The Times West Virginian

Opinion

August 24, 2008

‘None of the above’ proves to be safe bet

The moment is finally here.

The text messages went out. So did the e-mails.

Barack Obama has finally announced his running mate for the upcoming election against Republican candidate John McCain.

We gave a list of either four potential vice presidential picks or none of the above on www.timeswv.com and asked our readers whom they thought the Democratic nominee should pick to be on the ticket with.

Surprise, surprise … with 40.14 percent of the 142 total votes, Sen. Hillary Clinton was the voters choice. After all she did win the state of West Virginia handily of Barack. Why shouldn’t she be the pick for vice president.

Nice pick, but let me check my cell phone again. Nope, not her.

The description on the Web site read “he needs her votes to win the nation.”

That just might be the case, but he’s going to have to win those votes without her.

Of the rest of the candidates, Virginia Sen. Jim Webb came in with 11.97 percent of the vote. This Vietnam vet was thought to be able to lend some military experience to the campaign.

He didn’t make the cut either, saving us another election year without having to see any more groups like the Swift Boat Veterans For Truth running commercials against his war record.

The next two candidates finished in a dead-even tie, each with 4.23 percent of the vote.

Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland and Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine didn’t get the text message. Well, then again, maybe they did — their name just wasn’t in it.

In fact, if you happened to catch a glimpse of the ’round-the-clock vice presidential coverage on CNN Friday, then you’d have seen that Kaine told reporters he wasn’t the candidate. Maybe you thought he was just trying to chase the television cameras off his lawn. Maybe it was a ploy to keep the “nation’s biggest secret” as it’s been described just that for one more day.

That left the 39.44 percent of the voters who went with the field.

Their response? None of the above.

Guess what? Just like in Vegas, it was a safe bet.

When the cell phones, Blackberries and all the other mobile devices chimed to life this morning only one name was there — Sen. Joe Biden Jr. of Delaware.

He’s expected to bolster Obama’s foreign policy numbers, which is always a big help.

Can the guy who couldn’t win the Democratic nomination for president in 1988 or even come close in 2008 help push Obama to the White House?

According to Obama, he’s a “Mr. Smith Goes to Washington” kind of guy.

“For decades ... hr has brought change to Washington, but Washington hasn’t changed him,” he said Saturday during their first joint campaign appearance. “He never moved to Washington. Instead, night after night, week after week, year after year, he returned home to Wilmington on a lonely Amtrak train.”

We’ll see in November if Mr. Biden Goes to 34th Street and Massachusetts Avenue, the vice president’s abode in Washington, D.C.

Next week, let’s hear your thoughts on Republican nominee John McCain’s running mate.

Log on. Vote. E-mail me.

Misty Poe

City Editor

mpoe@timeswv.com

Opinion
  • Mine officials’ swift action may have saved lives

    While it was hard to watch Patriot Coal Corp.’s Federal No. 2 Mine halt production a few times over the past month, we have to believe that swift action on the part of mine, union and federal officials may have saved lives.

    Stopping mining at the operation means placing a financial burden on the miners who work there, we understand, but conditions were such that an explosion like the one that took the lives of 12 miners just four years ago in Sago was possible.

     

    March 14, 2010

  • Voters: Scrap it and rewrite it

    A few weeks.

    A lot can happen in a few weeks. Just think, a few weeks ago, we were all lamenting the snow and poor road conditions. Now we’ve had enough spring-like weather over the past couple of days that the only snow left is the clumps in parking lots from the plows. And even those are melting faster than a Dairy Creme Corner ice cream cone on a hot July day.

     

    March 14, 2010

  • Area women’s basketball programs have come long way

    For many years, women’s basketball just seemed to many observers to be just something for young girls and women to do prior to the “real games” being played by boys and men. It took a long time before women’s games were even covered by the media — and that includes radio and television as well as newspapers. 

    Fortunately, opinions have changed over the years. 

     

    March 12, 2010

  • City must practice responsible fiscal policy

    The employees of the City of Fairmont have a reason to celebrate.

    For the first time in three years, since a water crisis crippled the city and its finances in the early months of 2007, employees will get one-time pay increases worth about $750.

     

    March 11, 2010

  • Laws needed to regulate development of resources

    The Marcellus shale formations, which extend throughout the Eastern United States, remain a largely untapped reserve of natural gas. And that makes it a prime target for energy development.

    But local legislators want a little regulation when it comes to the extraction of the natural resource. Drillers tap millions of gallons of water from streams and rivers so as to bore into the rock formations that trap the state’s abundant reserves of natural gas.

     

    March 10, 2010

  • Broadband access vital to state’s future

    The Mountain State is receiving $126.3 million in federal stimulus funding for a proposed statewide broadband infrastructure project.

     

    March 9, 2010

  • Here’s to dodging those potholes

    There’s always this span of time when the snow melts and the beauty of the landscape suffers for it. Bare trees once frosted with snow are just bare again. The streets and sidewalks are covered with cinders and dust.

    The brighter the sun shines, the uglier it looks. 

     

    March 7, 2010

  • Erin’s Law would enable families to get sense of justice after future tragedies

    There came a point several months after the violent death of her daughter that Debbie Keener came to a very grave conclusion. The person responsible for the hit-and-run death of her daughter would face but one charge — leaving the scene of an accident causing death. 

    And that charge, if successfully prosecuted, would mean that the person responsible for the death of Erin Keener, a 21-year-old honors nursing student at West Virginia University, would serve up to three years in prison.

     

    March 5, 2010

  • Hall of Fame would be fitting tribute to FSU legend Joe Retton

    Has it really been almost 50 years since Joe Retton took over the reins of the Fairmont State basketball program that became such an important part of the West Virginia Conference Tournament for many years thereafter?

    That it has. Forty-seven years, to be exact. And the West Virginia Conference Tournament is celebrating its 50th anniversary being held in Charleston this week.

     

    March 4, 2010

  • Community generosity shines during ‘Gift of Love’

    Did you ever see something that just made you feel good all over and that all is right with the world?

    You probably have, at one time or another. But down at the Times West Virginian, we enjoyed that rare feeling Monday afternoon. That’s when a good portion of the food collected out in the county for the Gift of Love food drive arrived at our building for distribution today.

     

    March 3, 2010

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