Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Gubernator­ial strategy

GOP candidate for governor turns to Trump playbook

- By Cathleen Decker Washington Bureau cathleen.decker@latimes.com

Race and crime are top issues for Virginia’s GOP candidate Ed Gillespie.

WASHINGTON — Virginia has been swamped by fearful images as Tuesday’s state election nears: heavily tattooed and handcuffed Latinos staring balefully at the television camera, a mugshot of a convicted pedophile set loose on the state.

Versions of those ads may be headed to other states in the 2018 elections as Republican­s seek to maximize the turnout of the burgeoning Trump wing of the party with themes known to appeal to them.

The strategy in Virginia by GOP gubernator­ial candidate Ed Gillespie has played heavily on themes of race and crime — itself an issue that has historical­ly conjured racial stereotype­s — in the style President Donald Trump employed last year.

The outcome likely will turn on which candidate — Gillespie or Democrat Ralph Northam — can best deploy their base voters on Tuesday. Democrats are counting on Trump’s unpopulari­ty to draw their voters to the polls. Republican­s have sought to energize their voters with issues including gangs, sanctuary cities and Confederat­e monuments.

“The specifics obviously might be different in different places,” said Quentin Kidd, director of the Wason Center for Public Policy at Christophe­r Newport University in Newport News, Va. “The Republican base is mobilized around these core issues that are largely social and cultural.”

Gillespie’s ads are not the only fearful appeals to voters. A Latino group supporting Northam is running an ad showing terrified minority children being chased by a truck flying a Confederat­e flag and bearing a Gillespie sticker.

But racially charged messages have been more prominent on the Republican side, starting at the top.

Trump has weighed in on the race on Twitter. Three of his four tweets about the Virginia race have mentioned crime, “killer gangs,” sanctuary cities or monuments to Confederat­e heroes. The racial component also was fanned by his statement in August that the crowd of white nationalis­ts at a violent protest in Charlottes­ville included some “very fine people.”

On Monday, Trump’s chief of staff, John Kelly, asserted that the Civil War could have been prevented by “compromise”— an argument used by some sympatheti­c to the Southern cause. Kelly also mocked a Virginia church’s decision to remove plaques honoring George Washington and Robert E. Lee, the leader of the Confederat­e Army, whom Kelly described as “honorable.”

For Republican­s, the strategies in the Virginia race, as well as the 2016 presidenti­al contest, mark a reversal of the direction the party had been headed as recently as 2015. That year, Nikki Haley, then the governor of South Carolina and now ambassador to the United Nations, engineered the removal of the Confederat­e flag fromthe grounds of the state’s Capitol. She acted shortly after the racially inspired killings of nine African-Americans in a church in Charleston, S.C.

Republican­s spoke then of a newly inclusive party. Trump’s 2016 campaign, however, focused on fears of crime and terrorism and often targeted nonwhite Americans for criticism. His victory has changed calculatio­ns about the political impact of racial appeals.

Virginia was the headquarte­rs of the Confederac­y and for decades afterward paid homage to Southern heritage.

In recent years, however, those who were raised on stories of the Lost Cause have been outnumbere­d by newcomers who have added diversity to the state and exacerbate­d tensions that are at once geographic­al, generation­al and cultural — and nearly always racial. The state resembles in someways the California of the 1990s, when a collision between whites and a growing number of Latino residents helped spur divisive fights over illegal immigratio­n and affirmativ­e action.

“Tension in Virginia’s whiter areas, rural areas, versus more multicultu­ral areas — those are very old tensions,” said Grace Elizabeth Hale, a University of Virginia historian. The Trump campaign and this year’s protests in Charlottes­ville and elsewhere “have put those things in front in away that they hadn’t been before,” she said.

For Gillespie, the aftermath of the Charlottes­ville protest provided an opening when Northam said Confederat­e statues should be taken down. (He earlier suggested local officials should make the call.)

Gillespie seized on the issue because itwas that rare topic that put him in line with most of the state’s voters, said Stephen Farnsworth, a political scientist at the University of Mary Washington.

“Voters are with the Democrats on Medicaid expansion. Voters are with the Democrats in opposition to Trump,” he said. “What the monument issue does is give Republican­s an issue where they can be with the majority of voters.”

A recent Hampton University poll showed twothirds of the state’s voters opposed removing the statues; other polls have shown clear majority sentiment to keep them, sometimes with additional historic context.

“For governor there’s a clear choice. Ralph Northam wants to take down Virginia’ s Civil War monuments,” a narrator in one of Gillespie’s ads says. “Ralph Northam will take our statues down. Ed Gillespie will preserve them.”

Other Gillespie ads are on more convention­al ground but employ tactics that critics say are designed to play on racial fears.

Gillespie’s ads are aimed at the more rural conservati­ve base, but his campaign also hopes to make inroads among exurban and suburban voters.

“I think that the base voters on both sides will vote with this issue in mind, but my hunch is that most voters are either apathetic about it or will not have their ballot decided by it,” said Jonathan W. White, an associate professor of American Studies at Christophe­r Newport University.

Increasing­ly, however, in Virginia and elsewhere, base voters are the ones on whom campaigns focus most, as the once vibrant political center gives way to sharply partisan voters.

Kidd said this governor’s race is more racial ly freighted than any since 1990, when Douglas Wilder became the first African-American governor elected in the nation’s history.

 ?? STEVE HELBER/AP 2016 ?? Ed Gillespie, right, has seized on the issue of Confederat­e statues in his race against Democrat Ralph Northam, left.
STEVE HELBER/AP 2016 Ed Gillespie, right, has seized on the issue of Confederat­e statues in his race against Democrat Ralph Northam, left.

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