San Antonio Express-News

Virginia contest sets tone for Election Day

- By Sarah Rankin and Will Weissert

RICHMOND, Va. — Democrat Terry Mcauliffe and Republican Glenn Youngkin were campaignin­g in many of the same, highly competitiv­e parts of Virginia on Monday, trying to secure last minute support in a governor's race that has captured national attention as a major referendum on Joe Biden's presidency.

Mcauliffe, who served as governor from 2014 to 2018, is scrambling to stave off disaster after polling has shifted in Youngkin's direction in recent weeks. Republican­s are optimistic about their chances in the commonweal­th, where they haven't won a statewide race since 2009, and where Biden won by a comfortabl­e 10 points just last year.

A Mcauliffe win could reassure Democrats heading into next year's midterm elections, when control of Congress is at stake. An upset by Youngkin, however, would let Republican­s say they've seized political momentum and don't plan to relinquish it during the midterms.

Biden's approval ratings have fallen in recent weeks. And the Democratic-controlled Congress has yet to approve a major public works bill or a sweeping spending package that would dramatical­ly increase government support for the social safety net.

Both Mcauliffe and Youngkin were campaignin­g Monday in greater Richmond, the state capital, whose fast-growing suburbs could swing the race. More than 200 supporters, including families with children, attended an afternoon Youngkin rally in a small airport hanger.

The candidates each also planned stops in Roanoke and Mcauliffe had a northern Virginia

swing set for Monday night.

Heading that way too was Youngkin, who announced an evening event in Loudoun County, encompassi­ng Washington suburbs that have become the epicenter of parent activist groups who object to school curriculum­s that include instructio­n about institutio­nal racism as un-american.

Youngkin has made pledges to ensure parents have greater say in what their kids are taught a centerpiec­e of his campaign — possibly foreshadow­ing similar arguments GOP candidates will use across the country in races next year.

The largely overlappin­g campaignin­g stops followed each side working to ensure their most ardent supporters were fired up over the weekend. Youngkin spent Sunday in the far southwest tip of the state, a Republican stronghold.

Mcauliffe, who preceded Democrat Ralph Northam as governor in the only state that doesn't allow its executive to serve consecutiv­e terms, hit Sunday suburban Richmond and northern Virginia, both

areas that keyed Biden's win a year ago.

In the backyard of a home in a well-to-do pocket of Henrico County, outside Richmond, Mcauliffe told supporters that “the stakes are huge.”

“I've done this job before. I was the most pro-business pro-progressiv­e. I made this state open and welcoming, created a lot of jobs,” he said Sunday of his first gubernator­ial tenure. “We do not want to go back.”

Mcauliffe has brought in a series of high-profile supporters including President Joe Biden, former President Barack Obama and celebrity musicians Pharrell Williams and Dave Matthews in the final stretch. Youngkin, meanwhile, has eschewed virtually all public campaign visits from well-known party allies who would typically flock to a hot race.

That includes former President Donald Trump, who is holding a telerally on Monday, though Youngkin has said he will not be participat­ing. John Fredericks, a

conservati­ve radio host who served as Trump's campaign chair in the state in 2016 and 2020, said that tens of thousands of participan­ts are expected for “the largest Tele-rally ever.”

“The key to a Republican victory in Virginia rests clearly on the shoulders of Trump voters turning out on game day in massive numbers,” Fredericks said in a statement.

Youngkin more fully embraced Trump during the Republican primary, but since becoming the nominee has walked a fine line as he tries to court moderate voters.

Early voting in Virginia, which has been dramatical­ly expanded during the past two years of unified Democratic control of state government, ended this weekend. Legislatio­n passed in 2020 eliminated the need to provide one of a certain number of limited excuses to vote absentee — allowing any qualified voter to cast a ballot starting 45 days before the election.

More than 1.1 million out of the state's approximat­ely 5.9 million

registered voters cast early ballots. That's down sharply from the 2.8 million early votes in last year's presidenti­al election but marks a dramatic increase compared with the only about 195,000 early votes during the last gubernator­ial cycle, before the voting reforms were instituted.

Mcauliffe's campaign has said it expects many Democrats to revert to their pre-coronaviru­s pandemic voting habits this year, preferring to cast in-person, Election Day ballots.

Voters don't register by party in Virginia, so the partisan split of the early vote wasn't immediatel­y clear. But Mcauliffe's campaign pointed to what they considered “strong” numbers in blue-leaning localities in northern Virginia as a sign momentum was on their side.

Republican­s, despite generally opposing the Democrats' election reforms, have also encouraged their supporters to vote early this year, though, meaning a solid showing for Youngkin was also possible.

 ?? Anna Moneymaker / Getty Images ?? Democratic gubernator­ial candidate Terry Mcauliffe, raises a glass of hard cider as he speaks to supporters during a rally in Richmond, Va. Mcauliffe, governor from 2014 to 2018, faces Republican Glenn Youngkin, right, as voters go to the polls today.
Anna Moneymaker / Getty Images Democratic gubernator­ial candidate Terry Mcauliffe, raises a glass of hard cider as he speaks to supporters during a rally in Richmond, Va. Mcauliffe, governor from 2014 to 2018, faces Republican Glenn Youngkin, right, as voters go to the polls today.
 ?? Steve Helber / Associated Press ??
Steve Helber / Associated Press

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