Congressman Mooney of West Virginia Calls On GOP Colleagues To Support Trump’s Efforts To Overturn Election

Republican Congressman Alex Mooney of West Virginia is calling on GOP colleagues Tuesday to support President Trump’s efforts to challenge the results of the November election.

Mooney, who represents West Virginia’s 2nd Congressional District, proposed a resolution titled “Counting Every Legal Vote.”

The effort, introduced during a call with the House Republican Conference, offers support for Trump’s post-election efforts to question the results in key states he lost and seeks to “investigate and punish election fraud.”

In a statement on Twitter, Mooney said he would offer a similar resolution to the entire House.

“I hope my GOP colleagues today choose to adopt this resolution supporting President Trump’s efforts to count every legal vote and investigate and punish election fraud,” Mooney said. “I call on my fellow colleagues in the House GOP Conference to join me in sending a strong, united message of support for President Trump. No Republican member should prematurely call on President Trump to concede before these investigations are complete.”

By Tuesday afternoon, Mooney tweeted again that the resolution had been introduced in the House. The social media post included a photocopy of the resolution.

Democrat and President-elect Joe Biden decisively won the election with 306 electoral votes — and a popular vote margin of about 7 million votes. However, Trump and his legal team mounted unsuccessful court challenges in states where the results were close.

Trump has refused to concede the election to Biden, baselessly claiming the election was rigged.

Mooney has long been a vocal supporter of Trump. In October 2019, the congressman, along with other Republicans, stormed into a secure facility where a House committee was holding meetings ahead of the president’s impeachment.

State Superintendent Says More than Three-Quarters of K-12 Students Sign Up For In-Person Classes

Looking ahead to K-12 classes resuming Sept. 8, West Virginia superintendent of schools Clayton Burch said Wednesday that 79 percent of the state’s 265,000 students have signed up for in-person learning. 

State education officials set a deadline of last week for county school systems to detail reopening plans, including virtual and in-person instruction. They have also given parents options on how their children can attend classes as the pandemic continues into the new school year.

“I think that sends a message that we are ready for our children back to school, but it also now puts our schools in a position of implementing those plans,” Burch said.

In other news of the day, Justice announced that bars in Monongalia County will remain closed through Aug. 31 unless the area sees a spike in cases of the coronavirus. The governor originally closed bars in the county in mid-July.

“I hate it like crazy. I know this is your business. I know that’s part of your life and everything,” Justice said as he announced the extension of the closures. “But at the same time, we’ve got a situation where we’ve got to try in every way to protect everybody in that county and throughout all across West Virginia.”

Justice was joined at his briefing by U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito and Rep. Alex Mooney, who both made mention of the currently stalled federal coronavirus relief package — known as the HEALS Act — and the potential of $105 billion becoming available to states to support schools. West Virginia’s share of those funds was not immediately clear. 

“There’s no way that Republicans and Democrats can’t at least agree on supporting our children’s education — here in a few weeks — and at least pass that bill,” Mooney said. “We can keep talking about others. But, we need to get that through as fast as possible because there’s a deadline. Schools are opening.”

Wednesday’s briefing followed a roundtable discussion in Charleston that included Dr. Deborah Birx, who serves as the Coronavirus Response Coordinator for the White House Coronavirus Task Force. 

State coronavirus czar Dr. Clay Marsh said Birx praised West Virginia’s response to the pandemic but reminded state leaders to remain vigilant.

“She was appropriately cautious, but she did feel like that we were doing many of the right things — and, in fact, wanted to share some of the practices that we have engaged in and some of our creativity with other states and other governors,” Marsh said.

West Virginia Representatives Vote Against Formalizing Impeachment Procedures

Updated Thursday, October 31, 2019 at 3:45 p.m.

The U.S. House of Representatives has adopted a resolution formalizing its impeachment inquiry into President Donald Trump. As the first official vote in what’s sure to be many related to impeachment, the roll call showed a stark divide between majority Democrats who’ve already begun holding closed-door depositions on the matter and Republicans who continue to back the president. West Virginia’s three House members — all Republicans — voted against the measure.

H. Res. 660 authorizes the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee to conduct open hearings and allows the president and his attorneys the opportunity to cross-examine witnesses should Democrats approve. The resolution also directs the three panels leading the ongoing inquiry — the House Intelligence, Oversight and Foreign Affairs committees — to report their findings to the House Judiciary Committee, which will decide whether to move forward with drafting and voting on articles of impeachment.

Democrats said the procedures — which give them the ability to curb the president’s lawyers from calling witnesses — are similar to rules used during the impeachment proceedings of Presidents Richard Nixon and Bill Clinton. Republicans complained they were skewed against Trump.

