May 4, 2012
Manchin, Tomblin create uncertainty lot of uncertainty going around
Waffling about Obama leaves voters less sure
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U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin, the most popular governor the state has ever had, said in April that he isn't sure whether he will vote for President Obama in November.

Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin, the savvy former state Senate president who replaced Manchin as governor, subsequently allowed as how he isn't sure whether he will vote for his party's president either.

This is an awful lot of slippery-looking uncertainty for people who are running in a state where the electorate is certain.

The Charleston Daily Mail's West Virginia Poll of 410 likely voters recently found a 54-37 margin for Republican Mitt Romney over Barack Obama.

That continues a trend line.

West Virginians didn't go for Obama last time, or the Democratic Party's presidential nominee before that, or the Democratic presidential nominee before that.

And that was before President Obama and a Democratic Senate passed the deceptively termed "Affordable Care Act" to ultimately sweep us all into government-controlled health care.

And before, with the tacit support of the Democrats' majority in the U.S. Senate, Obama's Environmental Protection Agency started inflicting real economic harm on West Virginians with its ruthless regulatory war on coal.

Because the Senate has abdicated its role in making national energy policy, it is allowing the administration to make energy policy by itself - imposing rules that have made it increasingly difficult to mine coal or burn it in electric power plants.

Very few people in West Virginia think a president should be allowed to work that way. Why even have a Senate if it doesn't think it's supposed to make energy policy?

All the while, the president Manchin still isn't sure about has poured billions into favored solar energy firms, many of which haven't been able to make it even with taxpayers' money.

West Virginians have felt the effects of the administration's war on coal in investments not made, jobs not created and utility bills not affordable.

"I'll look at the options," Manchin said in announcing his uncertainty over how he will vote.

"The people in West Virginia, they basically look at the candidates . . . the performance and the result that's been obtained."

"I am just waiting for it to play out. I am not jumping in one way or the other," adding helpfully: "I'm worried about me.

"I've said it's not a team sport. You need to go out and work for yourself."

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Copyright 2012 . All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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