The Richmond Register

Local News

October 29, 2012

Barr, Chandler face off tonight on KET; race going down to the wire

BEREA — BEREA – It was supposed to be easier for Democratic Congressman Ben Chandler this time around.

After squeaking out a 648-vote win over Republican challenger Andy Barr during the 2010 Republican wave, the 6th District was redrawn, adding Democratic registered voters in the east and shaving off some reliably Republican areas in the southwestern portion of the district.

But it hasn’t worked out that way – the race this year between the same candidates appears to be close, very close.

“It’s kind of like two years ago,” when the race tightened noticeably toward the end, Barr said this weekend. “We feel like we have even more momentum this time than two years ago.”

Chandler said he’s always expected a tight race, although earlier in the campaign he touted internal polling he said showed him with comfortable double-digit leads.

“We expected all along it would tighten as it came down to the wire,” Chandler said Thursday as he handed out food items to children in the lunch line at Silver Creek Elementary in Berea.

While Barr was busy late last week addressing civic groups, one might wonder why Chandler was spending time at an elementary school where most of the people he met are too young to vote.

“They’ll go home and tell Mom and Dad,” said Karen Farmer, a full-time substitute at the school. Farmer said she is registered Republican and her husband works for a utility company, making coal a key issue for her.

It’s an issue Barr has tried to make central to the campaign, although there are no active mines in the district. But many coal interests live in central Kentucky, and those newly added eastern counties have ties to coal. Perhaps more importantly, coal interests have donated heavily to Barr’s campaign.

“Oh yes, coal is important to me,” Farmer said. Who declined to say how she’ll vote. “Because my husband works for the electrical co-op and as they like to say: coal keeps the lights on.”

While Barr has emphasized coal – and a vote by Chandler for a “cap-and-trade” bill in the U.S. House that never got out of the Senate, Chandler has tried to link Barr with Republican plans to scale back Medicare and Social Security.

Chandler said he voted for the cap-and-trade bill because it contained funding for “clean coal” research he said would have benefited the industry, and he says he’s supported other coal friendly legislation. But Barr has hit him with ads – along with others paid for by outside Republican and coal groups – saying he and President Barack Obama have “declared war on coal” and “devastated the industry.”

Chandler responds by saying Barr supports efforts by Republican Vice Presidential nominee Paul Ryan to “voucher-ize” Medicare and attacking Barr’s integrity with an ad focusing on Barr’s failure to disclose on state government job applications an arrest while in college for using a fake ID when he was on vacation in Florida.

Theresia Lewis, a second-grade teacher at Silver Creek, said the negative ads by the two candidates haven’t persuaded her how to vote.

“Not particularly,” she said during a lunch break at the school when asked if the ads had any effect. “I know how all that propaganda works. I don’t believe everything I hear.”

Lewis’ grandfather was a coal miner and coal is an important issue to her – but so are Medicare and Social Security, funding for education “and also the moral issues.” She is registered Republican but described herself as a moderate on social issues and said her vote will likely be decided by how the candidates talk about education.

“Education is my livelihood,” Lewis said, adding she has sufficient experience and tenure that the level of support for education may not affect her personally, but she worries about younger teachers’ futures and she worries about the education of the young children she teaches.

“But at this point, I’m not really decided,” Lewis said.

Lewis is one of the voters Barr and Chandler will be talking to Monday night when they meet for their only face-to-face debate on Kentucky Education Television – along with independent candidate Randolph Vance.

Barr has criticized Chandler for avoiding debates.

Chandler responds that relatively few people attend the local debates Barr wanted but the KET debate will be broadcast throughout the central Kentucky district.

It’s likely the two will try to hammer home their campaign themes: coal and government debt from Barr and Medicare cuts proposed by Ryan and Republicans and his own support for the auto bailout from Chandler who notes there are 50,000 more auto-related jobs in Kentucky than coal jobs.

Barr criticizes the bailout because it used government funding to keep General Motors and Chrysler afloat while going through bankruptcy. He said such financing could have been provided by the government without “taking an ownership position” in the companies – although that’s hard to distinguish from what the Obama plan actually did.

Chandler said he was asked by Toyota – which employs about 8,000 auto workers at its Georgetown plant – to support the bill because manufacturers like Toyota and Ford, which weren’t part of the bailout, feared their supply chains would collapse of GM and Chrysler went under.

Ronnie Ellis writes for CNHI News Service and is based in Frankfort. Reach him at rellis@cnhi.com. Follow CNHI News Service stories on Twitter at www.twitter.com/cnhifrankfort.

Text Only
Local News
  • download-3.jpg White Hall teachers say farewell for the summer

    White Hall Elementary kindergarten assistant Patti Von Fischer said she found a poem on the Internet that seemed to fit the last day of school perfectly.
    “The teachers jumped out of the windows; the principals ran for the door; the nurse and librarian bolted; they’re not coming back anymore,” Von Fischer read over the loudspeaker Friday before students left for the summer.

