Ojeda to Resign from West Virginia Senate, Will Focus on 2020 Presidential Run

This is a developing story and will be updated.

West Virginia state Senator Richard Ojeda says he will resign from his seat next week to focus on winning the Democratic nomination for president in 2020.  

“I cannot — I will not — allow myself to not be sitting in my seat and leave it empty. It needs to be filled with somebody who’s going to go in here and just going to do their best to help the state,” Ojeda said during an interview at the West Virginia Capitol on Wednesday, the first day of the Legislature’s 60-Day session.

He said he plans to submit a letter of resignation on Tuesday, Jan. 15.

The Army veteran is in his first term in public office, having won his seat in the West Virginia Legislature in 2016. He first made national headlines when he was severely beaten just two days before his primary election that year.

He has been traveling the country in recent weeks as part of his presidential campaign, which he launched less than a week after losing the race for West Virginia’s 3rd Congressional District in November 2018 by more than 12 percentage points.

Ojeda lost the race for congress to Republican Carol Miller, who was backed by President Donald Trump. During the 2018 campaign, Trump referred to Ojeda as a “stone cold wacko.”

 

Ojeda, who has said he voted for Trump in 2016, has been a sharp critic of the president after seeing few efforts to help southern West Virginia.

“I’m going to try to help the state from outside of this state — because I think that’s exactly the best way for it,” Ojeda said of his run for president.

A 10-member committee from 7th District Senatorial Executive Committee — from each of the five counties represented by Ojeda’s district (Boone, Lincoln, Logan, and portions of Mingo and Wayne) — will make up the committee to choose Ojeda’s replacement. One man and one woman from each county in the senatorial district will make up the committee.

The West Virginia Democratic Party will make the vacancy public — and then the committee will review applicants and offer to the governor three choices from which to fill the vacancy.

“I just hope that whoever is selected to be my replacement is somebody that the Democratic Party will be happy to have in that caucus with them — and not lobbyists or anything like that — not somebody that the governor picks because he just wants to have somebody that’s going to do his bidding,” Ojeda said.

When asked, Ojeda expressed concerns over one rumored potential replacement — Paul Hardesty, who is a registered lobbyist and works on behalf of companies owned by Gov. Justice’s family.

“If those rumors are true then, shame, shame on the supposed leaders of this state,” Ojeda said without referring to Hardesty by name.

A spokesperson for the governor said they had not yet recieved a letter of resignation from Ojeda and, therefore, did not have comment.

Gov. Justice Announces Re-Election Bid at Event Promoted by State GOP

With the 2020 election still a little less than two years away, Republican Gov. Jim Justice has announced he is running for re-election. The announcement, which came at a Monday event in White Sulphur Springs, was promoted by the state Republican Party through an email invitation to media and other interested parties.

Justice’s campaign began the announcement by showing a video outlining his administration’s accomplishments and other moments throughout the course of his term, which began in January 2017. The video appeared similar to other materials produced by the governor’s office and used at news conferences in recent months. A spokesperson for the governor’s office said no state resources were used to produce the video shown Monday in White Sulphur Springs.

Throughout a speech that lasted nearly half an hour, Justice looked back over his first two years in office.

“When we started down this journey, you know, I didn’t really know what to expect. I knew that it probably would be difficult to win when I wasn’t a politician — and I don’t want to be a politician. I’ve said it a thousand million times. I don’t care if you’re Democrat or Republican,” Justice said.

Justice also spent a portion of his speech detailing the state’s fiscal condition on whiteboards set up on the stage at the White Sulphur Springs Civic Center — where he spoke to a crowd of roughly a hundred supporters. Slogans used on campaign materials read “Results Not Politics” and “Hope Delivered.”

“I am telling you — this would be my prediction — by year end, we will be $300 million above budget,” said Justice, as he noted revenue surpluses that have been reported throughout Fiscal Year 2019.

 

But data from the U.S. Census Bureau released in September show West Virginia’s poverty rate increased 1.2 percentage points from 2016 to 2017 — now standing at 19.1 percent. 

Justice also said that public education has been, and will continue to be, a priority.

“West Virginia’s image forever — forever and a day — had been not very good. It had been a place it was dingy and dark and backward and whatever it may be. People on the  outside really believed we had to kill a deer every day to feed the kids at school,” he said. “Now, how do you expect somebody to come to West Virginia if that’s our image? So, it had to change. The biggest thing that I thought we had to do was put our stake in the sand that we are absolutely committed to education.”

Justice described himself as an unselfish person with the ability to fix the state’s problems.

“I’m not sitting here tooting my horn in any way. Have we ever had someone ever it had the guts that was willing to step into the all the junk and take the toll and take the errors — that had the experience and a creative mind and could think with the biggest ideas in the world?” Justice asked rhetorically.

 

 

According to the Secretary of State’s office, Gov. Justice had been scheduled to preside over a meeting of the Board of Public Works at a 2:30 p.m. meeting Monday. That meeting was canceled Friday. Following his re-election campaign announcement, Justice said he understood that the board was unable to establish a quorum — or gather enough members to make the meeting official.

 

Elected in 2016 as a Democrat, Gov. Justice switched his political affiliation to Republican at a rally for President Donald Trump in Huntington, in August 2017.

