Sportsline with Tony Caridi  Watch |  Listen

No Labels co-founder speaks in Morgantown

The Co-Founder of No Labels, an organization that promotes problem solving over party politics, is visiting West Virginia.

“No Labels means you can have your label, I can have my label, but there’s times when we kind of need to put our labels aside and work to problem solve on the various issues that the country needs us to work on,” Clarine Nardi Riddle said.

Riddle was in Monongalia County on Thursday to speak at the West Virginia University Center for Civic Engagement’s Engagement Celebration.  It was held at Lakeview Resort.

The events for No Labels were scheduled to continue on Friday on WVU’s Morgantown campus as part of the Week of Engagement.

Riddle says citizens understand that cooperation among elected officials is important.

“A lot of people outside the beltway can see that we really need members of Congress to sit down together, get to know each other, tell the full truth, govern for the future, put the country first, be responsible, but always try to work together,” Riddle said on Thursday’s MetroNews Talkline.

Riddle knows her way around Washington, D.C.  She now works as a consultant but formerly served as U.S. Senator Joseph Lieberman Chief of Staff.

U.S. Senator Joe Manchin, a Democrat, and former Utah Governor Jon Huntsman, a Republican, are the national leaders for No Labels.





More News

News
Governor Justice endorses Moore Capito to succeed him
Capito is a former House Judiciary Committee chairman, son of the U.S. senator and grandson of three-term Gov. Arch Moore.
April 18, 2024 - 6:27 pm
News
WVU Medicine announces major capital investment plan
Health system plans $400 million investment.
April 18, 2024 - 2:41 pm
News
Boone County woman charged in teenage daughter's death
Court documents say a 14-year old victim was found dead in her home in an "emaciated, skeletal state"
April 18, 2024 - 2:12 pm
News
Rep Miller supports aid for Ukraine, Israel, Taiwan, plus TikTok bill and keeping the speaker on the job
Miller, who represents counties in the southern half of West Virginia, said she supports each of the bills in the package -- plus keeping Johnson on the job.
April 18, 2024 - 2:08 pm


Your Comments