Monstrous Coal Baron Finishes Third in WV Senate Primary, Saving Republicans From Begrudgingly Supporting Him in November
The Republican Party dodged a huge bullet on Tuesday night, as former coal baron and convicted criminal Don Blankenship finished a distant third in the Republican primary for U.S. Senate in West Virginia.
The New York Times called the primary for Patrick Morrisey, the state’s attorney general. With about 94 percent reporting, Morrisey was pulling 35 percent, while Congressman Evan Jenkins was sitting at 29 percent. Blankenship was hovering just above 20 percent, and three other candidates combined for about 16 percent of the vote.
Blankenship, who spent the most of anyone in either primary including incumbent Democrat Joe Manchin, is the former CEO of Massey Energy, a now-defunct coal company which saw the death of 29 miners in the 2010 Upper Big Branch mine disaster. Blankenship later went to prison for conspiracy to violate federal mine safety laws.
While in prison, he released a manifesto blaming Manchin and former President Barack Obama for “persecuting” him, and then filed to run for Senate. In the past few days, internal polling showed Blankenship edging out Morrissey and Congressman Evan Jenkins, who finished second, which caused Donald Trump to do this tweet: