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Manchin has earned thanks and respect

Last week West Virginia prepared for the end of an era, as U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin gave his final speech on the floor of the Senate after having devoted his life to serving the state’s residents for more than 40 years.

Manchin has been a stalwart for the Mountain State, at all levels — the House of Delegates, the state Senate, West Virginia’s secretary of state, the state’s governor and, since 2010, a powerful voice for us in Washington, D.C., as a member of the U.S. Senate.

Filling the shoes of the late U.S. Sen. Robert C. Byrd might have been a daunting task for some, but Manchin, who entered the senate as a Democrat and will leave as an independent, did not hesitate to get to work for residents of the state.

He became, as his colleague and soon-to-be senior U.S. senator from West Virginia Shelley Moore Capito put it, “a relentless advocate for our state.” And he did it with more loyalty to us than to the letter after his name — eventually deciding to switch from Democrat to Independent while also working against the increasing divisions he said “run pretty deep” in the Senate and across the country.

Through principled statesmanship, Manchin used his position to do what would be best for West Virginia and the country as a whole. His efforts ranged from protecting coal miners’ pensions and healthcare benefits, ensuring doctors understood a patient’s previous opioid addiction history and funding the expansion of broadband access to helping design the $737 billion Inflation Reduction Act that was meant to lift everyone.

As his retirement approaches, West Virginians need not worry. Manchin is not done working. He plans to be active with his daughter’s Americans Together, which focuses on recruiting political moderates for higher office.

“I rise with a full heart and overwhelming sense of gratitude,” Manchin said on the Senate floor Tuesday. “It’s been the honor of my life to represent my great State of West Virginia in this great country of ours.”

Residents of the state are grateful as well. West Virginians — and all Americans — wish you well as you turn the page, and say — though the words might seem insufficient — thank you for a job well done.

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