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The Washington Times Online Edition

W.Va. lawmakers settle on Byrd-seat election

Rep. Shelley Moore Capito, West Virginia Republican (UPI Photo)Rep. Shelley Moore Capito, West Virginia Republican (UPI Photo)

West Virginia lawmakers reached a legislative compromise Monday night over a measure that would allow the state to hold a special November election to fill the seat of the late Sen. Robert C. Byrd.

The compromise also allows Rep. Shelley Moore Capito, a Republican, to run both for Byrd’s seat and a sixth U.S. House term. She’s considered the GOP’s top prospect.

Under the measure, a primary will be held Aug. 28, and a general election will be on Nov. 2.

The measure was passed 83-7 by the House and 29-0 by the Senate.

The compromise comes after hours of party wrangling, with Republicans and Democrats accusing each other of trying to derail the effort.

Republicans wanted an amendment to structure the Nov. 2 vote so that Mrs. Capito could run for the Senate seat and also be on the ballot for re-election to a sixth House term.

GOP lawmakers said the negotiations had stalled because of infighting among Democrats - who control both houses of the Legislature - during the four-day, special legislative session, in which state lawmakers were trying to decipher ambiguous state electoral laws. The measure had to pass during Monday’s special session to apply this fall.

Democratic Gov. Joe Manchin III had pushed for quick action on a new electoral law, amid fears delay could make it impossible to organize the special election by November. Mr. Manchin has said it’s highly likely that he’ll also run.

Troy Berman, the state Republican Party executive director, blamed a power struggle between House and Senate leaders and disagreements among Democrats over whether the legislation gives Secretary of State Natalie Tennant too much authority over the special election. The bill limits the discretion allowed Ms. Tennant.

“The Democrats are fighting within themselves,” Mr. Berman said. “We’ve said all along [that] the people should have an election so they can decide.”

State Democratic Party Chairman Larry Puccio said the problem was Republicans playing partisan politics in a bid to protect Mrs. Capito’s House seat.

“Shame on the Republicans for turning this into a partisan vote to protect one of their own,” he told the Hill newspaper. “To have an individual run for two offices at the same time would confuse the citizens of West Virginia.”

Attempts to fill the seat began hours after the 92-year-old Byrd, the longest-serving senator in U.S. history, died June 28.

Ms. Tennant originally ruled that a special election could not be held until November 2012, when just weeks would have remained on Byrd’s term, with a candidate appointed by the governor serving for the next 2 1/2 years.

But Mr. Manchin then ordered a legal opinion from state Attorney General Darrell McGraw, a Democrat, who concluded the governor and state Legislature could amend state laws to move up the date of the special election to November.

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About the Author
Joseph Weber

Joseph Weber

Joseph Weber is a congressional reporter, his first job upon coming to Washington in 1992. Mr. Weber joined The Washington Times in 2002 as a metro desk editor and ran the section for several years, working on such stories as the Virginia Tech massacre, the Supreme Court case on the District’s handgun law, the D.C. snipers and the 2008 presidential ...

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