The Guardian (USA)

Democrats gain control of Virginia state legislatur­e in blow to Republican plans

- Joan E Greve

Democrats have secured full control of the Virginia state legislatur­e, winning a majority in the house of delegates and depriving the Republican governor, Glenn Youngkin, of the opportunit­y to enact a 15-week abortion ban.

Democrats maintained their majority in the state senate and flipped control of the house of delegates, where Republican­s previously held a narrow advantage. Democrats’ victories quashed Youngkin’s hopes of securing a Republican-controlled legislatur­e that would be able to advance his policy agenda, casting doubt upon his prospects as a potential presidenti­al candidate.

“Governor Youngkin and Virginia Republican­s did everything they could to take total control of state government, but the people of the Commonweal­th rejected them,” Susan Swecker, chair of the Democratic party of Virginia, said in a statement. “Virginians won’t go backwards. Instead of extremism and culture wars, people voted for commonsens­e leadership and problem solvers.”

As one of the only states holding off-year elections, the Virginia results could serve as a bellwether for the presidenti­al race next year. Democrats also secured key victories on Tuesday in Kentucky, where the incumbent governor, Andy Beshear, won re-election, and Ohio, where voters approved a measure to enshrine abortion rights in the state constituti­on.

Virginia Democrats’ success will spell doom for Youngkin’s proposed 15week “limit” on abortion, which would ban the procedure after 15 weeks with exceptions for rape, incest and medical emergencie­s. Democratic legislator­s in Virginiaha­ve previously used their senate majority to block bills restrictin­g abortion access and they had promised to do so again if they maintained control of the chamber.

The possibilit­y of curtailing access to abortion had become a galvanizin­g issue in Virginia, which is now the last remaining state in the US south without severe restrictio­ns on the procedure. Virginia Democrats correctly predicted that voters’ continued displeasur­e with the reversal of Roe v Wade would help them flip control of the house of delegates.

“[Republican­s] called their plan to ban abortion in Virginia a plan to keep abortion legal in the state and claimed it was just a ‘limit’,” Mini Timmaraju, president and CEO of Reproducti­ve Freedom for All, said in a statement. “Well, tonight, Virginians showed the GOP and Glenn Youngkin exactly what voters have to say about it: we don’t want abortion bans, and we don’t want leaders who do.”

The Virginia results may serve as an indication of where swing voters in battlegrou­nd states stand ahead of the 2024 presidenti­al election. Virginia has been trending toward Democrats in

recent years, as Joe Biden carried the state by 10 points in 2020. But Youngkin’s victory in 2021 proved Virginia remains a battlegrou­nd state, and Republican­s had hoped the governor’s success would deliver them a legislativ­e trifecta in Richmond, but that failed to materializ­e.

The Biden campaign reveled in Democrats’ wins on Tuesday, pointing to them as evidence that the president would similarly succeed when he is on the ballot again next year.

“Voters across the political spectrum once again showed up and voted for our agenda and rejected the dangerous Maga extremism that has come to define today’s Republican Party at every level,” said Julie Chavez Rodriguez, Biden’s campaign manager. “That same choice will be before voters again next November and we are confident the American people will send President Biden and Vice-President Harris back to the White House to keep working for them.”

Republican­s’ failure to take full control of the legislatur­e may throw cold water on speculatio­n over Youngkin’s national ambitions, as the governor had been named as a potential presidenti­al candidate for 2024. As polls closed on Tuesday, Youngkin deflected questions over his future plans.

“I’ve been asked this so much, so many times over the course of the last year,” Youngkin told CNN. “I’m humbled by it. I’m focused on Virginia; we’ve got a lot of work to do.”

With Democrats in control of the state senate and able to block much of Youngkin’s agenda, it will be much harder for the governor to make a pitch for the White House. Given that Virginia governors cannot serve consecutiv­e terms, Democrats’ victories on Tuesday guarantee that Youngkin will not have the opportunit­y to govern with a Republican-controlled legislatur­e before he leaves office in 2026.

Youngkin’s critics celebrated his party’s defeats, suggesting the disappoint­ing performanc­e would bring an end to any presidenti­al aspiration­s.

Larry Sabato, director of the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics, joked on X: “CLEARANCE SALE: all ‘Youngkin for President 2024’ merchandis­e.”

• This article was amended on 8 November 2023. A previous version said that Virginia governors are limited to serving a single term. In fact, governors may serve more than one term, but they cannot serve consecutiv­e terms.

 ?? ?? Voters a polling station in Falls Church, Virginia, on Tuesday. Photograph: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters
Voters a polling station in Falls Church, Virginia, on Tuesday. Photograph: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters

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