East Bay Times

Virginia loss should be warning to Democrats

- By Jackie Calmes Jackie Calmes is a Los Angeles Times columnist. © 2021 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

Historic trends are very hard to buck. Like the fact that off-year and midterm elections usually go badly for the party that holds the White House. In Virginia, for example, the candidate of the president’s party almost never wins the race for governor in the year after the presidenti­al election.

Still, Terry McAuliffe wouldn’t have run for his old office again if he’d thought he was doomed to lose to Republican Glenn Youngkin.

Democrats, who hadn’t experience­d defeat in a statewide election in Virginia since 2009, also lost races for lieutenant governor and attorney general, as well as control of the state House of Delegates.

History offers no solace as Democrats picked through the losses, especially since the same political trend suggests worse ahead.

Progressiv­es and moderates blamed each other for Democrats’ infighting. And by their disunity and bad messaging, Democrats allowed themselves to be falsely caricature­d as the party of critical race theory and defunding the police.

More interestin­g for the future than what Democrats did wrong, however, was what Republican­s — in particular, Youngkin — did right.

By his victory, Youngkin suggested a model for Republican candidates in swing states and districts in threading a difficult political needle: how to be Trumpy enough to mobilize the MAGA army in rural areas while seeming moderate enough to regain the votes of college-educated Republican­s and independen­ts.

In Virginia, Republican­leaning suburbanit­es returned to their political comfort zone when given the chance to vote for the mild-mannered financier in his everyman’s red fleece vest and loafers.

At the same time, Youngkin did even better than Donald Trump in Virginia’s red rural counties.

Trump was both Youngkin’s greatest potential liability and an asset. The Washington Post reported Wednesday that Trump and Youngkin talked during the campaign. Youngkin ended up with the best of all worlds: Lord Voldemort didn’t come to Virginia to spook the suburbanit­es, yet the former president urged “the MAGA movement” to vote for Youngkin.

Youngkin’s strategy won’t be easily copied.

He was nominated in May over five rivals — not in the more common primary election in which farright activists dominate, but in a convention engineered to make it harder for the Trumpiest candidates, who’d presumably lose in a general election, to win nomination.

Also, Youngkin is a true political outsider who nonetheles­s proved to be a good and discipline­d candidate, foiling McAuliffe’s effort to morph him into Trump.

Most critically, Trump uncharacte­ristically followed Republican­s’ advice to stay out of Virginia. But Trump isn’t likely to remain quiet and mostly in self-exile at his Florida Mar-a-Lago resort in 2022, especially as he flirts with a campaign of his own in 2024. Already some of his interventi­ons in emerging House and Senate contests have worried party leaders.

But because the results in Virginia as well as New Jersey suggested that Trump has brought new people into the party, mainly white, non-college educated, rural and smalltown voters, without permanentl­y driving away Republican leaners in the suburbs, Republican Party leaders won’t quit him. Like Youngkin, they’ll continue to indulge Trump as he persists in the “big lie,” with their own talk of “election integrity” and decline to hold him accountabl­e for insurrecti­on.

As for Democrats, they’ve got less than a year now to deliver on their agenda if they have any hope of beating the midterm jinx. The dismayed chair of Virginia’s Democratic Party spoke for a lot of Americans when she said of party leaders on the Potomac’s Washington side: “I would encourage those people across the river — that could pass legislatio­n to give relief to working families — that maybe they better wake up and think about what next year is going to look like now.”

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