The Guardian (USA)

Democrats won Virginia and are claiming victory in Kentucky. What's next?

- Lloyd Green

On election day 2019, the Democrats swept the Virginia legislatur­e, and appear to have won the Kentucky governor’s mansion. Trends visible when Nancy Pelosi reclaimed the House speaker’s gavel a year ago remain ever present.

America’s suburbs continues to abandon their traditiona­l political home even as rural voters remain energized by an unpopular president. On Tuesday, impeachmen­t wasn’t the vote magnet the president’s minions swore that it would be.

In Kentucky, Democrat Andy Beshear, the state’s attorney general, appears to have ousted Matt Bevin, the incumbent Republican who has refused to concede defeat. Less than half a percent separates the two candidates. Trump had triumphed in the Bluegrass State by 30 points. If not gone, his magic is not readily transferab­le.

For the record, Beshear won the very suburban counties that had gone for Bevin four years earlier. Meanwhile, voters in Kentucky’s urban precincts flocked to the polls for the Democrat. Jefferson County, home to Louisville, voted Democratic by better than twoto-one.

On the Monday night immediatel­y before the election, Trump had headlined a Maga rally for Bevin and was joined onstage by Kentucky’s senators Mitch McConnell and Rand Paul.

There, Trump proclaimed: “If you lose, they are going to say Trump suffered the greatest defeat in the history of the world. You can’t let that happen to me!” At the same gathering, Paul had urged the press corps to out the whistleblo­wer who is the bane of Trump’s existence, a reminder of libertaria­nism’s neo-Confederat­e strains.

Hours later, on Tuesday morning, Trump then tweeted that the “impeachmen­t hoax had fired up voters in Kentucky”. Maybe so, but not exactly the way Trump had thought.

Instead, Trump’s presence comes with a downside: it energizes his opposition. As to be expected, Donald Trump Jr told Fox News’ viewers as the results rolled in, “This has nothing to do with Trump.”

To be sure, Trump and Bevin may have also been hurt by the headlines that emerged as Kentuckian­s went to the polls. Gordon Sondland, Trump’s ambassador to the European Union, had corrected his impeachmen­t testimony and admitted that there had been a quid pro quo involving Ukraine and Hunter Biden.

Republican demands that the Democrats release transcript­s have given way to Republican­s announcing that they now have no intention of reading said transcript­s. Ignorance is the new bliss.

Meanwhile, McConnell who doubles as Senate majority leader, was signaling that while he thought the Senate would acquit Trump in an impeachmen­t trial, bipartisan agreement would be needed for the trial to proceed. “This is not something the majority can micromanag­e like it can on almost any other issue,” said McConnell.

In Virginia, the Republican­s fate was gloomier as they lost the state senate and the house of delegates. For the first time since 1992, the Democrats hold control of both legislativ­e chambers. Adding insult to injury, Juli Briskman, the cyclist who flipped-off the presidenti­al motorcade two years earlier, won her bid for local office in Virginia’s Loudon County.

Looking back, the Republican­s’ defeat in the 2017 gubernator­ial race

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