News
November 2, 2008
Swift Boat ad makers target McGraw

CHARLESTON, W.Va. - The way West Virginia Attorney General Darrell McGraw sees it, he's not running against Republican Dan Greear. His real opponent in Tuesday's election is the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

Though the two campaigns have spent about $200,000, Greear is getting a $700,000 boost from the national and state chambers of commerce, which launched a last-minute batch of television ads last week attacking McGraw.

The chamber has hired Mentzer Media Services to wage its 11th-hour siege of McGraw. The Maryland-based firm produced attack ads from the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, the group that made unsubstantiated allegations in 2004 about Democratic nominee John Kerry's decorated military record in Vietnam.

McGraw also has been targeted by numerous stories in the West Virginia Record, which the national chamber owns.

McGraw says his list of enemies grows each time his office wins a case against unscrupulous debt collectors, mortgage companies and other businesses.

Since becoming West Virginia's top attorney in 1992, his office has forced numerous companies, including those in the tobacco and pharmaceutical industries, to pay a total of nearly $2 billion to settle claims.

As a result, "They are really twisted out of shape," he said.

McGraw says the national chamber, with backing from the Institute for Justice, the Center for Individual Freedom and Citizens Against Lawsuit Abuse, is targeting his re-election effort to try "to teach the other AGs a lesson."

Two polls show a tight race for attorney general, with the most recent showing an 8-point lead for Greear, 50 percent to 42 percent.

Greear says the McGraw name is "very polarizing" across the state. The way he sees it, McGraw "gets 45 percent of the vote if he doesn't do anything. I get 45 percent of the vote if I don't do anything. We're fighting for the 10 percent in the middle."

While protecting consumers is an important aspect of the job that will pay about $95,000 next year, Greear says it should not discourage business. He vows to be no less vigilant against shoddy businesses, but more cooperative and less antagonistic than he says McGraw has been.

The 40-year-old lawyer served in the state House of Delegates from 1995 to 1996.

While a delegate, Greear fought unsuccessfully to require women seeking abortions to wait 24 hours, view photographs of fetuses and read about possible physical and psychological side effects of abortion. He also tried to disallow federal money for abortions at a time when federal law already prohibited the funding.

Greear warned against the evils of gambling, sought to require minors with children to attend school to receive welfare benefits, and to force all youths over the age of 14 who are charged with violent crimes to be tried as adults.

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Posted By: birdeye (1:53pm 11-04-2008)
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Whether you are a McGraw supporter or not. How could anyone elect representatives which codify secret campaign financing?

Posted By: DTO (11:53am 11-04-2008)
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"Dog" wrote "I had planned to vote against McGraw, but now me thinks me will change me mind."

Hmm, WHY do think a liberal rag like the Gazette is running a "story" like this at the last minute?

Posted By: lenny (9:57am 11-04-2008)
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Much of the country is catching on but the lying still works well in WV. The NRA did it to Gore, Kerry was Swiftboated, Obama smeared with the whole muslim/radical garbage.
Brent Benjamin bought by massey coal for 3 million dollars worth of lies. Now the Chamber of Commerce is buying an attorney general for $700,000.
We'll get it right some day.

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