Meet Don Blankenship: the ex-con coal exec the GOP fears could be their Senate nominee in W Virginia

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If 2018 were a season of ‘The Apprentice,’ we’d already have a front-runner

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/opin...02a0d0-47da-11e8-827e-190efaf1f1ee_story.html
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/25/us/politics/don-blankenship-china-west-virginia.html
https://www.cnn.com/2018/04/27/politics/don-blankenship-west-virginia-senate/index.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don_Blankenship
http://www.donblankenship.com






If the 2018 midterm election were a season of “The Apprentice,” we would already have a front-runner to beat out everyone else: Don Blankenship, fresh out of prison, who stands a decent chance of becoming West Virginia’s next Republican nominee for the Senate.

Among this year’s crop of red-state Republican candidates, there are more than a few who seem as eager as the contestants on President Trump’s old reality show to cast themselves as his clones. But when it comes to being an exemplar of the principles, or lack of them, that put Trump where he is today, none quite matches the former coal baron once considered the most reviled person in West Virginia.

At a Republican debate Monday night in Wheeling, Blankenship boasted that he is “Trumpier than Trump, and . . . that’s a fact.”

If that is another way of saying he is shameless, Blankenship has a point.

He became notorious as the chief executive of Massey Energy when its Upper Big Branch coal mine exploded in 2010, killing 29 people working there. Blankenship was convicted of conspiring to violate workplace-safety laws and sentenced to a year, after ajury acquitted him of more serious felony charges that could have put him away for much longer.

Anyone else might be wracked with remorse. But in Blankenship’s telling, he was a victim, too. Or as he put it, a “political prisoner.” Like Trump, he sees the hand of the “deep state” behind his legal woes — in his case, a conspiracy between an overzealous Obama administration and the state’s then-governor, Joe Manchin III (D).

That would be the same Joe Manchin whom Blankenship now hopes to unseat from the Senate. Manchin, though popular in West Virginia and a proven political survivor, is vulnerable, if for no other reason than that he is a Democrat in a state that Trump won by more than 40 percentage points in 2016.

For Blankenship, however, this is personal. Manchin has said that responsibility for the mine disaster “permeated from the top down.” The very week that Massey’s former chief executive got out of prison last May, he let loose a barrage of tweets, including one that said: “I challenge Sen. Manchin to debate UBB truth. A U.S. Senator who says I have ‘blood on my hands’ should be man enough to face me in public.”

As Blankenship campaigns throughout the state, he still brings up prison — but as a place where he would like to send Trump’s favorite foil. “We don’t need to investigate our president,” one of his recent ads declared. “We need to arrest Hillary.”

Blankenship also shares Trump’s aversion to transparency. He has refused to disclose his personal finances to the Senate Select Committee on Ethics, even though it is legally required. He told the New York Times there isn’t “much of a penalty” for flouting the law, and added, “I don’t personally think anybody should have to disclose private information.”

His reluctance to do so is understandable, in light of the newspaper’s report that his primary residence is actually a $2.4 million villa near Las Vegas.

National Republicans have been watching the May 8 GOP primary race in horror. They believe that either of Blankenship’s more mainstream rivals, Rep. Evan Jenkins and state Attorney General Patrick Morrisey, would stand a better chance of delivering the Senate seat this fall. Right now, the race is fluid, with a Fox News poll indicating the top three contenders within nine points of one another and at least one-quarter of the electorate still undecided.

Lately, things have gotten even uglier. Earlier this month, a new super PAC with ties to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) launched an ad accusing Blankenship’s company of poisoning local drinking water with coal slurry, even as its multimillionaire CEO installed a piping system to provide his own mansion with uncontaminated water. The tag line: “Isn’t there enough toxic sludge in Washington?”

Blankenship responded with . . . immigrant bashing, a favorite diversionary tactic by you-know-who.

In an interview Monday with a West Virginia radio show, Blankenship accused McConnell of “obstructing President Trump’s put-America-first program,” and speculated that the majority leader might be “soft on China” because his “father-in-law is a wealthy China person.” McConnell’s wife is Taiwan-born Secretary of Transportation Elaine Chao, whose Chinese American father founded a shipping company.

At any other time, a candidate with Blankenship’s baggage would not have stood a chance. But in 2018, he might actually become a Republican standard-bearer. In which case, “Trumpier than Trump” will have worked as a slogan — and as a requiem for decency.
 
