In the Kentucky Governor's Race, It's an Unpopular Man vs. an Unpopular Party
New York Times
PIKEVILLE, Ky. Under normal circumstances, the Kentucky governors race would be all but over except for the concession phone call. The incumbent running for re-election this year is a conservative Republican in a state that has recently become as red as hot coal, where unemployment is as low as it has been in nearly two decades and most of the voters are still crazy about the governors ally, President Trump.
But.
This is not a normal governors race, said Paul Patton, a former Democratic governor, sitting in his memento-filled office at the University of Pikeville. Weve got an abnormal governor.
There are reasons that Matt Bevin, a millionaire businessman who stomped into Kentucky politics from the right, is by some polls the least popular governor in the United States. His proposed cuts to government services have been steep and his plans to tackle the states long underfunded pension program have been seen by many as a betrayal. But the main issue with Mr. Bevin, acknowledged even by his supporters, is not what he has done but how he has done it.
He has tangled with journalists, union representatives and Democrats, but he has been startlingly harsh on less typical targets like public school teachers. After thousands of educators walked out last year in protest of budget cuts and proposed changes to teacher pensions, Mr. Bevin accused some who picketed a state senators business of having a thug mentality and called others selfish and ignorant.