Center, right: Gov. Jim Justice’s car parked outside the state capitol with the license plate “COAL 3.” Bottom: A view of the soon-to-close Mylan Pharmaceuticals plant. | Credit: Raymond Thompson, Jr./POLITICO

MORGANTOWN, W.Va.—In a hotel just off of West Virginia University’s campus in early June, drowsy night shift workers from the local pharmaceutical plant filed through a poorly lit suite, filling out unemployment paperwork, applying for supplemental health insurance and cracking jokes about the breathtaking advertisements for a new state program that will pay you to move to a place many of them are considering leaving.

Six months before, officials at Viatris announced that the plant, which has been a fixture in Morgantown since 1965, would close at the end of July, shipping more than 1,500 jobs overseas. In a state already suffering from the freefall of its signature coal mining industry, the loss of jobs that paid as much as $80,000 sent alarms through the capital.

This spring, the state legislature passed a resolution calling on the governor, Congress and union-friendly President Joe Biden to save the plant by […]

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