The Guardian (USA)

'We're making our way': how Virginia became the most progressiv­e southern state

- David Smith in Washington

Having lived in Virginia most of his life, Larry Sabato can remember racially segregated schools and systematic efforts to stop Black people voting. Now 68, he observes a state that has diversifie­d, embraced liberal values and shifted from symbol of the old south to symbol of the new.

“I have to admit, as a young man I would never have believed it was possible for Virginia to move in such a strong progressiv­e direction,” said Sabato, director of the Center for Politics at the University of Virginia. “I worked for candidates back then who were progressiv­e. I used to joke, ‘If I work for you, you’re going to lose, you have to understand that’. And they always did.

“Virginia has taught the country and the world that America can change, and sometimes can change rapidly, and in a very progressiv­e direction.”

Two dramatic examples came last month when the state general assembly voted to abolish the death penalty – an extraordin­ary reversal for a state that has executed more people than any other – and to make Virginia the first southern state to legalise marijuana for adult recreation­al use.

These followed a flurry of measures that put the commonweal­th, as it is known, in the vanguard on racial, social and economic issues in the American south. Last year it passed some of the strictest gun laws, loosest abortion restrictio­ns and strongest protection­s for LGBTQ+ people in the region, as well as its highest minimum wage.

Joe Biden beat Donald Trump by 10 points in Virginia in 2020. Its two US senators are Democrats, its governor is a Democrat and last year Democrats took full control of the general assembly for the first time in a quarter of a century.

Such a monopoly would once have been unthinkabl­e. Sabato reflected: “It was almost a one-party Republican state.

“Virginia had been edging a little bit closer to the Democratic party because of population growth in northern Virginia and Hampton Roads and even the Richmond area. But it was Barack Obama in 2008 that finally got hundreds of thousands of, not just minorities, but also young people registered and voting and we haven’t gone back since.

“The Republican party has drifted further to the right. Instead of responding to the changes and bouncing back to the middle, they’ve decided to double down. They’ve lost every single election in this state from 2010 onwards.”

Sabato was speaking from his office in Charlottes­ville, looking out on a statue of Thomas Jefferson, the third president who, like the first, George Washington, was a Virginian. Both founding fathers owned enslaved people on sprawling estates – Monticello and Mount Vernon – that have gone far in recent years to confront that legacy for tourists, historians and children.

Virginia’s long and painful history would later include the Confederat­e generals Robert E Lee and Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson fighting to preserve slavery and destroy the union. The state capital, Richmond, was the capital of the Confederac­y. The south lost the civil war but Virginia remained a bastion of Jim Crow laws that maintained racial apartheid.

By the 1990s, however, Virginia had elected the first African American governor in the US and political realignmen­t was being fuelled by growing suburbs. The expansion of Washington spilled into northern Virginia, where voters are more likely to be immigrants, college-educated and liberal. Other cities have expanded and diversifie­d. The mayors of Richmond and Charlottes­ville are African American.

Few changes are as totemic as the demise of capital punishment. Virginia had executed nearly 1,400 people since colonial days, according to the Death Penalty Informatio­n Center. Since 1976, when the US supreme court reinstated the death penalty, it had carried out 113 executions, second only to Texas. But in voting to abolish it last month, Virginia’s general assembly noted that it is applied disproport­ionately to people of colour, the poor and the mentally ill.

The march of progressiv­e values is neither uniform nor irreversib­le. Virginia’s reforms have provoked resentment in rural areas. Tens of thousands of gun rights activists descended on Richmond last year to protest.

A white supremacis­t rally in Charlottes­ville in 2017 was a stark reminder of the potential for backlash. Four years later, the statue of Lee at the centre of the protest still stands. Despite last summer’s Black Lives Matter protests, a giant Lee monument in Richmond also remains intact.

Juli Briskman, a district supervisor in Loudon county, northern Virginia, said: “You don’t have to drive very far to start seeing Trump flags and Confederat­e flags, and often you see them together. We still have the ‘Don’t tread on me’ licence plate. I’m trying to figure out how we can take that out of the system. So Virginia still has a little ways to go but I think as a ‘southern state’ it is really leading the way right now.

“We’re the first state to pass the Voting Rights Act in the south and that is sitting on the governor’s desk right now. We’ve made a lot of strides in abortion access: last year the general assembly repealed a law that would have required women to get an ultrasound and have certain types of counsellin­g before getting abortion care. We’ve passed a number of gun sense laws in ’20 and ’21, so we’re making our way.”

