Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Sen. Manchin boosts West Virginia’s hopes

- By Cuneyt Dil

U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin has the best shot in years to steer federal dollars back home to West Virginia.

CHARLESTON, W.VA. >> West Virginia has long proclaimed itself “Almost Heaven,” a nod to a song and soaring mountainto­p vistas. Now some joke the state name-checked in “Take Me Home, Country Roads” could take things up a notch as Democratic U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin bargains his way through Congress.

“Maybe we’ll get to heaven status,” said longtime Democratic Party official Nick Casey.

Reviving West Virginia’s economical­ly battered coal towns and reversing a persistent population decline is a tall order. But Manchin, who grew up in the mountain town of Farmington, has emerged as a key swing vote in a divided Senate. Now he has his best shot in years to steer federal dollars back home.

Manchin put himself in the middle of things again this week over the COVID relief bill making its way through Congress, singlehand­edly halting work on the measure Friday as Democrats sought to placate his concerns about the size and duration of an expanded unemployme­nt benefit.

As for his own agenda, Manchin has dropped hints publicly about “common sense” infrastruc­ture investment­s sorely needed back home: expanding rural broadband and fixing roads among them. He declared that West Virginia could supply the manufactur­ing firepower to “innovate our way to a cleaner climate.” And more than once, he’s said coal miners can build the best solar panels if given a chance.

Economy

Some wonder if his newfound clout might help him do something former President Donald Trump promised but couldn’t deliver — reignite a state economy long overly dependent on a coal industry in freefall.

Manchin’s Senate colleagues have good reason to study the needs of small towns beyond the Blue Ridge Mountains. Manchin, 73, was already a recognized

dealmaker on Capitol Hill, but deference to the most conservati­ve Democrat in a 50-50 Senate has ratcheted up since November. A senator from Hawaii recently teased him as “your highness.” The guessing game of which way he’ll vote has become fodder for late night television.

In recent days, Manchin’s opposition helped sink Neera Tanden as President Joe Biden’s nominee to lead the federal Office of Management and Budget.

Not since Robert Byrd’s

death in 2010 has a senator from West Virginia wielded this much influence. Over half a century, Byrd brought home billions of dollars in federal buildings, landmarks and roads, many bearing his name.

“This is hardscrabb­le country, man — our population is dropping, the demise of coal,” said Casey, an attorney and former chair of the state Democratic Party. “We got a guy now who can maybe do something legacywise. And I think there’s a lot of hope and some expectatio­n that Joe’s going to do things that are significan­t, exceptiona­l.”

Pam Garrison, a retired cashier, said she told Manchin at a meeting seeking a $15 federal minimum wage that Byrd has universiti­es and hospitals named after him because “when he got into power, he used that power for the good of the people.”

“If you do what’s good for the people, even after you’re gone, you’re going to be remembered.”

Manchin, though, sees himself not as a seeker of pork-barrel projects but as a champion for policies that aid Appalachia and the Rust Belt.

“What we have to do now, and I think it’s appropriat­e — we show the need, and that the base has been left behind,” he said.

Clean energy

Manchin started down that road by joining Michigan Democratic Sen. Debbie Stabenow in co-sponsoring a proposal for $8 billion in tax credits to boost clean energy manufactur­ing for coal communitie­s and the auto industry.

Robert Rupp, a political history professor at West Virginia Wesleyan College, says Manchin can use his position in a 50-50 Senate to put his small state in the forefront of everyone’s mind.

“He’s at the center of attention, and he could assert power,” Rupp said.

A former governor, Manchin has deep roots in West Virginia politics. That helps explain why he is the last Democrat to hold statewide office in a state Trump carried twice by large margins.

Manchin maintains an air of unpredicta­bility. He opposed a $15 minimum wage provision in the $1.9 billion pandemic stimulus package, even after activists rallied outside his state office in Charleston, leaving some to question his future legacy.

“We’re either going to smell like a rose in West Virginia, or we’re going to smell like crap, and it’s going to be attributed to Joseph Manchin,” said Jean Evansmore, 80, an organizer with the Poor People’s Campaign in West Virginia.

 ?? LEIGH VOGEL — POOL ?? Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., speaks during a Senate Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington.
LEIGH VOGEL — POOL Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., speaks during a Senate Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington.

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