Gulf Times

Obama stumps for Virginia candidate in race seen as referendum on Biden

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Former US president Barack Obama yesterday joined a roster of highprofil­e Democrats campaignin­g for Virginia governor candidate Terry McAuliffe, just days ahead of a tight, closelywat­ched election.

Opinion polls show McAuliffe, who served as Virginia’s governor from 2014-2018, and Republican Glenn Youngkin nearly tied in the countdown to the November 2 contest.

The race is seen as a barometer of the country’s political direction after Joe Biden, a Democrat, won the presidency over Republican Donald Trump a year ago.

A poll this week by Monmouth University showed Youngkin, 54, had closed

McAuliffe’s 5-point lead since September by gaining ground with independen­t and women voters.

Youngkin’s strength in the polls during the first weeks of early voting has worried Democrats, who anticipate­d a comfortabl­e lead in a state that has trended blue in recent years. Democrats flipped the Virginia legislatur­e in 2019 and Trump lost the state by 10 percentage points in November 2020, double his margin of defeat in 2016.

Obama, who served as president from 2008-2016, spoke at Virginia Commonweal­th University in Richmond yesterday afternoon, aiming to boost McAuliffe, 64, in the final leg of the race. Biden is slated to campaign with McAuliffe next week.

In a television ad broadcast on Wednesday, Obama backed McAuliffe’s stances on climate change, abortion rights and voting rights.

“I watched Terry stand strong on the values we all care about; protecting every citizen’s right to vote, fighting climate change and defending a woman’s right to choose,” Obama said of the former governor.

The serving governor, Ralph Northam, a Democrat, cannot seek re-election because the state bars governors from serving consecutiv­e terms. McAuliffe can run because he left office in 2018.

Both candidates for governor have dug into hotly contested cultural issues to stir up voter engagement in the off-year election, including abortion rights and how schools address the topics of race and racism with students.

McAuliffe has sought to paint Youngkin as a far-right extremist and align him with Trump, who has endorsed the Republican candidate.

In turn, Youngkin has suggested that McAuliffe is trying to advance a far-left agenda. A former private equity executive, Youngkin has focused in part on education — especially the right of parents to have a say in their children’s schooling - which has proven popular with suburban women, a key demographi­c.

Youngkin kicked off a bus tour yesterday in Henrico, Virginia, touting his agenda to build momentum in the final days of campaignin­g.

He has walked a fine line between welcoming Trump’s endorsemen­t and distancing himself from the former president’s false claim that the 2020 presidenti­al election was stolen.

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