image missing
HOME SN-BRIEFS SYSTEM
OVERVIEW
EFFECTIVE
MANAGEMENT
PROGRESS
PERFORMANCE
PROBLEMS
POSSIBILITIES
STATE
CAPITALS
FLOW
ACTIVITIES
FLOW
ACTORS
PETER
BURGESS
SiteNav SitNav (0) SitNav (1) SitNav (2) SitNav (3) SitNav (4) SitNav (5) SitNav (6) SitNav (7) SitNav (8)
Date: 2024-04-25 Page is: DBtxt001.php txt00021505
US POLITICS
SENATOR JOW MANCHIN (WEST VIRGINIA)

Manchin's fealty to big coal becoming crystal clear to the mineworkers he used to court


Original article: https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2022/1/10/2073864/-Manchin-s-fealty-to-big-coal-becoming-crystal-clear-to-the-mine-workers-he-used-to-court
Burgess COMMENTARY
Joe Manchin has been getting a lot of press coverage in the past year because of his role in blocking President Biden's legislative agenda. Whether this is because of crass financial greed on the part of Manchin, or something else, I do not know ... but the end result is that the narrative around President Biden's performance has been significantly degraded.

Money in politics is playing a role in the Machin saga. The coal industry ... the fossil fuel industry ... has had a champion in Manchin even while he has a (D) label by his name.
Peter Burgess
Manchin's fealty to big coal becoming crystal clear to the mineworkers he used to court

Joan McCarter ... Daily Kos Staff

Monday January 10, 2022 · 3:39 PM EST

MATEWAN, WV - MARCH 31: Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV) greets constituents before holding a Town Hall meeting with coal miners on March 31, 2017 in Matewan, West Virginia. Manchin has announced that he will vote for President Donald Trump's U.S. Supreme Court nominee, Judge Neil Gorsuch. (Photo by Bill Pugliano/Getty Images)

If Joe Manchin’s colleagues are losing patience with him, imagine what it’s like to be a citizen of West Virginia, counting on him to represent you. As far as Manchin is concerned, though, not all constituents were created equal.

That’s become increasingly clear to the state’s mineworkers, who are finding they have much less sway with the Democratic senator than the mine owners when it comes to the Build Back Better legislation to secure their futures. The United Mine Workers issued a surprise statement last month, breaking with mine owners for the first time, well, ever on coal.

The union urged Manchin “to revisit his opposition to this legislation and work with his colleagues to pass something that will help keep coal miners working, and have a meaningful impact on our members, their families, and their communities.”


Manchin with the mineworkers in 2017, when he pretended to care about their futures.

“The whole Democratic caucus stood with us and fought with us,” Manchin said then. “No matter whether we agree on different issues, whether we agree to disagree, this is one area—if you don’t stand up for the American workers, no one will.” The American workers in West Virginia’s coal mines are rightfully wondering where that Joe Manchin went.

He’s hanging out with their bosses, who “were shocked” when the workers broke with them in asking for Manchin’s help on Build Back Better. That’s according to Chris Hamilton, the president of the West Virginia Coal Association, who told the NYT that the unions were “waving a white flag” in asking for this legislation that the unions said, “would help workers, our families, and the labor movement both across the country and right here in West Virginia.”

“We would have thought they’d have gone down swinging,” Hamilton added. “I don’t think we ought to be trading one job for another, particularly basic fossil energy jobs which are extremely well paid and carry benefits—and could last for another generation.”

The chief lobbyist for the mineworkers union slapped back. “We’re still swinging, but we’re swinging in a smart way and in a way that will provide a real future for fossil energy workers in West Virginia and throughout the country.” Union officials, who spoke to the NYT “on the condition of anonymity to avoid angering mine owners,” because that’s how tenuous they feel their jobs are, said that Manchin taking advice from the West Virginia Coal Association was a mistake, and not just because it’s full of Trumpers and endorsed Manchin’s Republican opponent in 2018. They point to the fact that the union made him an honorary member in 2020.

“My grandfather, Papa Joe, started working in the mines at nine years of age and I will never forget his stories of how hard he worked and fought for his fellow miners to have the dignity and respect every miner deserves,” Manchin said when he was honored by the union. “I lost my Uncle John, classmates from high school, friends, and neighbors in the 1968 Farmington No 9 mining disaster. I know the hard work and risk our miners take every day to provide for their families, but also the patriotic pride they have in providing our great nation with the power we needed to win wars and propel us to become the world power we are today.”

“Standing alongside the UMWA members while they fought tooth and nail to secure the pension and healthcare benefits they rightfully earned has been one of the greatest honors of my life,” he continued. “Today I am humbled to be recognized as an honorary member of this great organization and to be brought in as one of their brothers. I am incredibly proud of everything we have accomplished together for West Virginia coal miners and their families and all miners across America.”

So the mineworkers are right to question where his allegiances now lie—with them and their future or with the big money of the coal companies. The companies that have chewed workers up and spit them out for decades and decades. The companies that want to squeeze every bit of work and every dollar that they can out of coal right now, and the hell with the future.

It’s not just coal, by the way, that’s an issue for his state in his opposition to Build Back Better. The Medicare expansion to vision, dental, and hearing coverage that Manchin opposes would disproportionately help West Virginians, who have some of the highest rates of deferred or simply absent care. The state is number 3 in the nation for people aged 65 and older who have lost all of their teeth due to lack of dental care (26.3%) and is number two for all adults who have not been to a dentist or dental clinic for a year or more (44.7%). It has more adults with hearing loss (24.7%) than any other state. It’s the third-oldest state in the country.

It’s possible Manchin is like the mine owners—he’s looking to get what he can while the getting is good. But if he has any inclination at all to run for office again, he’s going to have a helluva lot to answer for at home.



The text being discussed is available at
https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2022/1/10/2073864/-Manchin-s-fealty-to-big-coal-becoming-crystal-clear-to-the-mine-workers-he-used-to-court
and
SITE COUNT<
Amazing and shiny stats
Blog Counters Reset to zero January 20, 2015
TrueValueMetrics (TVM) is an Open Source / Open Knowledge initiative. It has been funded by family and friends. TVM is a 'big idea' that has the potential to be a game changer. The goal is for it to remain an open access initiative.
WE WANT TO MAINTAIN AN OPEN KNOWLEDGE MODEL
A MODEST DONATION WILL HELP MAKE THAT HAPPEN
The information on this website may only be used for socio-enviro-economic performance analysis, education and limited low profit purposes
Copyright © 2005-2021 Peter Burgess. All rights reserved.