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In West Virginia, Conservatives Whiffed Armageddon

<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Not so long ago&comma; President Trump&rsquo&semi;s damn the torpedoes approach to Roy Moore and the Alabama Senate Race exploded in his face&period; Redemption came Tuesday as the president&rsquo&semi;s eleventh-hour tweets helped sink the gorilla candidacy of Don Blankenship&comma; the foul and felonious xenophobe running in West Virginia&rsquo&semi;s senatorial Republican primary&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Privately&comma; the president and nervous Republican Party leaders knew much more was at stake than West Virginia&rsquo&semi;s winnable Senate seat&period; Blankenship&rsquo&semi;s late surge threatened Republican prospects in all the upcoming mid-term elections&period; Some believed his potential victory would pose an existential threat to the preservation of conservative values&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>For a decade&comma; Blankenship ran the nation&rsquo&semi;s sixth largest coal company&period; But he ended up doing a year of hard time for his role in a tragic mining accident&period; Declaring himself &ldquo&semi;Trumpier than Trump&comma;&rdquo&semi; the surly ex-con declared war on official Washington &not&semi;&mdash&semi; not a bad strategy given that in today&rsquo&semi;s polarized electorate&comma; the only common ground seems to be hatred of all things Washington&period; But the shock and awe part of Blankenship&rsquo&semi;s message was delivered in a flurry of racially charged television ads and appearances&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Blankenship&rsquo&semi;s primary target was Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell&period; Branding him as &ldquo&semi;Cocaine Mitch&comma;&rdquo&semi; the coal mogul also attacked the wealth of the senator&rsquo&semi;s &ldquo&semi;China family&period;&rdquo&semi; McConnell&rsquo&semi;s wife is Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao&comma; who was born in Taiwan&period; In 2014&comma; Colombian authorities found cocaine on a vessel linked to her father&rsquo&semi;s shipping company&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Blankenship race-baited in similar ads&comma; referring to &ldquo&semi;China people&rdquo&semi; and &ldquo&semi;negro people&period;&rdquo&semi; Of course&comma; the ads went viral in the national media&period; Network&rsquo&semi;s gleefully booked him as shocking fodder&period; And in a seeming sequel to Roy Moore&rsquo&semi;s Nightmare on Elm Street&comma; it looked like the unelectable Blankenship might win&period; Imminent&comma; it appeared&comma; was this&colon; &lsquo&semi;Hey America &mdash&semi; remember that Republican whacko from West Virginia come mid-term election time&period;&rsquo&semi;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Ignoring The Bait<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In the end&comma; though&comma; Blankenship appealed more to West Virginian&rsquo&semi;s better angels&period; The Titanic missed the iceberg&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&ldquo&semi;Don Blankenship played the race card and West Virginia Republicans flipped it back in his face&comma;&rdquo&semi; gloated Steven Law&comma; a McConnell political lieutenant and the president of the Senate Leadership Fund super PAC&period; &ldquo&semi;It turns out that Blankenship&rsquo&semi;s racist dog whistle played a lot louder with Washington reporters than with West Virginia primary voters&period;&rdquo&semi;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Most Americans have probably never seen Mitch McConnell laugh&comma; or even smile for that matter&period; But if nervous laughter could be tweeted&comma; it would look like McConnell smiling in a cloud of cocaine dust&period; The Senate Leadership Fund&comma; which has close ties to McConnell&comma; tweeted that exact image after Blankenship&rsquo&semi;s defeat&period; A caption read&comma; &ldquo&semi;Thanks for playing&comma; Don&period;&rdquo&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>All told&comma; much kudos has gone to McConnell&period; Despite Blankenship&rsquo&semi;s personal attacks against him and his family&comma; McConnell didn&rsquo&semi;t engage in a tit-for-tat&period; Instead&comma; he sanctioned a well-coordinated&comma; &dollar;1&period;3 million ad campaign against Blankenship&period; The effort was funded by the Senate Leadership Fund&period; That&rsquo&semi;s the same super PAC that poured &dollar;5 million into the Alabama Senate race to derail Roy Moore&comma; also under the watchful eye of McConnell&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>McConnell also closely coordinated the response to Blankenship&rsquo&semi;s rapid ascension with the White House&period; As things heated up&comma; he urged President Trump to step in&period; So&comma; with an assist from McConnell&comma; this time the president got it right&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The strategy kept West Virginia&rsquo&semi;s winnable Senate seat in play for the Republicans&period; Moreover&comma; it foiled Blankenship&rsquo&semi;s near hijacking of the conservative image&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Republican strategists realize that the emphatic rejection of race-baiting politics in conservative West Virginia has denied Democrats an easy battle cry in the mid-terms&period; Still&comma; the preface to the end was too close for comfort&period; How did this happen&comma; and what has the Republican intelligentsia learned&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Fire Still Burns<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Hours before the West Virginia vote&comma; it seemed that the Republican leadership might be losing control of its party&period; Tuesday&rsquo&semi;s results neither proved or disproved this sentiment&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The takeaway for Republican strategists from these early primaries is that the anti-establishment wildfire still burns&period; Four sitting Republican members of Congress lost their primaries to outsider types&comma; and Trump&rsquo&semi;s pugnacious rise will attract other firebrands&period; The voting tested how far similar candidates can push these anti-establishment boundaries&period; Party leaders must synergize true conservatism with the rebel appeal&period; And the string of a Yo-Yo candidate must be cut &not&semi;&mdash&semi; not frayed &mdash&semi; before it can unfurl&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Whether party leadership can accommodate these lessons before the mid-term elections is an unknown&period; What is known&comma; is that Conservatives staved off an epic mess in West Virginia&period; In doing so&comma; they somehow managed to disinfect the kitchen&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Had Blankenship prevailed&comma; the age-old&comma; liberal dog whistle of equating conservatism with racism would have become a fire alarm&period; But now&comma; Conservatives have demonstrably reclaimed an important threshold for moral integrity and tough choices&period; Standing for stricter immigration reform&comma; stronger border enforcement and structural changes to entitlement programs do not equate to racism&period; Simply emulating the president&rsquo&semi;s brash style&comma; even in a Trump stronghold&comma; has not become a new conservative credential&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>We&rsquo&semi;ve all laughed at our share of West Virginia jokes&period; But the Blankenship defeat belies the trite light often cast on the good folks of The Mountain State&period; So next time you&rsquo&semi;re about to laugh&comma; know this &mdash&semi; West Virginia&rsquo&semi;s Conservatives may have just saved the Republican Party from falling off an Appalachian-sized cliff&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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