All power to all people.

Your Mountain Party candidate for House of Delegates District 79, covering downtown Morgantown, First Ward, Greenmont, Jerome Park, Sabraton, South Park and Woodburn.

Why I’m Running

Growing up as the child of a single mother, I saw firsthand the struggles families face to access adequate housing, care and education, and the impact of rising costs on the average American. I am fighting for a fair economy in West Virginia that truly protects life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness – not a crooked economy built on environmental destruction, exploitation of the poor and unchecked corporate welfare. 

In the House of Delegates, I will introduce, vote on, and debate bills to push to

  • Create public utility companies to end predatory pricing

  • Construct and maintain sufficient public housing to support safe and clean living places for everyone

  • Protect and strengthen our public education to promote access to high-quality, robust centers of learning

Show Up and Do Something

Show Up and Do Something

Paige Reiring gives a peace sign in front of bed of bean plants at a community garden.

When food assistance was threatened, I got involved with Morgantown Freedom Farmers, and now I work to make our community gardens thrive every week.

Paige Reiring smiles while working at a Planned Parenthood bingo event in downtown Morgantown.

I love to help in whatever way I can, so I volunteered to collect donations and check bingo cards for this event with Planned Parenthood Votes South Atlantic.

Paige Reiring sits behind a sewing machine and a sign for Stitch, Please!, which provides free clothing repair.

Clothing repair can be expensive and inaccessible, which is why I provide free repairs every month at the Morgantown Mutual Aid Fair through Stitch, Please!

When the public was invited to speak on the MARL transmission lines that would be running through West Virginia and Monongalia County from Pennsylvania to feed data centers in Virginia, I showed up to speak up.

When I learned that opioid settlement funds were being used to fund 20 Flock cameras in Monongalia County instead of actually helping victims of the opioid epidemic, I exposed them.

People-Powered Movement

A people-powered movement needs people. Can you help?

“Just say the word and I am off. Suffering humanity needs our best efforts, and we should not spare ourselves.”
- Mother Jones