Clinton, Dems Face Heat in Coal, Steel Country
Started by Robert M
UNITED
STATES - MAY 2: Protesters gesture and yell as presidential candidate
Hillary Clinton pulls away after touring a health and wellness center in
Williamson, W. Va., on Monday, May 2, 2016. Several dozen protesters
stood in the rain to voice their opposition to Hillary Clinton's visit
to coal country. (Photo By Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call)
Posted at May 2, 2016 3:55 PM
ASHLAND,
Ky. — The steel mill here shut down recently, costing 600 jobs, as
China dumps cheaper steel on the market. The coal mines have been
slowing down production for years as renewable energy gains traction.
And Democrats who used to win elections in this patch of Appalachia are
losing to Republicans.
So when Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton arrived here Monday for an event at a local restaurant, she drew protesters.
“Coal
and steel are the lifeblood here,” said Jose Gonzalez, one of a small
group of protester[s] to arrive. “It kills me that people from this area
are like, ‘Yeah, Hillary.'”
The
criticism grew more intense later in the day after Clinton crossed the
West Virginia line to visit a medical facility treating coal miners
suffering from black lung disease, part of what she calls her "Breaking
Down Barriers" tour.
Clinton
was greeted by a throng of angry protesters, standing in the pouring
rain and booing as she arrived at the facility in Williamson.
Protesters gather in the rain as presidential candidate Hillary Clinton tours a health and wellness
center in Williamson
Clinton
has endured criticism in Appalachian states for her push to replace
coal with renewable energy. In November, she released a plan to
help coal communities rebuild with initiatives to promote small
businesses, invest in education and support miners with black lung.
But the conversation Monday focused on words she spoke at a March town hall on CNN: "We're gonna put a lot of coal miners and coal companies out of business.”
Bo Copley, an unemployed coal miner who said he was a registered Republican, asked Clinton about the comment.
Clinton
said her words were taken out of context, but she realizes that her
remark may hurt her with voters in West Virginia and Kentucky.
“I
put forth a $30 billion plan,” Clinton said. “We can’t just leave
people like you and your family behind. That’s not how I’m made, and
it’s not what I’ll do. And so I made one misstatement, you know, and I
apologized for that. It was not meant to be taken the way that it was
taken.”
“I’m
totally at peace with what I want to do and I understand the anger, and
I understand the disappointment that is being expressed given what’s
been going on,” she continued. “I’ll be honest with ya,a lot of people
said just don’t go to West Virginia ... go to California, there are lot
more votes there. They vote in June.”
“Whether
you vote for me or not, whether people yell at me or not, it’s not
going to affect what I’m going to try to do to help,” Clinton said.
An Appeal to Blue Collar Workers
Clinton's visit to the region came a week ahead of West Virginia's May 10
primary, but in many ways, her message was aimed at a general election
audience, particularly blue collar voters who may be wary of her
positions on trade and energy.
The
earlier event in Kentucky was a small gathering, reminiscent of her
early stops in Iowa or New Hampshire. The event even brought the return
of what was affectionately dubbed the "Scooby van," when Clinton
traveled from her home in the New York to Iowa more than a year ago.
Inside
Alma's Italian Cafe, Clinton assured a gathering of steel workers that
she would go after China and other actors engaged in dumping, in
addition to establishing a "trade prosecutor" to get out in front of
problems.
"We got into a pattern that I don't agree with where we waited for a problem to happen," Clinton said.
Presidential
candidate Hillary Clinton speaks with local steel workers and civic
leaders during her campaign stop at Alma's Italian Cafe in Ashland, Ky.
(Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call)
She also discussed her plan for reviving coal communities, including a "Marshall Plan" effort to retrain coal workers for new jobs.
Tim
Gibbs, the president of the Ashland Alliance, which is a local chamber
of commerce, said jobs lost when the AK Steel mill shut down earlier
this year and when coal production declined, are not replenished with
anything comparable, even when jobs do come to the region.
"It's
very difficult to recruit jobs of this quality in this region, and it's
our legacy," Gibbs said during the meeting with Clinton.
One
of the unemployed AK Steel workers, Shawn Burnham, went so far as to
buy a camper and make the drive north to Columbus, Ohio, in search of
work.
Kentucky
Republican Sen. Rand Paul has been among the public officials active in
working on the AK Steel issue, meeting with Ashland Mayor Chuck
Charles, as well as Gibbs last month.
From Blue to Red
This
part of Kentucky was once reliably Democratic. But the shift to the
Republicans, while trailing behind the South, has been close to
complete.
While
West Virginia and Kentucky went for Bill Clinton in 1992 and 1996, both
states have voted Republican in the four presidential elections that
followed. On Sunday, the former president faced hecklers as he spoke in rural Logan County, W.Va.
Senate
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell's 2014 re-election campaign dedicated
considerable resources to Eastern Kentucky, in which he easily defeated
the state's Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes in counties that
had not traditionally voted for Republicans.
Grimes was present for Clinton's event Monday.
Josh
Holmes, who oversaw the McConnell campaign effort, pointed out that the
same held true in the 2015 gubernatorial race in which Republican Matt
Bevin was elected.
"We
focused like a laser on coal country Democrats because we believed the
Democratic Party had completely abandoned them economically and
culturally, and the only reason they voted [for the Democrats] was
historical practice. If presented a choice on issues and values instead
of party affiliation, they would be with us," Holmes said. "In the end,
they were."
Contact Lesniewski at nielslesniewski@cqrollcall.
Laura J Alcorn
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Wednesday, May 4, 2016
HILLARY'S POSITION ON COAL CANNOT BE CHANGED TO "OUT OF CONTEXT" CLAIM!
Submitted by: Conservative 2 Conservative
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