The Education Wave That Began In West Virginia May Change Politics For The Nation
The Education Wave That Began In West Virginia May Change Politics For The Nation
Whether Democrats take back the House in the midterm elections may come down to races like the one in West Virginia’s third Congressional District.
“Richard Ojeda has taken a district that Trump won by almost 50 points … and turned into a toss-up,”
writes Bill Scher for Politico. The article includes Ojeda in a list of 15 candidates that will not only determine control of the House and Senate, but also signal “how the party tries to oust President Trump” in 2020.
“If Democrats want to reclaim white working-class Trump voters in West Virginia, Ojeda may be their best hope to do so,” writes Elia Nilsen for Vox, “His … challenge is to persuade the Trump-loving voters of his district to send him to Congress as a Democrat.”
But if races like the one in West Virginia’s third Congressional District determine the direction of politics in the country, the fight over education will have a lot to do with it.
‘The Political Face’ of the Education Wave
Ojeda (you pronounce the “j”), a much-tattooed Iraqi war veteran who
appeared in Michael Moore’s recent documentary, state senator of the district that includes counties that sparked the statewide teacher strike earlier this year that shut down schools in all 55 counties. His prominent support of the teachers
made him the “the political face” of the strike, reported the New York Times .