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US president opposes Senate candidate who’s ‘Trumpier than Trump’

Massey Energy Company Chairman and CEO Don L. Blankenship rubs his eyes as he waits to appear before the Senate Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, on Capitol Hill, in Washington DC, USA,20 May 2010. The hearing on 'Investing in Mine Safety: Preventing Another Disaster' comes in the aftermath of West Virginia's Upper Big Branch mine explosion, owned by Massey Energy, that killed 29 miners. EPA/MIKE THEILER

President Donald Trump urged voters Monday to reject a maverick Senate candidate from his own camp, an ex-con coal baron who Republicans fear is too radical to prevail in November's mid-term elections -- and could cost them a winnable seat.

Proclaiming himself “Trumpier than Trump,” Don Blankenship has mounted a highly controversial campaign ahead of Tuesday’s primary in West Virginia, setting off alarm bells among Republicans facing a stiff challenge to maintain control of the US Congress.

Blankenship — a former coal executive who spent a year in prison over safety lapses linked to the deaths of 29 miners — has peddled conspiracy theories, used racially charged terms, and coined incendiary, Trump-like nicknames for his opponents.

On Monday, Trump used his Twitter bully pulpit to urge “the good people of West Virginia” to reject Blankenship and instead pick one of two rival Republicans — congressman Evan Jenkins or state Attorney General Patrick Morrisey.

“Problem is, Don Blankenship, currently running for Senate, can’t win the General Election in your State…No way!” Trump wrote. “Remember Alabama.”

December’s Senate election in conservative Alabama proved disastrous for Republicans, when Roy Moore, who was endorsed by Trump despite accusations he once molested underage girls, lost to a Democrat.

Moore was among a handful of extreme candidates in recent years who have won the Republican nomination only to eventually lose the Senate election.

The president and his party now appear alarmed that a primary win by Blankenship would sink prospects for ousting Democratic incumbent Senator Joe Manchin — even in a state Trump won by 42 points in 2016 — and make it harder for the party to hold its narrow 51-49 Senate majority.

Republican groups have thrown big money at the race, releasing ads branding Blankenship a “convicted criminal.”

Blankenship, meanwhile, has grown increasingly defiant, using his fortune to blanket the state with ads attacking establishment leaders including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who he has branded “Cocaine Mitch” — in reference to drugs once being found aboard a ship owned by his wife’s family.

“Tomorrow, West Virginia will send the swamp a message — no one, and I mean no one, will tell us how to vote,” Blankenship said in a Facebook post.

Several states hold Republican primaries Tuesday for Senate and House contests, as the country enters a deeply divisive campaign season ahead of November mid-terms.

Among the congressional candidates in Indiana’s Republican primaries is Greg Pence, the older brother of US Vice President Mike Pence who held the seat for a decade. DM

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