opposed to the measure, and you know, she said that to me, and it kind of stuck with me, and I thought, well that’s really what I’ve always wanted to do,” he explained.

Wooton is one of two candidates using the public campaign financing system to fund his judicial race. The program is only available to Supreme Court candidates who meet various requirements to receive the $500,000 in taxpayer funding. While some of his competitors are adamantly against the system, Wooton defends it.

“I think most members of the public appreciate the reason why the Legislature enacted the statute,” he noted, “It’s intended to lessen the impact of enormous sums of outside money, and I think most members of the public appreciate that. I think if you have a case that goes before the Supreme Court, you’ll feel better about it if you’re aware that no judge was elected with overwhelming financial contribution from your opponent.”

Wooton fought for his belief and his participation in the program when another Supreme Court candidate, Beth Walker, sued his campaign.

“I believe that what she did in my case was a quote, frivolous lawsuit,” he said, “I think it was a tactical effort to impede my campaign.”

Credit Wooton Campaign
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In the lawsuit, Walker’s campaign argued Wooton failed to meet certain filing deadlines and the State Election Commission erred in awarding him public money. Wooton argues the basis of her complaint was a minor technical violation.

“There’s a statute that has certain deadlines in it, and every deadline in that law I met,” he explained, “The administrative agency charged with enforcing the law, on their own, decided to put some additional deadlines in regulation, not in the law, and shame on me, I did not carefully study the regulations.”

Wooton says the regulations require candidates to file a formal request for the money within two business days of being certified by the State Election Commission as eligible for the program. He filed his on the third day. After the lawsuit against his campaign and another against fellow candidate Brent Benjamin over the regulations, Wooton expects the SEC will revisit the program guidelines.

And he says he’s also been attacked for another part of the judicial election process – partisanship.

This is the first time a judicial election has been non-partisan in West Virginia and the first time all judicial officers will be elected during the May 10 primary. Wooton says he has mixed feelings about the change. He’s concerned a candidate could be elected with less than 50 percent of the vote — because of the vote being split between five candidates.

“I don’t know what the Legislature’s intent was. I suspect that was an unintended consequence,” Wooton said, “I think the public is best served by a person elected by a majority of the voters.”

And in recent weeks, negative ads have appeared on television stations across the state claiming Wooton and fellow Supreme Court candidate Darrell McGraw are part of an “old boy network” in state government. A news release from the Wooton campaign says the ads were funded by more than $500,000 of outside money provided by a special interest group. And the end of each TV ad calling Wooton out, says it’s paid for by the Republican State Leadership Committee – Judicial Fairness Initiative.

Wooton https://vimeo.com/164430717″>responded to the negative ads with an ad of his own attacking the special interest group.

“The very people who wanted this election to be non-partisan, now are injecting partisanship into the election,” he noted.

With Primary Day on May 10 fast approaching, Wooton is hopeful he’ll win the seat. He says he’s the best choice for the Supreme Court, because public service has been a major part of his life.

“I think that the experiences and the abilities that I have, such as they may be, ideally qualify me to be a justice on the Supreme Court of Appeals,” Wooton said, “I think it’s the culmination of the sum total of my life’s work.”

'Trump Digs Coal' at Charleston Rally

Apparent Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump drew a crowd of more than 10,000 to the Charleston Civic Center Thursday for a campaign rally largely focused on revitalizing the coal industry.

Although the candidate shared few specifics about ways to bring the ailing industry back in West Virginia, he several times pointed to the weakening of regulations at the federal level as a way to help miners.

“If they didn’t have ridiculous regulations that put you out of business and make it impossible for you to compete, I’m going to take that off,” Trump said to loud cheers. “You are going to be proud of me.”

Trump received the endorsement of the West Virginia Coal Association shortly before the rally began and was joined on stage by Coal Association Vice President Chris Hamilton who presented him with a hard hat.

“How’s my hair?” Trump joked after trying the hat on.

It was his support of the coal industry that drew many of the West Virginians in attendance. Coal miner Derek Angel of Boone County said he believes Trump is going to put coal back on the map.

“Our county, our state, everything has been on the decline and it’s pushing everybody out of the state of West Virginia,” Angle said. “So, it kind of gives people a sense of hope to even be a coal miner.”

Credit Steve Helber / AP Photo
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AP Photo
A group of coal miners hold Trump signs as they wait for a rally with Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump.

Republican candidate for Governor Bill Cole introduced Trump and House Speaker Tim Armstead, Senate Majority Leader Mitch Carmichael, Del. Josh Nelson and Democratic Del. Rupie Phillips were among those in the crowd.

“I cannot support a candidate who does not support coal,” Phillips said before the rally.

Twice during the 45 minute speech, Trump told supporters he had already won the party nomination and there was no need for voters to head to the polls in the primary.

“Stay at home,” Trump told the crowd, “and get twice as many people to vote in November.”

Early voting is already underway in the state. West Virginia’s primary election is May 10.

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