    May 25, 2013 10 Photos

  • Benson will be state’s third highest paid university president

    When Michael Benson begins his tenure as the 12th president of Eastern Kentucky University on Aug. 1, his $400,000 salary plus benefits will make him Kentucky’s third-highest paid state university president.
    Benson’s pay will be less only than that of Eli Capilouto, president of the University of Kentucky, $500,000 a year, and Gary Ransdell, president of Western Kentucky University, $423,588 a year, according to figures obtained from the state Council on Post-secondary education.

    May 25, 2013

  • Detective Monte H. Owens Richmond post troopers recognized at annual ceremony

    The Kentucky State Police announced the 2012 Trooper of the Year, Detective of the Year, Commercial Vehicle Enforcement Officer of the Year and other awards for acts of bravery, life-saving, professionalism and dedication to duty Friday at the Capital Plaza Hotel in Frankfort.

    May 25, 2013 3 Photos

  • 5-25 Balloon1.jpg Second-grade classroom receives recognition for reading nearly 1,400 books

    A project at Mayfield Elementary School has received recognition across state lines from a woman who found a balloon released in celebration of one classroom having read more than 1,000 books.
    Second-grade teacher Wanda Wilson started the school year by challenging her 22 students to read a total of 1,000 books by the end of the school year.

    May 25, 2013 3 Photos

  • 5-25 PetsofWeek1.jpg Pets of the Week

    This week's cat is an 8-week-old female kitten.  This week's dog is 1-year-old Nicki, a spayed female who does not care for horses, according to her previous owner.

    May 25, 2013 2 Photos

  • Father/Daughter Dance is June 14 at RAAC

    Dads and daughters will take to the dance floor Friday, June 14, for the second annual Father/Daughter Dance to benefit the Hope’s Wings Domestic Violence Program.
    The ball will take place from 6 to 9 p.m. at the Richmond Area Arts Center, 399 W. Water St.

    May 25, 2013

  • Three Richmond thefts reported Tuesday-Thursday

    Richmond police are investigating thefts reported from Tuesday through Thursday.
    An employee of Baptist Health, Eastern Bypass, reported Thursday that her vehicle had been broken into during the evening and a small shoulder purse was stolen. The purse contained several debit/credit cards, $70 in cash, and a Pantech slider cellular telephone. Estimated loss: $595.

    May 25, 2013

  • Paul plans re-election bid for U.S. Senate in 2016

     Republican Rand Paul will run for re-election to the U.S. Senate in 2016 regardless of any decision to launch a presidential bid. And he will campaign for his Kentucky colleague and Senate Republican Minority Leader Mitch McConnell in 2014.

    May 25, 2013

  • 5-24 Model 2.JPG ‘Etta May’s On Her Way’ for Model Lab benefit

    Laughter will fill Eastern Kentucky University’s Keen Johnson Ballroom June 8 when southern comedienne Etta May comes to town for Model Laboratory School’s first annual fundraising event.
    Half of the ticket proceeds will be donated to help five Model programs: Scholarships, gifted programs, the arts, athletics and extended field trips or exchange programs, said school psychologist Ellen Rini.

    May 23, 2013 7 Photos

  • 5-24 Carla Rae Clontz.jpg Court hearing reveals errors in trafficking case’s investigative file

    A discrepancy in police records led to an unusual hearing in a drug trafficking case Thursday in Madison Circuit Court.
    The attorney for 49-year-old Carla Rae Clontz made a motion earlier this month for a bill of particulars hearing. Both the prosecution and defense attorneys had noticed problems with the file numbers in Clontz’ case, and there also were different reports of the number of pills sheriff’s deputies allege were found in her home.

    May 23, 2013 1 Photo

Community Calendar
Loading…
Events by eviesays.com
AP Video
Mayor: Person Killed in San Antonio Flooding Raw: Apple 1 Computer Sells for More Than $650k Hagel Urges Cadets to End Scourge of Sex Assault Raw: Gay Rights Activists March in Ukraine Bus Fire Kills 16 Children, Teacher in Pakistan Raw: Pakistan Election Results Protested Raw: Trucker Bumps I-5 Bridge Before Collapse Raw: Texas Deputy Shot by Colo. Suspect Honored Major Detours Following Wash. Bridge Collapse American Held in Grisly Czech Murders Raw: Jersey Shore Reopens for Summer UK-bound Pakistan Plane Diverted, 2 Men Arrested Officials: Tsarnaev Friend Linked to Slaying Obama:Sexual Assault Threatens Trust in Military Bridge Collapse Survivor: 'Rough Day' Jersey Shore Open for Business Raw: Memorial Day Flags Placed at Arlington New Wheelchair Lift Promises More Access First Person: Mom Discusses Famous Tornado Photo Raw Video: Washington State Bridge Collapse
Hyperlocal Search
Premier Guide
Find a business

Walking Fingers
Maps, Menus, Store hours, Coupons, and more...
Premier Guide
Poll

Will you or someone you know benefit from the state’s expansion of Medicaid under the federal Affordable Care Act commonly known as Obamacare.

Yes. Without it I and others who are unemployed or whose employer does not provide the benefit could not afford health insurance.
No. I have health insurance through my employer, a relative’s employer or a government program such as Medicare, the Veterans Administration or Medicaid.
No. I don’t want health insurance.
No. I don’t want health insurance, and the government should not require me to purchase it.
     View Results