Republican Gov. Jim Justice officially jumped into the West Virginia Senate race Thursday, setting up a hotly contested Republican primary in a key race in the fight for Senate control and a possible bid against Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin.
"I want to tell you that tonight I am officially announcing my candidacy for the United States Senate. And I absolutely will promise you, to God above it, I will do the job, and I will do the job that will make you proud," Justice said at an announcement event Thursday.
As a popular two-term governor who can leverage his vast personal wealth, Justice gives the GOP a formidable recruit in a state that’s critical to its path to the Senate majority. Republicans see West Virginia as a top pickup opportunity in a state former President Donald Trump won by almost 40 points in 2020 — regardless of whether Manchin chooses to run for re-election.
A Manchin bid would set up a high-profile clash — he has served two decades in statewide office, winning elections despite the state’s rightward political drift. If he chooses not to run again, Democrats would face a tall task defending the seat from whoever wins the Republican primary.

Against that backdrop, some party leaders have already lined up behind Justice.
National Republican Senatorial Committee Chairman Steve Daines, R-Mont., cheered Justice in a statement, calling him “a proven winner whose record of creating jobs, cutting taxes, and fighting for conservative values has made him one of the most popular governors in the country.”
The GOP super PAC Senate Leadership Fund, which is aligned with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., also signaled that it views Justice as a strong contender.
“More than any other Republican in the state, he is far and away the best candidate to take on and retire the sellout that Joe Manchin has sadly become,” Steven Law, the group’s president, said in a statement.
Sens. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va., and Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., both spoke at Justice’s event, lauding him and saying they hoped he’d be their Senate colleague.
“We’re really going to make a good pair up in Washington,” Capito said before Justice took the stage.
Graham told reporters before the event that he likes Manchin but would “rather have a Republican who’s gonna be a more reliable vote,” he said. “Joe Manchin is a wonderful fellow. I think Jim Justice is a winner.”
But Justice won’t have a coronation for the Republican nomination. The GOP primary is expected to be costly and divisive, and the fight has already begun.
GOP Rep. Alex Mooney, who jumped into the Senate race in November, launched a new TV ad ahead of Justice’s announcement Thursday, labeling him as “liberal Jim Justice.” The 30-second spot knocked Justice’s policies on the Covid pandemic and taxes and featured a clip of Justice awkwardly donning a mask.
Justice responded in kind, playing a video at his announcement event that said: “The stakes of this U.S. Senate race are high. We can’t trust our future to an all-talk, no-action D.C. politician,” with an image of Mooney on the screen.
The conservative Club for Growth PAC has endorsed Mooney, and its president, David McIntosh said this month that the PAC could spend more than $10 million in the primary.
“West Virginia voters want a principled conservative like Alex Mooney who will fight the out-of-control spending and woke policies coming from Washington. The fact is Jim Justice is Mitch McConnell’s hand-picked candidate, and would support the reckless spending that Manchin voted for and more,” McIntosh said in a statement.
Outside groups have already started spending in the race. Senate Leadership Fund’s nonprofit arm, One Nation, launched a TV ad last week targeting Manchin. Democrats responded with Duty and Honor, a nonprofit arm of the Democratic group Senate Majority PAC, launching a TV ad labeling Manchin as a “commonsense senator.”

The early missives underscore how West Virginia will be pivotal in the battle for the Senate. Republicans need a net gain of just one or two seats to take control of the chamber, depending on whether they win the White House, because the vice president casts tiebreaking votes.