The measure was approved Thursday on a 232-196 vote, with two Democrats — Rep. Jeff Van Drew (N.J.) and Rep. Collin Peterson (Minn.) joining Republicans in opposing the measure. The House’s lone Independent, Justin Amash (Mich.) voted in favor of the resolution.

West Virginia’s House delegation, comprised of three Republicans, has backed President Trump as the impeachment investigation has mounted. They’ve called the inquiry “partisan” and “baseless.” 

Reps. David McKinley, Alex Mooney and Carol Miller — of the state’s 1st, 2nd and 3rd districts, respectively — all voted against Thursday’s resolution.

“Our Founding Fathers never intended for impeachment to be used as a tool for scoring political points. Alexander Hamilton wrote in Federalist Papers No. 65, that there is always a danger that the decision to use the power of impeachment would be driven by partisan ‘animosities’ instead of ‘real demonstrations of innocence or guilt.’ Today’s purely partisan vote has proven Hamilton right,” McKinley said in a statement Thursday. “This process has continued to be unfair and unproductive, Democrats have created a biased narrative by using selective leaks and secretive interviews. Under Speaker Pelosi’s leadership, the House, has had more subpeoenas issued than bills signed into law.”

McKinley and Miller said Democrats in the House have been too focused on impeachment and not other issues affecting West Virginia and the rest of the country. 

In a statement following Thursday’s vote, Miller also argued that the resolution falls short in providing President Trump the same rights as other presidents who have been impeached. 

“The resolution brought to the floor today fails to provide my Republican colleagues and I, as well as the Trump Administration, the same rights offered in past presidential impeachment proceedings,” Miller said in part. “Their investigation is centered around secret hearings and selective leaks designed to damage the President. This process lacks transparency and fairness.”

Mooney issued a statement through a video posted to Facebook. 

“There’s already been 37 days of secret hearings — I attended once and attempted to attend many other times. Those secret hearings will still go on with this inquiry vote — supporting of it with his vote,” Mooney said in the video. “I’m glad they had a vote, so the American people can see where their representatives stand on this issue.”

Last week, Mooney joined dozens of other Republicans in a protest of the closed-door depositions as they made their way into a sensitive compartmented information facility — known as a SCIF — were being held. Like other GOP lawmakers, Mooney argued the depositions were being done in “secret” and called for proceedings to take place in view of the public and the news media. 

In a tweet posted Tuesday, Mooney said he again tried to make his way into a deposition being held in the SCIF. 

Miller also participated in last week’s protest. She sits on the House Oversight Committee, which is one of the three House committees that have had access to the depositions.

In a press conference as members gathered in the House ahead of Thursday’s vote, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi pushed back on Republican claims that the process is a “sham” and unfair to President Trump. She said procedures laid out in the resolution are “very transparent and open.” Pelosi also said the resolution gives “more privileges to the president and his argument than were given in the past.”

The Associated Press contributed reporting to this story. 

Rep. Alex Mooney Defends Protest Of Impeachment Inquiry Depositions

A Republican congressman from West Virginia who took part in a Wednesday protest of an ongoing impeachment inquiry into President Donald Trump is defending his actions. Rep. Alex Mooney was one of dozens of Republican lawmakers who made their way into a secure room where a scheduled deposition was delayed. 

Some congressional Democrats say the protest might have been a violation of national security and are calling on the House’s Sergeant of Arms to take action against those who made their way into the secure area. 

Mooney drew attention Wednesday when he tweeted audio of a dispatch he made from inside a sensitive compartmented information facility — known as a SCIF — where Pentagon official Laura Cooper had been scheduled to provide a deposition. Those proceedings were delayed for hours. 

“I represent over 600,000 people in West Virginia who are not given a right to know what’s even being said in these hearings. It is a brazenly attempt for no reason to impeach the president of the United States,” Mooney said in the audio uploaded to Twitter. “I’m proud that over 30 members of Congress, including our whip, Steve Scalise, walked into that room and demanded transparency and justice for our president.” 

On that recording, he said he made a call on a secure phone from inside the SCIF.

But questions arose about whether some Republicans, including Mooney, had brought their cellphones into the SCIF. Mooney also tweeted video of himself walking down a corridor and toward the entrance of the secure room as the protest was beginning.

In a Thursday phone interview with West Virginia Public Broadcasting, Mooney outlined his involvement in the protest, defended his actions and criticized Democrats for limiting access to the impeachment inquiry depositions. 

“I think what you saw — both from other media sources and from my own cell phone — was me walking into the hallway area that you have to go through first. In that hallway area, they tell you to turn your cellphones off,” Mooney said of the video he took of himself. “And then you have to go through another door to actually be in the SCIF area. So what you saw was actually not the SCIF area. And that’s been misreported by some outlets. But once I got in there, they said, ‘Turn the phones off.’ So I turned it off.”

“Once we got in there, they took our phones away from us,” he added. 

Mooney acknowledged that Republicans who sit on three panels — the House’s Intelligence, Oversight and Foreign Affairs committees — are allowed to take part in the hearings. But, he said he is unaware of how much time members of the minority are given to ask questions or what information has been gathered. 

“I know the Republicans on the committees are allowed in the room. That much I know. I don’t know how the questioning goes,” he said.

Mooney and other Republicans have argued that conducting the depositions behind closed doors and excluding other members of Congress is not an acceptable method for the proceedings. 

“Committee hearings aren’t supposed to be done in secret. This is a basic thing of government and I don’t care where you stand on the issues — Republican or Democrat, or if you like Trump or you don’t like Trump.  Committee hearings are not supposed to be done in secret, particularly impeachment inquiries,” he said.

The U.S. Constitution does not specify how impeachment inquiry proceedings should take place — only that the House “shall have the sole Power of Impeachment” and the Senate would hold a trial.

Following the Republican protest, House Homeland Security Chairman Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., sent a letter to the chamber’s sergeant at arms, calling Wednesday’s events an “unprecedented breach of security.” Thompson called for action to be taken against those who took part in the breach of the SCIF.

“More broadly, I urge you to take House-wide action to remind all Members about the dangers of such reckless action and the potential national security risks of such behavior,” Thompson wrote. 

Mooney fired back at Thompson’s letter, saying that congressional Democrats should be investigated for the way in which the depositions have been held. 

“I feel that’s the pot calling the kettle black. There is no way that we are violating any rules,” he said. “They are the ones violating the rules by closing these hearings. If there’s an ethics investigation of any kind, it should be against the people closing these hearings and declaring that it’s confidential when it’s not. This is a kangaroo court, Soviet-style hearings. I’m not going to be intimidated by these people. This is that that is absolutely nothing that I’m concerned about at all.” 

Mooney also noted that he met with President Trump earlier this week, along with a group of other Republicans. He also said the idea to hold a protest of the closed-door depositions was his own. 

“I actually said over a week ago at one of our Republican meetings that we should go into those hearings — and it was very well received among Republicans,” Mooney said. “I’d like to say that was my idea to go into those hearings. Although, it was Congressman Matt Gaetz, who called the press conference and Steve Scalise, our whip, who wasn’t at the meeting I was at, anyway, with the president — who led this effort.”

Mooney said he will continue to push for more open proceedings and for minority Republicans to be allowed to call witnesses in the depositions. 

A spokesman for Rep. Carol Miller, of West Virginia’s 3rd Congressional District and who sits on the House Oversight Committee, said in a statement that Miller has been part of the group allowed in the SCIF depositions. She outlined Miller’s involvement in Wednesday’s activities on Capitol Hill.

“Congresswoman Miller participated in this morning’s press conference to oppose the lack of transparency and due process in Nancy Pelosi and Adam Schiff’s closed-door impeachment proceedings, which are being hidden from a majority of her colleagues, and far out of sight of the American people,” the spokesperson said in an email to West Virginia Public Broadcasting. “Congresswoman Miller does not bring her electronic devices into the SCIF.” 

Miller’s spokesman did not respond to West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s request for an interview. 

A spokesperson for Rep. David McKinley of the state’s 1st Congressional District said McKinley did not take part in the protest.

West Virginia Delegation Reacts To Impeachment Inquiry Launched Against President Trump

Updated Wednesday, September 25, 2019 at 2:40 p.m.

West Virginia’s congressional delegation has weighed in on a formal impeachment inquiry launched against President Trump and the contents of a phone call between Trump and Ukranian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Ca., announced Tuesday, Sept. 24, that House Democrats are moving forward with an impeachment inquiry related to a whistleblower complaint about the president. Additionally, the White House released a partial transcript of the July 25, 2019, Trump-Zelenskiy phone call. That account of the phone conversation was based on notes taken by White House staff assigned to listen. 

According to a partial transcript the White House released Wednesday, Trump asked Zelenskiy for “a favor” by looking into Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden and his son, Hunter Biden.

The conversation has raised concerns that Trump may have broken the law by asking for foreign help against a potential presidential contender in 2020. However, the Justice Department has concluded that prosecutors “did not and could not make out a criminal campaign finance violation.”

