Los Angeles Times

GOP nears a lock on the South

With Kentucky electing tea party favorite Matt Bevin governor, region goes a deeper shade of red.

- By Michael Finnegan michael.finnegan@latimes.com

The Democratic Party’s half-century of decline across the South was all but complete Wednesday after Kentucky elected a Republican governor who campaigned against abortion, gay marriage and, for a time, Obamacare.

The victory of tea party favorite Matt Bevin affirmed the appeal of outsider candidates challengin­g the establishm­ent in a year when real estate mogul Donald Trump and retired neurosurge­on Ben Carson are leading the party’s presidenti­al race.

Bevin, an investment manager who has never held public office, branded Democratic rival Jack Conway as a “career politician.” He ran television commercial­s calling Conway, Kentucky’s attorney general, “pro-abortion,” “anti-coal” and a champion of President Obama’s “liberal agenda” — reprising themes that swept many Republican­s into office in last year’s midterm election.

When Bevin is sworn in next month, Democrats will hold just two governorsh­ips in the South: Terry McAuliffe in Virginia and Earl Ray Tomblin in West Virginia. The sole legislativ­e chamber that Democrats still control in the South is Kentucky’s House of Representa­tives.

“We’re sort of catching up to the rest of the South,” said Al Cross, a veteran Louisville political columnist and director of the University of Kentucky’s Institute for Rural Journalism and Community Issues.

The Democrats’ lock on the South began to erode after enactment of federal civil rights laws in the 1960s. The decline accelerate­d as the nation’s polarizati­on over cultural issues intensifie­d in the decades since then.

Kentucky’s shift away from Democrats has been slower than in some neighborin­g states, thanks partly to the 2005 indictment of its last Republican governor, Ernie Fletcher, in a political patronage scandal, Cross said.

For Bevin, Obama’s unpopulari­ty in culturally conservati­ve states like Kentucky proved a major asset. His advertisin­g leaned heavily on tying Conway to the president.

Obama is also a major factor in the Nov. 21 runoff for governor of Louisiana, where Republican U.S. Sen. David Vitter is trying to use the president’s low popularity there to damage Democratic opponent John Bel Edwards.

Since 2008, when Obama won the presidency, Democrats have lost 13 governorsh­ips and more than 900 state legislativ­e seats across the U.S.

In Kentucky, Bevin campaigned as a Christian conservati­ve businessma­n who would protect coal mining, a backbone industry in the Appalachia­ns.

Jim Cauley, a Democratic strategist in Louisville, said that timeworn tactic was especially effective in rural areas where the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency is seen as a coal-mine job killer.

“There’s this feeling that the liberal Democrats are coming to get them,” Cauley said. “They don’t have Christmas because Barack’s coming at them with the EPA.”

Bevin highlighte­d his “pro-life” and “pro-family” stances. He stressed his opposition to Planned Parenthood and his support for Kim Davis, the Kentucky county clerk who spent several days in jail for refusing to obey federal court orders to issue marriage licenses after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that same-sex marriage was legal. Bevin paid her a jailhouse visit.

He also campaigned against Obamacare, a sensitive issue in a state where the Affordable Care Act has extended coverage to more than 500,000 people, mostly through an expansion of Medicaid under Democratic Gov. Steve Beshear.

Bevin wound up backpedali­ng on his initial pledge to stop the Medicaid expansion, saying he would continue to accept federal money to keep the newly insured covered but would require some of them to pay fees.

Bevin’s pivot came as GOP White House contenders, with a few exceptions, strike a less bellicose posture against the healthcare law than they did in 2012.

“We went from ‘repeal, repeal, repeal’ to ‘repeal and replace,’ ” said Jennifer Duffy, senior editor of the nonpartisa­n Cook Political Report. “That, to me, is shorthand for Republican­s figuring out you couldn’t just talk about repeal. Maybe someone explained to them exactly what would happen if they repealed it.”

Former Kentucky Republican Chairman John McCarthy said Democrats had counted on a boost at the polls from many who gained healthcare, but “they didn’t show up to vote.”

‘There’s this feeling that the liberal Democrats are coming to get them. They don’t have Christmas because Barack’s coming at them with the EPA.’

— Jim Cauley,

Democratic strategist in Louisville, Ky.

 ?? Timothy D. Easley
Associated Press ?? MATT BEVIN, the governor-elect of Kentucky — shown with his wife, Glenna, center, and Lt. Gov.-elect Jenean Hampton, also a Republican — brings the count of Southern Republican governors to all but two now.
Timothy D. Easley Associated Press MATT BEVIN, the governor-elect of Kentucky — shown with his wife, Glenna, center, and Lt. Gov.-elect Jenean Hampton, also a Republican — brings the count of Southern Republican governors to all but two now.

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