Ex-con coal CEO turns Senate race upside down in W.Va. - Entrepreneur Generations

Blankenship
The contentious Republican primary for a U.S. Senate seat in West Virginia highlights the GOP's struggle to position itself to win in the upcoming midterm elections. Career Republicans in many states are distancing themselves from President Trump, but his popularity in West Virginia — which had a higher percentage of votes for Trump than any other at 69 percent — led state Attorney General Patrick Morrisey and Rep. Evan Jenkins to emphasize their support for Trump as candidates for the Senate seat, which is currently held by Democrat Joe Manchin, Asma Khalid reports for NPR.

But a third Republican candidate, Don Blankenship, is jeopardizing their odds with a mostly self-funded campaign that has turned the race into a three-way tie. Blankenship, the former CEO of Massey Energy who spent a year in federal prison for his role in a deadly mine explosion, mentions Trump the least in his campaign but has much in common with the embattled president as a wealthy political outsider with a polarizing message. "Some analysts say Blankenship's campaign is a vendetta — a personal quest to clear his name. But, even if it began as payback, it's morphed into something much more — he has an intense desire to crush his opponents and win at all costs," Khalid reports. "He's been running attack ads against both of his chief opponents, and they've been reluctant to punch back in public (or attack him directly about his prison record)."

The national Republican party worries that Blankenship could be toxic in the general election, and has spent nearly $700,000 on anti-Blankenship attack ads via a newly formed political action committee called the Mountain Families PAC. "The national party isn’t promoting its role in the group, but its fingerprints are all over it," Alex Isenstadt reports for Politico.

"At the same time, they’ve been concerned that attacking him would allow Blankenship to portray himself in the race as the embattled adversary of powerful D.C. interests," Isenstadt reports. "The scenario is similar to the one that played out in last year’s Alabama Senate race, when the party spent millions of dollars in an unsuccessful effort to stop former state Supreme Court Justice Roy Moore from winning the GOP nomination."

from The Rural Blog https://ift.tt/2qB9aat Ex-con coal CEO turns Senate race upside down in W.Va. - Entrepreneur Generations

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