Watch Don Lemon Shut Down WaPo's Taylor Lorenz Over This Take About Gaza...
Frat Boys Launch Their Own Intifada Against Pro-Hamas Radicals on Their Campuses
Pro-Hamas Supporters at LSU Didn't Know What to Do When the Fraternities Showed...
Who Thought It Was a Good Idea to Bring Out 'The Lost Jedi'?
The Left’s New School Choice Playbook in Arkansas Serves as a National Warning
Supporters of President Trump Should Not Support Biden’s DOJ or its Dark Antitrust...
The Truth About the CIA
The Left’s Radicalization Of Our Children
Holly Rehder: The Only MAGA Candidate in the Race for Missouri Lt. Governor
RFK, Jr.'s Proposed 'No Spoiler Pledge' Is a Stroke of Genius
It's Time to Use American Energy As a Weapon
Why Intellectuals Don't Like Capitalism
NYPD Reveals Details About the 'Professional' Pro-Hamas Agitators Popping Up on Campuses
Liberal Reporter Triggered by Frat Boys Counterprotesting Hamas Agitators, Calls Them 'Rac...
Columbia President Breaks Overdue Silence Amid Pro-Hamas Protests
Tipsheet

Manchin on Hillary Visiting West Virginia Ahead of Election: No Thanks

During the 2016 presidential election, Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton proudly told voters that as president she is "going to put a lot of coal miners out of business."

Advertisement

Her remarks cost her whatever support she had left in West Virginia, which hasn't gone Democratic since 1996. Coal workers confronted her at campaign stops and some even gave her the middle finger. Clinton tried to correct her "misstatement" but noted she "can't take it back." She simply offered to "support" West Virginians in any way she can.

It's a year later, but voters have not forgotten her threat against the coal industry. That's why Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) is kindly asking Clinton not to visit his state as he campaigns for re-election. In this particular case, it would be best if they "separate friendship from politics."

Advertisement

"It wouldn't be wise for Hillary to come to West Virginia," he told MSNBC's Kasie Hunt. "It wouldn't be a good thing for her or for me." 

The senator added that Clinton's remarks were "very harmful and very hard to justify or say." 

Clinton's coal comments also have the potential to derail Lt. Gov. Ralph Northam's chances in Virginia's gubernatorial race, as Matt reported last week. In recent debates with his Republican opponent Ed Gillespie, Northam acknowledged that coal is "very important" to southwest Virginia and he would do his best to protect the coal industry. 

Clinton's presence would likely upend that narrative.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement