Chattanooga Times Free Press

GOP nominee’s independen­ce from Trump debated

- BY MATTHEW BARAKAT

FALLS CHURCH, Va. — If Glenn Youngkin was looking to pivot back to the political center after winning the GOP’s nomination for governor in Virginia, Donald Trump made it a little tougher by giving the nominee a big bearhug of an endorsemen­t.

“Glenn is pro-Business, pro-Second Amendment, pro-Veterans, pro-America, he knows how to make Virginia’s economy rip-roaring, and he has my Complete and Total Endorsemen­t!” Trump said in a written statement issued the day after Republican­s declared Youngkin the victor in their May 8 nominating convention.

Virginia Republican­s chose Youngkin, a political newcomer, over six rivals. In doing so, they snubbed the most overtly proTrump candidate, state Sen. Amanda Chase, who gladly accepted the moniker of “Trump in heels.” Chase finished a distant third. Tom Davis, a former Virginia

congressma­n who is now rector of George Mason University, said Youngkin’s nomination shows Virginia Republican­s were more concerned about electabili­ty than fealty to Trump.

“It’s not that he threw Trump under the bus, but there were other candidates who ran campaigns that were just focused all

on Trump, and they lost,” Davis said. “I think Youngkin’s in a good position to be his own guy.”

Davis also pointed to the nomination­s of Winsome Sears for lieutenant governor and Jason Miyares for attorney general as evidence that Republican­s were focused on winning in the fall.

“They’ve got a bazilliona­ire, a

Black woman and a Latino running at the top of the ticket,” he said. “It’s hard to even put that together in a back room. It’s a very strong ticket and it puts a lot of pressure on Democrats.”

Larry Sabato, political science professor at the University of Virginia, acknowledg­ed Youngkin was not the most pro-Trump candidate in the field, but he said Youngkin still tied himself too closely to the former president to be viable in the general election in a state where Trump is deeply unpopular with moderates and lost by 10 points last year. He described the GOP candidates as “Trump-y, Trumpier and Trumpiest,” with Youngkin as the “Trump-y” candidate,

Sabato said people who knew Youngkin told him at the outset of the campaign to expect Youngkin to position himself as a moderate.

“It didn’t turn out that way,” Sabato said. “I understand they thought they had to do it to win the nomination, when it turns out they really didn’t. … But now he’s stuck with the positions he took and the endorsemen­ts he’s received.”

Sabato said that not only is Trump’s endorsemen­t a kiss of death in a general election, but Youngkin’s decision to campaign with Texas Sen. Ted Cruz in the days leading up to the nominating convention is equally unappealin­g to the political center. Sabato said that as much as Youngkin will try to run back to the center, Democrats won’t let it happen.

He expects the campaign of Terry McAuliffe, the front-runner in a five-candidate Democratic primary to be held next month, will define him as a Trump loyalist before Youngkin can define himself.

Indeed, the McAuliffe campaign pounced on Trump’s endorsemen­t, in which Trump went out of his way to take a shot at McAuliffe, referring to him as “the Clintons’ bagman.”

“Glenn Youngkin spent his campaign fawning all over Donald Trump, and now Trump has returned the favor by wholeheart­edly endorsing him,” McAuliffe said in a statement issued after Trump’s endorsemen­t.

 ?? AP PHOTO/STEVE HELBER ?? Republican gubernator­ial candidate, Glen Youngkin, arrives for an event in Richmond, Va., on Tuesday, May 11.
AP PHOTO/STEVE HELBER Republican gubernator­ial candidate, Glen Youngkin, arrives for an event in Richmond, Va., on Tuesday, May 11.

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