Feb. 7, 2010
COMMENTARY: Spike Maynard's Candidacy: West Virginia Has Come of Age
By Stephen N. Reed
Time was when a Democratic Congressman from West Virginia was
locked in for life after one election. After getting elected through the
pre-existing Democratic Party Machine, the franking privilege could
kick in, telling constituents back home on a regular basis how
their representative was "standing up for West Virginia, " etc.
This was the way it worked 78 years and 39 elections, with
rare exceptions. Former Bluefield Mayor Craig Hammond
noted that West Virginia had the longest running one-party
system in the world, even beating Fidel Castro's Cuba.
And with similar results for the people, some would add.
But in recent times, we've seen some evidence of a
two-party system, or at least dissatisfaction with that
decrepit one-party system that seemed to only benefit
party leaders and their friends. We've seen West Virginia
go Republican three times out of three in recent Presidential
elections, for example.
I knew something was up when I covered the first rally for George
W. Bush at the statehouse lawn in Charleston as a reporter for
Metronews. This was no mere "throng." This was a huge event,
with 5,000+ coming out to hear the Republican nominee for
President. Similar overflow crowds would continue to greet
Bush in repeated visits to West Virginia after he became
President.
Then there was Brent Benjamin's election to the Supreme Court
for a full twelve-year term. Here was another example of something
new in the air, because having a Republican elected to a full term
on the WV Supreme Court was an unheard of event. Democratic
Party leaders must have wondered what was going on here.
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But this year's Congressional races in the First and Third Congressional
Districts beat all. In the First Congressional District, Alan Mollohan
not only has respectable Republicans vying for the chance to take
on the incumbent after their GOP Primary in May, he also has
a fire in his rear in the form of Senator Mike Oliverio (D-Monongalia)
challenging his own party's incumbent in the Democratic Primary.
The caliber of Mollohan's challengers, Democrat and Republican, indicate
that they smell opportunity in the air this year.
But the most telling sign of all is former Supreme Court Justice Elliot
"Spike" Maynard changing parties from Democratic to Republican and
throwing his hat in the ring for the Third Congressional District seat.
He hopes to win the GOP Primary to take on Nick Joe Rahall, another
"lifer" Congressman who has benefited over the years from simply having
a "D" after his name.
Maynard has long been a conservative on social and business issues,
and he has a certain political heft that Republicans will need to take
out Rahall. Many Republicans are understandably thrilled to have a former
Supreme Court Justice throwing in his lot with them against Rahall.
Having interviewed Maynard on one of my talk shows, I can
tell you, this guy is both a Southern gentleman and a shrewd
politician. He wouldn't be getting in this hunt if he didn't know
that Rahall was vulnerable, after so many years in Washington.
So will the fever that hit Massachusetts a couple of weeks ago,
providing a surprise result to another old-line Democratic state, come
to West Virginia this election year?
Well, the bad news for Rahall and Mollohan may be that this
kind of independent-mindedness, this willingness to give the Republicans
a chance to redefine themselves, has already come to West Virginia
in fits and starts. All the GOP primary winners have to do is follow the
playbook of George W. Bush and Brent Benjamin to win.
The two-party system, long sought by generations of West Virginians
from all parts of our state, is finally at hand.
Stephen N. Reed is a former Metronews Capitol Correspondent and
Charleston talk radio host, now living in the Eastern Panhandle.