Clinton,
looking ahead to general election, begins Appalachia tour
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[May 02, 2016]
By Amanda Becker and Valerie Volcovici
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Democratic
presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton begins a two-day tour on
Monday through rural, traditionally coal-reliant parts of the eastern
Appalachian region where Republican rival Donald Trump’s pro-coal,
anti-trade message has resonated with economically distressed voters.
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Clinton, in a move to reclaim her early pledge to focus on helping
the struggling region resuscitate its economies, will meet the head
of a local steel workers union, retired mine workers and others in
Kentucky, West Virginia and Ohio affected by declining coal and
steel prices.
Her pledge of more than $30 billion to help coal regions was
overshadowed in March when Clinton, at an Ohio town hall, said the
country would “put a lot of coal miners and coal companies out of
business.”
Clinton’s statement was seized upon by coal industry groups and
Republican lawmakers such as U.S. Senators Rand Paul and Mitch
McConnell, both from Kentucky, as evidence she planned to continue
carrying out President Barack Obama’s regulatory “war” on coal.
Clinton immediately sent an apology letter to Democratic U.S.
Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia, an early supporter, pledging
to “focus my team and administration on bringing jobs to Appalachia”
and help its residents adjust to a wave of coal company bankruptcies
and changes in the U.S. energy market.
Her decision to embark on an Appalachian tour is in part timed ahead
of Democratic nominating contests in West Virginia on May 10 and in
Kentucky on May 17 as she seeks to secure the nomination before the
party’s July convention.
She won Ohio’s contest in mid-March, besting rival Bernie Sanders, a
U.S. senator from Vermont.
However, Clinton aides say her decision to focus on the region – her
husband, former President Bill Clinton campaigned in Kentucky on
Sunday and is expected in West Virginia on Tuesday – also reflects
her commitment to show voters she will work for them if elected even
if they do not support her now.
West Virginia last voted for a Democratic presidential candidate in
1996, when Bill Clinton was running for his second four-year term.
Former President Clinton is the only Democrat who has won Kentucky
since 1980.
During her first presidential run, Clinton defeated Barack Obama in
the 2008 primaries in those states but lost the nomination to him.
Her tour is an early move to siphon support from Trump, the
front-runner for the Republican nomination, who has called for
continued coal production and dismissed environmental concerns as a
policy priority. LAYOFFS, HEALTH CONCERNS
Clinton’s first stop, at a restaurant in Ashland, Kentucky, will be
a discussion with the leader of a local steel workers union and some
of 600 workers who were laid off when AK Steel Holding Corp
announced in October that it would idle one of its furnaces amid a
supply glut and lower steel prices.
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Clinton last month criticized China’s announcement that it was
encouraging increased steel output amid a global surplus that is
driving down prices and said, if elected, she would crack down on
Chinese trade practices.
She will continue to Williamson, West Virginia, a once-thriving town
near the state’s border with Kentucky in Mingo County, the heart of
the coal-producing region. Its main streets had been dotted with
empty store fronts as coal mining employment has been cut in half
over the past four years. The town is now trying to reshape its
economy.
Clinton will meet retired mine workers there and also tour the
Williamson Health and Wellness Center, which serves as the nerve
center for a local program that aims to drive economic
revitalization through a health-focused, local-foods movement using
land once designated for mining to drive large-scale agricultural
development.
Aides say Clinton’s interest in the region’s economic troubles was
piqued after she left the U.S. State Department in 2013. She
circulated data to aides then about studies related to decreased
life expectancies for less-educated white adults in Appalachia,
where the decline in coal-related employment has been accompanied by
a growth in opioid addiction, diabetes and other health issues.
Clinton has throughout her campaign criticized attempts made by coal
companies to “shirk” the responsibility to pay healthcare benefits
for retirees during bankruptcy proceedings, saying the country owes
them gratitude for fueling decades of economic success.
(Reporting By Amanda Becker and Valerie Volcovici; Writing by Amanda
Becker; Editing by Paul Tait)
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