To: Follies who wrote (132491 ) 5/12/2012 11:51:56 PM From: Hope Praytochange 2 Recommendations Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224724 Obama faces trouble in coal country [iframe style="WIDTH: 630px; HEIGHT: 42px; OVERFLOW: hidden" src="http://www.facebook.com/plugins/like.php?href=http://www.myfoxtampabay.com/story/18312318/obama-faces-trouble-in-coal-country&layout=after&show_faces=false&width=630&height=42&action=recommend&colorscheme=light" frameBorder=0 allowTransparency scrolling=no][/iframe] Posted: May 11, 2012 4:07 PM EDT Updated: May 11, 2012 4:07 PM EDT Source: The Wall Street Journal Cecil Roberts, the president of the United Mine Workers of America, traveled the country for Barack Obama four years ago. He hoped to persuade skeptical working-class white voters in places like southwestern Virginia and southern Ohio to vote for an African-American with an unusual name. Last month, Roberts went on a West Virginia radio show with a different message. He compared the way Obama's administration has treated the coal industry to the Navy SEALs' killing of Usama bin Laden. He now says the union might choose not to endorse Obama and sit out the election instead. Roberts' transformation suggests larger problems for Obama in the coal-producing regions of Pennsylvania, Ohio and Virginia, all swing states. The shift is driven largely by anger over Environmental Protection Agency regulations -- rules the coal industry says will make it so expensive to operate coal-fired power plants that no more will be built. Roberts and his union worry the result will be lower demand for coal as electricity-generating capacity shifts away from the fuel. "We've been placed in a horrendous position here," Roberts said in an interview. "How do you take coal miners' money and say let's use it politically to support someone whose EPA has pretty much said, 'You're done?" Danger signs for Obama appeared as recently as Tuesday, when more than 40 percent of voters in West Virginia's Democratic primary cast their ballots for a felon in prison in Texas rather than for the president. Democrats said the result reflected anger at Obama's energy policy.