The Denver Post

Primaries have plenty of surprise, no clear message

- By Alan Suderman

RICHMOND, Virginia’s closely watched off- year primary contest produced plenty of surprises Tuesday, but little in the way of a coherent message.

The top Democrat in the state Senate narrowly won his primary despite heavily outspendin­g a progressiv­e challenger, and another incumbent lost her seat to a former Virginia lawmaker who used to spend his days at the state Capitol and his nights in jail after being accused of having sex with his teenage secretary. Conservati­ve challenger­s upset with Republican incumbents who backed Medicaid expansion had mixed results. One delegate in a key swing district lost to a more conservati­ve challenger, while a moderate senator easily cruised to victory.

Once a key swing state that’s been tilting increasing­ly toward Democrats, Virginia’s 2017 elections were an early warning signal that a blue wave of opposition to President Donald Trump would wash over the 2018 U. S. midterms. Now political analysts are looking for clues about what message voters may send for the 2020 presidenti­al race.

Normally sleepy affairs, this year’s primaries had drama, as moderates in both parties took fire from their more extreme flanks.

On the Democratic side, progressiv­e challenger­s looking to upset the status quo failed to generate much enthusiasm, as most incumbents easily won. One glaring exception: Senate Minority Leader Dick Saslaw’s near- loss to human rights lawyer Yasmine Taeb in a northern Virginia district.

Saslaw, who is pro- business and chummy with Republican­s, has not faced a primary challenger in 40 years. This year he faced two, including Taeb, who painted Saslaw as too conservati­ve and cozy with special interests.

“I’m not gonna lie. It was closer than I thought it was going to be,” Saslaw said in a brief interview at his victory party.

He attributed the close nature of the race to the momentum for candidates who promise change. “People want new,” he said.

In a sign of unease with establishe­d Democratic politician­s on the local level, two long- tenured northern Virginia prosecutor­s lost to reform- minded challenger­s intent on making changes to what they view as a heavy handed criminal justice system. Parisa Dehghani- Tafti defeated incumbent Commonweal­th’s Attorney Theo Stamos in Arlington County and Steve Descano unseated incumbent Raymond Morrogh in Fairfax County.

On the GOP side, lingering resentment over last year’s vote to expand Medicaid in Virginia fueled divisive contests.

Republican voters in a swing district punished Del. Bob Thomas, who voted for the expansion. They opted instead for a more conservati­ve challenger, Paul Milde, who could make it harder for Republican­s to keep their majority in the House.

But Republican Sen. Emmett Hanger, one of the state’s most powerful senators, easily fended off his challenger.

Hanger played a key role in the Medicaid expansion that made 400,000 low- income adults eligible to enroll. Opponent Tina Freitas said Hanger had betrayed constituen­ts on the Medicaid issue and wasn’t conservati­ve enough on guns or abortion. Hospitals spent heavily to help Hanger.

Adding a significan­t new headache for Democrats was Joe Morrissey’s victory over incumbent Sen. Rosalyn Dance in a Richmond- area senate district. Morrissey was jailed four years ago after a sex scandal involving a teenager, who Morrissey later married.

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