The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Trump opposition inspires Dem focus on statehouse wins

- By Alan Suderman

RICHMOND, VA. » President Donald Trump said he would “drain the swamp” in Washington. Progressiv­es are hoping to make good on that vow, leveraging anti-Trump feeling to limit corporate influence in statehouse­s across the country.

They point to what just happened in Virginia, where Democrats rode a backlash against the president to sweeping victories. The surprise winners in House races include some first-time politician­s who vowed never to take contributi­ons from the state’s most powerful corporatio­n.

Together with Gov.-elect Ralph Northam’s win over the GOP’s Ed Gillespie, a former corporate lobbyist and Washington insider, and key wins in other state legislatur­es, the victories have lifted Democratic hopes of even more success in next year’s critical midterm elections.

Opposition to Trump has inspired a new breed of independen­t-minded Democratic candidates, said Carolyn Fiddler, a longtime Democratic operative focused on state legislatur­es who now works at the liberal blog Daily Kos.

“They are going to bring a very public-interest vision to governing, and they don’t have the deep corporate ties that establishm­ent politician­s have,” she said. “It’s going to change the way business is done in some of these state capitals.”

Virginia’s CEOs, lobbyists, lawmakers and other powerbroke­rs are still scrambling to make sense of the election’s implicatio­ns. Democrats won at least 15 seats in the House, all but erasing a business-friendly Republican majority that almost everyone assumed was safe. Democrats may even flip the chamber, depending on the outcome of three races that remained too close to call on Friday.

The newly elected Democrats — 11 women among them — include the House’s first openly transgende­r lawmaker, its first Latina members, and its first female Asian-American. Thirteen of them have taken a pledge to reject any donations from a regulated utility such as Dominion Energy, Virginia’s most influentia­l corporatio­n and largest corporate political donor.

The company has cultivated deep relationsh­ips with leaders in both parties, securing bipartisan support for laws boosting its bottom line. But critics have long complained that lawmakers are too cozy with the company.

“I certainly intend to directly challenge their power over the General Assembly,” said Lee Carter, an IT specialist, Marine veteran and member of the Democratic Socialists of America who won a surprise victory Tuesday. He said Dominion is one of several corporate interests that will “have to get used to a new way of doing things.”

Dominion spokesman David Botkins said the company is “looking forward to getting to know the new members and working together” on energy issues.

Virginia’s largely unregulate­d campaign finance system has fostered strong ties between lawmakers in both parties and the businesses they regulate. An examinatio­n by The Associated Press in 2016 found a handful of lawmakers, including senior members in both parties, rely almost entirely on business interests and their representa­tives for campaign contributi­ons.

Virginia also doesn’t prohibit lawmakers from spending from their campaign accounts for personal use, and many lawmakers rely on corporate donations to subsidize their official office budgets.

Northam has said he wants to limit corporate money in elections and ban personal use of campaign funds.

Carter defeated Jackson Miller, a GOP House leader whose list of top donors reads like a who’s who of corporate influence, including Dominion, Realtor groups, bankers, hospitals and car dealers. Many of the other defeated Republican­s got their campaign cash from similar sources.

Democratic state Sen. Chap Petersen, a fierce Dominion critic, sees a new era at the General Assembly.

“We have a new legislatur­e that is reform minded, which is not beholden to the large corporate interests,” he said.

Whether that vision gets dashed after the opening of January’s session remains to be seen. Republican­s still control the state Senate, and Democratic legislator­s have yet to resolve many of the tensions over corporate influence on their party that played out between Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders in last year’s presidenti­al race.

Democratic Senate Minority Leader Dick Saslaw said the General Assembly will remain a place that supports industries of all kinds, regardless of the election outcome.

“That’s not going to change, because we’re a probusines­s state,” he said.

 ?? JAHI CHIKWENDIU — THE WASHINGTON POST VIA AP ?? Danica Roem, center, a Democrat who ran for Virginia’s House of Delegates against GOP incumbent Robert Marshall, is greeted by supporters as she prepares to give her victory speech Tuesday in Manassas, Va. Roem, a former journalist, is set to make...
JAHI CHIKWENDIU — THE WASHINGTON POST VIA AP Danica Roem, center, a Democrat who ran for Virginia’s House of Delegates against GOP incumbent Robert Marshall, is greeted by supporters as she prepares to give her victory speech Tuesday in Manassas, Va. Roem, a former journalist, is set to make...
 ?? STEVE HELBER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe, right, shares a laugh with Gov.-elect, Ralph Northam, center, as Pam Northam, left, looks on during a news conference in the Governors mansion at the Capitol in Richmond, Va., Wednesday.
STEVE HELBER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe, right, shares a laugh with Gov.-elect, Ralph Northam, center, as Pam Northam, left, looks on during a news conference in the Governors mansion at the Capitol in Richmond, Va., Wednesday.

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