Girlfriend's on-air killing drives anchorman into politics


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BLACKSBURG, Va. (AP) — The tipping point for Chris Hurst came last fall while reporting on a shooting at a rail car factory. When the camera turned off, he wept.

Just more than a year earlier, the 29-year-old's reporter girlfriend was gunned down while conducting an interview on live TV. Now, Hurst was using the same truck that Alison Parker had used the last day of her life to report live from the scene of another shooting.

Hurst realized he needed a drastic life change.

The former TV anchor is now running for political office, challenging a National Rifle Association-backed candidate for a competitive Virginia state House seat in a firearm friendly part of the state. Hurst sees it as a way to honor the memory of the woman he thought he'd marry and to give back to the community that helped him through his darkest days.

"When we understand that life is fragile, does that mean we give up and say life ain't worth it? No," Hurst said at a local Democratic committee meeting in March. "That's when we say it is worth it, and we do what we can when we're here to try to help another person."

Hurst was living with Parker when she and cameraman Adam Ward were fatally shot while reporting for WDBJ-TV in August 2015. The gunman, Vester Flanagan, posted video of the attack online and killed himself hours later.

After the shooting, Hurst became the public face of the grieving Roanoke station, bringing him national attention and a large social media following. That helped him become one of the top House candidate fundraisers last reporting period.

The Pennsylvania native, who quit his TV job and moved from Roanoke to Blacksburg to run in the 12th District, has been labeled a carpetbagger by Republicans looking to protect Del. Joseph Yost, a well-liked moderate. The district is among the few competitive House seats in southwest Virginia, a rural Republican stronghold.

Hurst is one of several young Democrats new to politics running for a Virginia House seat this year. President Donald Trump's election has fueled a new interest in state and local politics, party leaders say, and Democrats hope they can put a dent in Republicans' sizeable House majority.

Hurst is no fan of Trump but says his reasons for running are more personal.

While at the station, he faced constant reminders of Parker. He struggled with walking past the place where he was told she was dead, and with covering stories about violence and death, he said.

"I knew that I could get myself up and pull myself together and do it, but I think it was at the price of my humanity," Hurst said.

Now, he says, his grief is lessening because he feels like what is doing has purpose.

"It has given him determination," said Alison's father, Andy Parker. "We both had to seek a way to make sense out of all of this."

Republicans are playing up their candidate's deep local roots and trying to paint Hurst as an outsider seeking political advancement. Yost, 30, has earned a reputation in Richmond as a humble, hard worker and champion for better mental health services.

"There's a difference between being on air and covering news as opposed to me, being in my district for the last 30 years," Yost said. "I think there's just a lot of questions and concern among the community about somebody who's moving in to challenge me."

While Parker's death drove Hurst into action, he treads lightly on the issue of gun control in these communities, where the gun culture runs deep.

Hurst, a gun owner, says that among other things he'd like to empower law enforcement to petition courts to have guns taken away from dangerous people. But he insists firearms aren't his top priority. He says he's focused on issues such as education and economic development.

Andy Parker, whose gun-control advocacy has made him a self-described "lightning rod," said he expects Republicans will try to link Hurst to him and call Hurst a "gun grabber."

"We're joined at the hip because of her and our love for her," Parker said. "He's not going to run away from it."

Mae Midkiff, Giles County Republican Committee chairwoman, said she doesn't think Republicans will make guns an issue in the race.

But Midkiff said if Hurst thinks he has an easy road to Richmond, he's mistaken.

"It would've just thrilled us to death to see Mr. Hurst stay in Roanoke and do the news," Midkiff said. "But if he comes into our territory, I'm going to have to tell you, he's going to have a battle," she said.

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Associated Press reporter Alan Suderman contributed to this report from Richmond.

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Follow Alanna Durkin Richer at http://twitter.com/aedurkinricher. Read more of her work at http://apne.ws/2hIhzDb

Copyright © The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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