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Yeah the GOP are going to find a way to stop this because if you do when there’s a good possibility he may lose and if he do win the general election there’s a possibility he may go to jail
 
Don Blankenship is NOT a "fringe" candidate. He's got money, he's got name recognition, and he is leading in a divided primary race according to internal GOP pollsters. Why do you think all of these national news articles are suddenly "appearing" only two weeks before the May 8 West Virginia primary?

https://www.politico.com/news/don-blankenship

Don't forget what JUST happened in Alabama: Luther Strange was the incumbent US Senator in the Republican primary and he had active campaign support from Trump and Pence the entire state and national GOP. He still lost in the Republican primary to convicted felon and pedophile Roy Jones. :oops:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Senate_special_election_in_Alabama,_2017
 
Nominate a guy responsible for a few peoples death? I see he took the rhetoric of the president and his brOadway comment and upped the ante.
 
There is a documentary on netflix "Blood on the Mountain", that shows West Virginia cold mining. Blankenship is featured in it, basically it's a view of how f'd up WV is now that coal is dying.
 
The cacs are some special race of demons. They tout obedience to the law but are averse to it when it comes to personal responsibility!

He told the New York Times there isn’t “much of a penalty” for flouting the law, and added, “I don’t personally think anybody should have to disclose private information.”
 
:hypnotised:I tried to give BGOL the head-up warning! :laptop:

Trump tries to sink Blankenship in West Virginia primary
https://www.yahoo.com/news/trump-tries-sink-blankenship-west-virginia-primary-132829185.html

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Kicking off his campaign in January, Blankenship spoke at a town hall in Logan, W.Va. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)


On the eve of the West Virginia Senate primary, President Trump urged voters in the state to reject Republican Don Blankenship, a coal magnate who served a year in prison after a deadly mine explosion, and instead cast their ballots for either of two other GOP candidates.

“To the great people of West Virginia we have, together, a really great chance to keep making a big difference,” Trump tweeted Monday morning. “Problem is, Don Blankenship, currently running for Senate, can’t win the General Election in your State…No way! Remember Alabama. Vote Rep. Jenkins or A.G. Morrisey!”

“The president is a very busy man and he doesn’t know me,” Blankenship responded in a statement to Axios. “I am Trumpier than Trump and this morning proves it.”

Both Evan Jenkins and state Attorney General Patrick Morrisey have positioned themselves as ardent Trump supporters, denouncing special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigation as a “witch hunt” and echoing Trump’s calls to “drain the swamp.”

But Blankenship, who was convicted on misdemeanor charges stemming from a 2010 explosion that killed 29 miners, may be the most Trumplike candidate, accusing the government of covering up its own failures and blaming his conviction on an Obama administration conspiracy.

“It was a fake prosecution,” Blankenship said during a Fox News debate last week.

“It’s as obvious as can be that the Upper Big Branch explosion was caused by the government,” he said Monday.

The winner of Tuesday’s primary will face incumbent Democrat Joe Manchin in November. Reports over the weekend said internal polls were showing Blankenship surging into a narrow lead.


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Rep. Evan Jenkins, left, and West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey greet President Trump at a roundtable discussion in White Sulphur Springs, W.Va., on April 5. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)


During last year’s special election for an open U.S. Senate seat in Alabama, Trump backed Luther Strange over Roy Moore in the Republican primary. Moore won despite allegations of inappropriate sexual contact with teenage girls when he was in his 30s. Trump endorsed him after the primary, but Moore lost to Democrat Doug Jones, sending shockwaves through the GOP. The deep-red state had not voted a Democrat into the Senate for 25 years.

Trump then turned around and said he had known Moore would lose. The president may be facing a similar situation with Blankenship.

The president’s son, Donald Trump Jr., has been more vocal in warning voters against Blankenship’s baggage.

“I hate to lose. So I’m gonna go out on a limb here and ask the people of West Virginia to make a wise decision and reject Blankenship!” Trump Jr. tweeted. “No more fumbles like Alabama.”

Blankenship responded by casting Trump Jr. as part of “the establishment.”

“No, I’m realistic,” Trump Jr. replied. “I know the first thing Manchin will do is run ads featuring the families of those 29 miners killed due to actions that sent you to prison. Can’t win the general… you should know that & if others in the GOP won’t say it, I will.”
 
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