Capito Calls Impeachment Inquiry ‘Partisan Theatrics,’ Manchin Takes Non-Prejudicial Tone

On Tuesday evening, Republican Sen. Shelley Moore Capito offered a statement characterizing the impeachment inquiry as politically motivated and partisan in nature. 

“West Virginians have made it clear to me time and time again that they would rather Congress focus on the issues that truly affect their day-to-day lives — not political and partisan theatrics,” Capito said. “Earlier this afternoon, in good faith, the president said he is willing to release the ‘complete, fully declassified and unredacted transcript,’ and I applaud that decision. Moving forward with an impeachment inquiry before that transcript is even public proves that House Democrats are more interested in partisan politics than in following the facts.”

Since the release of the partial transcript, Capito has not returned West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s request for comment on what is publicly known about the Trump-Zelenskiy phone call. 

Sen. Joe Manchin, the only Democrat to represent West Virginia in Congress, struck a cautious, unprejudiced tone with news of the House Democrats’ impeachment inquiry. 

“Any allegation of misconduct with a foreign country must be investigated. I firmly believe it is premature to jump to any conclusion until an investigation of the facts is complete,” Manchin said in a statement issued just after noon on Wednesday.

Manchin went on to say that he takes his “responsibility in the process very seriously” and that “the Senate’s role is to evaluate the facts.” The senior senator did not make mention of or comment on the partial transcript released Wednesday by the White House. 

“It would be irresponsible of me to comment on each piece of the process until all of the facts come out and the Senate begins to review the findings,” Manchin said, adding that he hopes the Senate rises above party and politics to do what is best for the country.

Republican House Representatives Take Aim At Speaker Pelosi

By midday Wednesday, all three of West Virginia’s Republican members in the House of Representatives had also offered a reaction to the impeachment inquiry, but only one has specifically mentioned the partial transcript of the Trump-Zelenskiy call. 

Reps. David McKinley, Alex Mooney and Carol Miller all took aim at Speaker Pelosi and described the impeachment inquiry as politically motivated.

“Speaker Pelosi’s call for impeachment is just another partisan attack on President Trump,” McKinley, of the 1st District, said in a statement issued Tuesday. “This Congress has featured countless investigations, and today’s announcement is nothing more than Democrats continuing to put partisan politics ahead of getting real legislation done.”

Rep. Alex Mooney, a Republican from the 2nd District, echoed McKinley’s sentiments about the impeachment inquiry. 

“Nancy Pelosi and her liberal allies in Congress have launched a baseless and purely partisan impeachment inquiry against President Donald Trump. The liberals in Congress have been clear from day one that their goal was to take down President Trump and remove him from office,” Mooney said. “As I travel across West Virginia, I talk to folks who are sick and tired of this purely partisan investigation aimed at reversing the results of the presidential election. It is time for Democrats to move on and start focusing on issues that matter to all Americans.” 

Rep. Carol Miller, a freshman from the 3rd District, offered a statement similar to McKinley’s and Mooney’s. She released a statement Wednesday morning via Twitter, also accusing Speaker Pelosi of politically attacking the president. 

“Nancy Pelosi and House Democrats have once again proven they are willing to stop at nothing to discredit the 2016 election and take down President Trump by any means necessary,” Miller wrote. “It’s time for Washington liberals to stop playing politics and embrace the success of the Trump administration. I encourage my colleagues across the aisle to repurpose this misguided impeachment effort and work with House Republicans to grow our economy, end the opioid epidemic and solve the crisis on our Southern border. I stand with our president.”

Responding to a Wednesday afternoon email from West Virginia Public Broadcasting, Rep. Miller downplayed the contents of the partial transcript of the Trump-Zelenskiy phone call. 

“The transcript of the conversation between President Trump and President Zelenskyy clearly shows there was no wrongdoing. How many more times will President Trump have to be exonerated before this Witch Hunt ends?” Miller said.

Other members of the congressional delegation have not yet returned additional requests for comment on the partial transcript released by the White House. 

Mooney Bill to Cut Mine Safety Disclosures Advances

Regular disclosures to investors about publicly traded mining companies’ safety violations and worker deaths would no longer be required under legislation sponsored by West Virginia Republican Rep. Alex Mooney.

The bill was advanced this week by the House Financial Services Committee.

It would repeal a section of the Dodd-Frank Act intended to protect consumers and investors after the 2008 financial crisis.

It also followed the 2010 deaths of 29 miners at West Virginia’s Upper Big Branch Mine and amid questions about whether Massey Energy investors were misled about its safety practices.

Mooney calls it “a small, but significant, way to get rid of duplicative paperwork” and save the industry more than $1 million annually.

The Mine Safety and Health Administration separately tracks mine safety.

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