Over on the home page, I take a look at the West Virginia gubernatorial election, where the contrast between the candidates cannot be overstated:
Manchin’s election required him to step down as governor, and state-senate president Earl Ray Tomblin became acting governor. (Tomblin retains his title as senate president but is not collecting his legislative salary or presiding over the chamber.)
Tomblin’s biography seems like a litany of clichés for powerful state lawmakers with shady ties in rural states. His mother, Freda Tomblin, owned a pair of lucrative dog tracks and his father, Earl Tomblin, was a sheriff twice convicted of election fraud and bribery. The more recent case, from 1989, featured the elder Tomblin paying a sheriff candidate $10,000 for a salaried position as a part-time investigator for the sheriff’s office that required little work.
Tomblin’s family owned Southern Amusement Co., a vending-machine outfit that distributed “gray” video-poker machines before the state legalized video lottery in 2001. The term “gray” meant that while they were purportedly not meant to be used for gambling, just for amusement, it was an open secret that many venue owners paid players. After becoming senate president in 1994, Earl Ray Tomblin left his position with the company, and his family sold the business the following year — to “Joe C. Ferrell, a former state delegate from Logan County who pleaded guilty to racketeering and tax charges in federal court last month.”
Around the time they sold Southern Amusement, the Tomblins expanded the dog-racing venture. The state legislature started setting aside money for dog racing in 1993 as an incentive for dog owners to breed greyhounds; the fund was created when Tomblin was chairman of the Senate Finance Committee.
Since 1993, Tomblin Kennels; Tomblin’s mother, Freda; his brother, Carl Tomblin; and other members of the Tomblin family have received at least $4,194,014 in breeders’-fund bonus payments. One of Tomblin’s Democratic rivals, state treasurer John Perdue, tried to make the dog tracks an issue in the primary but got limited traction.
Meanwhile, the Republican nominee, Bill Maloney, was headed down to Chile to help rescue those trapped miners. Really.
Self-serving as it may seem, read the whole thing.
Don't hold your breath. Having lived in West Virginia for 4 years, I got a nice picture of the third world-style cronyism that is the bread and butter of the state and local political system. Joe Manchin, the former Democrat governor and now "moderate" senator is moderate in everything but his penchant for cronyism and corruption. Just a sample; he helped his daughter get an MBA from West Virginia University despite the fact that she was 22 credits short. She is now in a high position in a WV pharmaceutical company despite the transparent flaws in her qualifications, and for his part Manchin was elected Senator to replace the grand master cronyist Robert Byrd. Bottom line - anti-Obama sentiment and a stronger GOP candidate isn't going to be enough to beat tradition. In WV, it's who you know, and that's it.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseDoes the willingness of the Democratic party to nominate a person with such a past indicate the contempt the party has for voters, or the paucity of qualified candidates within their ranks? Or both?
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseWV still has straight ticket voting, so as long as the 'old timer' Democrats are living, they will continue to pull the lever for all the D's on the ticket, even though MOST West Virginians are conservative and would vote Republican if they had any clue how corrupt the current political system is.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseI don't think the word "crevasse" is what you want here. A crevasse is a narrow crack in an ice sheet that is very deep. A wide crevasse is, by definition, no longer a crevasse.
“Avoid fancy words....If you admire fancy words, if every sky is beauteous, every blonde curvaceous, every intelligent child prodigious, if you are tickled by discombobulate, you will have bad time Reminder 14.”
Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse― William Strunk Jr.
Maloney's story is compelling.
WV, while still very Blue at the state level, does tend to alternate between R & D governors. The last poll I saw on this race had Maloney down by 6, so he has his work cut out for him.
R's in general need to do a better job of explaining to blue-collar workers that their economic interests are served by the Republican Party's policies. If you work and pay taxes, D's exist to confiscate your hard-earned money and redistribute it to government employees and people that don't work at all.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseOn my way to work this morning in Morgantown I saw a yard sign that read "Democrats for Maloney". Quite surprising.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseChange comes slowly to WV. In some ways that's a good thing, but then there's this... flip side, where a lot of folks are still voting against Calvin Coolidge and political and/or union bosses can determine the outcome of an entire county.
The Maloney campaign made great inroads against the Democrat machine, though, winning 47 pct of the vote in a state where Democrats outnumber Republicans 2:1. At long last we have something to build on, and will see better, stronger results in 2012.
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