Current:Home > InvestWest Virginians’ governor choices stand on opposite sides of the abortion debate -FundPrime
West Virginians’ governor choices stand on opposite sides of the abortion debate
Will Sage Astor View
Date:2025-04-07 18:05:27
Follow live: Updates from AP’s coverage of the presidential election.
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — West Virginians on Tuesday will choose between a Republican candidate for governor endorsed by former President Donald Trump who has defended abortion restrictions in court and a Democratic mayor who has fought to put the issue on the ballot for voters to decide.
Both Attorney General Patrick Morrisey and Huntington Mayor Steve Williams have played an outsized role in fighting the drug crisis in the state with the highest rate of opioid overdose deaths in the country. But their similarities are few.
When it comes to abortion, the two couldn’t be more different.
Since he was elected attorney general in 2012, Morrisey, 56, has led litigation against opioid manufacturers and distributors netting around $1 billion to abate the crisis that has led to 6,000 children living in foster care in a state of around 1.8 million.
A self-described “conservative fighter,” Morrisey has also used his role to lead on issues important to the national GOP. Those include defending a law preventing transgender youth from participating in sports and a scholarship program passed by lawmakers that would incentivize parents to pull their kids from traditional public school and enroll them in private education or homeschooling.
Key to his candidacy has been his role in defending a near-total ban on abortions passed by the Republican-controlled legislature in 2022 and going to court to restrict West Virginians’ access to abortion pills.
In a statement after a U.S. District Court judge blocked access to abortion pills in 2023, Morrisey vowed to “always stand strong for the life of the unborn.”
Former Huntington city manager and House of Delegates member Williams, 60, has worked to change his city from the “epicenter of the heroin epidemic in America” to one known for solutions to help people with substance use disorder.
After being elected mayor in 2012, he instituted the state’s first citywide office of drug control policy and created a strategic plan that involved equipping first responders with the opioid overdose reversal drug Naloxone and implementing court diversion programs for sex workers and people who use drugs.
Abortion has been a key part of his campaign platform. Earlier this year, Williams collected thousands of signatures on a petition to push lawmakers to vote to put abortion on the ballot.
West Virginia is among the 25 states that do not allow citizen initiatives or constitutional amendments on a statewide ballot, an avenue of direct democracy that has allowed voters to circumvent their legislatures and preserve abortion and other reproductive rights in several states over the past two years.
Republicans have repeatedly dismissed the idea of placing an abortion-rights measure before voters, which in West Virginia is a step only lawmakers can take.
Republican leadership has pointed to a 2018 vote in which just under 52% of voters supported a constitutional amendment saying there is no right to abortion access in the state. But Williams said the vote also had to do with state funding of abortion, which someone could oppose without wanting access completely eliminated.
If elected, Morrisey would become just the third Republican elected to a first gubernatorial term in West Virginia since 1928. Outgoing two-term governor Jim Justice, now a Republican, was first elected as a Democrat in 2016. He switched parties months later at a Trump rally.
Polls statewide open at 6:30 a.m. and close at 7:30 p.m.
veryGood! (6)
Related
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- Authors Jesmyn Ward and James McBride are among the nominees for the 10th annual Kirkus Prizes
- UNC-Chapel Hill grad student Tailei Qi charged with murder in shooting death of professor Zijie Yan
- Victims' families still grieving after arrests in NYC druggings
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- Myon Burrell, who was sent to prison for life as a teen but set free in 2020, is arrested
- 'AGT': Sword swallower Andrew Stanton shocks Simon Cowell with 'brilliantly disgusting' act
- You remember Deion Sanders as an athletic freak. Now, he just wants to coach standing up.
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- 'Speedboat epidemiology': How smallpox was eradicated one person at a time
Ranking
- Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
- Revelers hurl tomatoes at each other and streets awash in red pulp in Spanish town’s Tomatina party
- Supermoon could team up with Hurricane Idalia to raise tides higher just as the storm makes landfall
- Top CEOs call on Biden administration to address migrant influx in New York
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- Former death row inmate pleads guilty to murder and is sentenced to 46 1/2 years in prison
- Australians to vote in a referendum on Indigenous Voice to Parliament on Oct. 14
- 50 Cent postpones concert due to extreme heat: '116 degrees is dangerous for everyone'
Recommendation
Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
See Hurricane Idalia from space: Satellite views from International Space Station show storm off Florida coast
Alligator on loose in New Jersey nearly a week as police struggle to catch it
Court rejects Connecticut officials’ bid to keep secret a police report on hospital patient’s death
Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
Best Buy CEO: 2023 will be a low point in tech demand as inflation-wary shoppers pull back
$5.6 million bid for one offshore tract marks modest start for Gulf of Mexico wind energy
Is Rite Aid at risk of bankruptcy? What a Chapter 11 filing would mean for shoppers.