‘He faced the storm’

Perhaps no one personifie­s the often uncomforta­ble, but seemingly inexorable, transforma­tion of Virginia more than Ralph Northam, the 61year-old governor. Two years ago the Democrat was engulfed in scandal over a blackface image in his 1984 medical school yearbook. In one disastrous press conference, he seemed ready to accept a reporter’s challenge to perform Michael Jackson’s “moonwalk” dance until his wife interjecte­d that these were “inappropri­ate circumstan­ces”.

Northam faced demands to resign but with his potential successor facing sexual assault allegation­s, managed to survive. He vowed to focus on racial equality and confrontin­g his own white privilege. He has enthusiast­ically signed many of the progressiv­e bills passed by the general assembly.

Briskman, a Democrat who shot to fame by giving Trump’s motorcade the middle finger while cycling near his golf course, was among those who called for Northam to quit but now believes he has redeemed himself.

“If he had resigned, we might not have gotten as much done,” she said. “It goes a long way toward reconcilia­tion when somebody like Governor Northam can say he faced the storm and decided that he was going to turn it around and do something about it.”

In an interview with the Guardian on Friday, Northam acknowledg­ed the blackface incident had been a watershed moment.

“That was a difficult time for Virginia and I’m thankful that Virginians stuck with me,” he said. “We had worked on a lot of equity issues prior to February 2019 but it really allowed me to travel around: I had listening tours and meetings and I learned so much from various people across Virginia.

“The more I know, the more I can do, so we’ve really been able to put a stronger focus on equity and I made it clear to our administra­tion, to our cabinet secretarie­s, that whether it be agricultur­e or education or health or whatever, we would address the inequities that continue to exist in our society today.”

Then, in 2020, came the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s and a nationwide uprising against racial injustice.

“That was an awakening for a lot of people that look like me that hadn’t really ever thought through it in such detail,” Northam said. “So I kind of had a head start before that tragedy but I think it was an awakening. People said this just this is not right and we need to make changes.”

Northam grew up in a conservati­ve rural area and was in sixth grade when his school became racially integrated. When he got involved in politics, around 2006-07, he recalls, Virginia was still a red state but turning purple.

The “blue wave” truly began with resistance to Trump’s election in November 2016, which prompted Northam to run for governor.

“It’s diversity that really makes this country and, in our case, makes Virginia who we are,” he said. “We’re becoming more diverse every day and so we need to have our lights on and our doors open and make people feel welcome.

“We’ve really used that theme to support our base and also to draw more people to our party and supporting commonsens­e policies. If you compare where we are today versus back in 2016, 2017, we’re essentiall­y a blue state now.”

‘Representa­tion matters’

Northam will soon return to work as a doctor, since state rules prevent him seeking a second consecutiv­e term. Among the Democrats vying to succeed him in November are Terry McAuliffe, governor from 2014 to 2018, and two African American women: Jennifer Carroll Foy and Jennifer McClellan. Victory for either would be another historic breakthrou­gh.

Carroll Foy, 39, who became a member of the Virginia house of delegates in 2017, said: “I can’t speak about what happened in the past but what I can say is I know the man today, and the Ralph Northam today will go down as one of the most progressiv­e governors that Virginia has ever had, delivering on the promises of getting us to expand Medicaid to 500,000 Virginians and helping to reform our criminal justice system.

“I passed a bill to prohibit the use of chokeholds by law enforcemen­t officers. We have just done such incredible things. I carried legalisati­on of marijuana for several years and now it’s passed in Virginia and that is under Governor Northam leading the charge and taking seriously his commitment to racial reconcilia­tion.”

Carroll Foy was one of the first African American women to graduate from Virginia Military Institute and is aware what message electing a woman

 ??  ?? After Black Lives Matter protests, the Richmond mayor Levar Stoney ordered the removal of Confederat­e statues on Monument Avenue. Photograph: Ryan M Kelly/AFP/Getty Images
After Black Lives Matter protests, the Richmond mayor Levar Stoney ordered the removal of Confederat­e statues on Monument Avenue. Photograph: Ryan M Kelly/AFP/Getty Images
 ??  ?? People watch as the Stonewall Jackson statue is removed from Monument Avenue in Richmond, Virginia, on 1 July. Photograph: Ryan M Kelly/AFP/Getty Images
People watch as the Stonewall Jackson statue is removed from Monument Avenue in Richmond, Virginia, on 1 July. Photograph: Ryan M Kelly/AFP/Getty Images

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