As Justice — whose family owns the historic Greenbrier Resort in White Sulphur Springs and companies involved in the coal industry — campaigned for governor in 2016, the GOP was critical of the billionaire businessman-turned-politician’s debts to the state and private entities.

An October 2016 report from NPR, West Virginia Public Broadcasting, Ohio Valley ReSource and Mine Safety & Health News found that Justice’s companies owed $15 million in taxes and fines in West Virginia and five other states, including Alabama, Kentucky, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia. The original report from NPR showed those companies owed $4.71 million in West Virginia.

In August, Justice — flanked by West Virginia revenue officials — announced his debt obligations to the state had been cleared. However, Justice did not provide details about how much was paid. It is unknown if Justice has cleared tax obligations in other states.

More recently, a federal judge ruled that a coal company controlled by Gov. Jim Justice’s family must turn over financial information related to a case involving other debts. That ruling comes as the company has been fined $1.23 million for being in contempt of court for repeatedly failing to pay Virginia-based James River Equipment $150,000 for mining equipment, service and parts.

Despite these troubles, Justice seems to have won the favor of his new party. Just ahead of the 2018 midterm election, he gave a $20,000 donation to the state GOP.

On its website, the West Virginia Republican Party outlines various platforms that guide the organization.

In terms of campaigns and elections, the party calls for “[h]ealthy, positive, one-on-one debates as the best vehicle to discuss issues with the people during an election season. We strongly encourage a series of debates among all candidates for all elected offices.”

In an email to West Virginia Public Broadcasting, state Republican Party chair Melody Potter declined to answer questions about whether the party would welcome primary challengers to the race.

With the 2020 election still 22 months away, Justice’s campaign announcement is the second to come in the race for governor — and the first from a Republican.

Democrat and community organizer Stephen Smith kicked off his campaign in November before holding a series of events around the state in December. His campaign held a more formal announcement in Matewan on Saturday. According to the Secretary of State’s campaign finance reporting system, Smith has filed as an undeclared candidate, while Justice has yet to file preliminary paperwork.

Other possible gubernatorial hopefuls have yet to formally or informally declare their intention to run.

 

West Virginia Community Organizer Jumps in 2020 Gubernatorial Race

Charleston community organizer Stephen Smith has announced his candidacy for governor in 2020.

 

Smith, who is running as a Democrat, recently stepped down as director of the West Virginia Healthy Kids and Families Coalition. The organization has focused on raising the minimum wage, child heath care and other policies aimed to help working class families.

 

 

“In some ways, the central idea of this campaign is: What if the values of service and generosity that we see in our neighborhoods were also the values that governed the statehouse?” he said.

Smith said he plans to help organize candidates for other statehouse offices as part of a larger movement. It’s his first time running for office.

In October, Republican Gov. Jim Justice said he may seek another term. According to the Secretary of State’s website, Justice have yet to file as a pre candidate paperwork for 2020. The website lists Smith as a candidate for an undeclared office.

As of Monday, five others have filed early to run for the state’s highest office — two Republicans, two Independents and one candidate from the Constitution Party.

 

After Losing Congressional Race, Ojeda Establishes Campaign Committee for 2020 Presidential Bid

A West Virginia state senator and Army veteran who lost a bid for congress in the 2018 midterms now has his sights set on running for president in 2020.

According to a statement of organization filed with the Federal Election Commission, Richard Ojeda has established a campaign committee to run for the nation’s highest office as a Democrat.

One of Ojeda’s campaign staffers confirmed the 2020 presidential bid and said a media advisory with more details, including information on a formal announcement, is expected Monday.

Ojeda lost in Tuesday’s election in the race for the U.S. House of Representatives in West Virginia’s 3rd Congressional District. Republican Carol Miller pulled in 56.41 percent of the vote to Ojeda’s 43.59 percent in the midterm contest, according to unofficial numbers from the Secretary of State’s office.

In a concession speech in Logan County on election night, Ojeda — who still has two years left in his term representing the state Senate’s 7th District covering Boone, Lincoln, Logan and parts of Mingo and Wayne counties — indicated he wasn’t finished in politics.

“This isn’t the result we wanted, or the result we worked so hard for. But make no mistake about it, this is not the end of my fight, and it is definitely not the end of our fight together,” he told of crowd of supporters.

The 24-year Army veteran rose to prominence during the 2018 West Virginia Legislature’s regular session as a galvanizing figure of the teacher strike.

During his 2018 campaign for Congress, President Donald Trump endorsed Miller and called Ojeda “stone cold crazy.” But Ojeda was undeterred by the Trump’s remarks and his one-time support of the president turned to sharp criticism after seeing little changes in the economic landscape around his district.

 

An email sent Sunday to supporters of Ojeda’s congressional run hinted at a bid for higher office and — by later that night — he had changed his Twitter handle from @Ojeda4congress to @VoteOjeda2020.

 

“When I decided to run for Congress in WV-03, I had one mission in mind — to improve the lives of the people in West Virginia,”  the email states.

In the email, Ojeda continues on to mention that he had received letters of support from others around the country about their own problems related to the affordability of higher education, the economy and substance abuse disorders.

“That’s when I realized — families in Logan West Virginia were going through the same struggles as families in the Bronx, San Francisco and Houston. This is not a West Virginia problem. This is an American problem and it has to change,” he wrote.

According to the email, additional details are expected Monday at noon.

West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s Molly Born contributed to this story.

Exit mobile version