Listen Now: Morning News

Salango says he won’t repeat bid for governor; Huntington Mayor Williams says he’s closer to launch

Ben Salango, who was the Democratic nominee for governor in 2020, says he is no longer considering a run for that office this political cycle.

Ben Salango

“I want to thank those that have reached out and encouraged me to seek the 2024 Democratic nomination for Governor of West Virginia. Your support and encouragement truly mean the world to me,” Salango stated today.

“Running for public office is a tremendous commitment, both personally and professionally. After months of consideration, I’ve decided that I will not seek the Democratic nomination for governor.”

Salango, a Kanawha County commissioner, won the Democratic nomination for governor in 2020 over a field of several competitors. He wound up losing to incumbent Gov. Jim Justice, the Republican nominee, by 33 points. Justice got 497,944 votes to Salango’s 237,024.

Justice is up against a term limit and is now running for U.S. Senate.

The current Republican field for governor is big and active.

Declared candidates on the Republican side so far include current officeholders Auditor J.B. McCuskey, Attorney General Patrick Morrisey, Secretary of State Mac Warner and House Judiciary Chairman Moore Capito. Also running is automobile dealer Chris Miller, son of U.S. Congresswoman Carol Miller.

This cycle, Salango had expressed interest in running for governor again but said he did not want to run against another possible Democratic nominee, Huntington Mayor Steve Williams.

“We’ll certainly reach an agreement before there’s any announcement. I don’t want to run against Steve Williams. He’s a great guy. It would probably be the most boring Democratic primary ever because I won’t say a negative word about him,” Salango said a few weeks ago. 

Williams, who has been mayor of Huntington since 2012, today said he is leaning strongly toward running. He made public comments at a local celebration of the Juneteenth holiday to indicate the likelihood.

“I said at the Juneteenth that I intend to run, but that it won’t be official until I intend to file and that wouldn’t be until sometime in July or August,” Williams said today in response to a question from MetroNews.

“I was simply dropping the breadcrumb. It’s never official until it’s official. I sure wasn’t going to announce anything until I heard from Ben. I’m a big step closer.”





More News

News
Capito-backed legislation blocks biggest state from mandating zero-emission vehicle transition
California had a target of 35% zero-emission vehicle sales by 2026, 68% by 2030 and 100% by 2035.
May 23, 2025 - 8:45 am
News
MetroNews This Morning 5-23-25
Summary of West Virginia news, sports, and weather for Friday, May 23, 2025
May 23, 2025 - 6:38 am
News
Charleston crowd braves bad weather to watch national championship criterium races
Races continue through Memorial Day.
May 23, 2025 - 12:39 am
News
The "Big, Beautiful Bill" Is Not Enough
May 23, 2025 - 12:06 am