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Democrats Take Control of Virginia and Claim Win in Kentucky Governor's Race
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=52090"><span class="small">Josh Wood, Guardian UK</span></a>   
Wednesday, 06 November 2019 09:26

Wood writes: "The Democrats have won control of Virginia for the first time in a generation after turning the state legislature blue in Tuesday's election - while the Democratic candidate for governor of Kentucky also claimed victory in what could be a huge double blow to Donald Trump."

Democrats celebrated winning control of the Virginia legislature at a party in Richmond on Tuesday. (photo: Carlos Bernate/NYT)
Democrats celebrated winning control of the Virginia legislature at a party in Richmond on Tuesday. (photo: Carlos Bernate/NYT)


Democrats Take Control of Virginia and Claim Win in Kentucky Governor's Race

By Josh Wood, Guardian UK

06 November 19


In blow to Trump, state house and senate in Democratic hands in Virginia, as candidate for governor in Kentucky claims victory

he Democrats have won control of Virginia’s state legislature for the first time in a generation, while the Democratic candidate for governor of Kentucky also claimed victory in what could be a huge double blow to Donald Trump.

The Democratic party prevailed in both the state house and senate in Virginia in Tuesday’s election as suburban voters turned against Republicans. Democratic governor Ralph Northam will now have scope to press ahead with legislation such as tighter gun control in the state.

In Kentucky, which Trump won by nearly 30 percentage points in the 2016 election, Andy Beshear – the Democratic challenger to unpopular incumbent governor Matt Bevin – declared victory as he was narrowly ahead of the Republican, who has refused to concede in a race that by Wednesday morning was too close officially to call.

Voter turnout was high in key state elections on Tuesday. The Republicans handily won the governorship of Mississippi. But in Virginia, Democrats continued a recent trend of flipping suburban districts that were once solidly GOP-friendly. Democratic pickups in Virginia occurred in the Washington and Richmond suburbs that already had moved in the party’s direction in recent years.

“I’m here to officially declare today, November 5 2019, that Virginia is officially blue,” Northam, told a crowd of supporters in Richmond.

Virginia voters surged towards moderate Democrats, especially women, in the last state election in 2017, when the Republicans kept control of the legislature by a whisker, and in the 2018 mid-term elections for the US Congress, and Tuesday’s result continued a worrying shift for Republicans at all levels in the key state.

Meanwhile Beshear declared himself the winner in Kentucky after securing 49.2% of the vote to Bevin’s 48.8%, telling voters that his performance was a message that elections were still about “right versus wrong” instead of right versus left. As of late Tuesday night, Beshear led Bevin by a margin of more than 5,000 votes.

But Bevin, who took the stage at the Republican party across town, called it a “close, close race” and said he was not conceding “by any stretch”. “We want the process to be followed, and there is a process,” he said.

Bevin was elected in 2015 and had portrayed this election as a referendum on Trump, who stumped for the governor at a rally in Kentucky on Monday night and called Beshear “too liberal, too extreme and too dangerous”.

At the rally, Trump told the crowd: “If you lose, it sends a really bad message … you can’t let that happen to me.”

In a late-night tweet after results came in, Trump appeared to concede the Republican may have lost: “@MattBevin picked up at least 15 points in last days, but perhaps not enough (Fake News will blame Trump!).”

A bullish Bevin had told the New York Times last month that he anticipated winning the election by between six and 10 points.

“I think you’re going to be shocked at how uncompetitive this actually is,” he told the paper at the time.

But while Trump won Kentucky with more than 60% of the vote in 2016 and remains popular in the state, with Republicans in other races there doing well on Tuesday, Bevin – who polls as one of America’s most unpopular governors – could not ride that popularity to victory.

Beshear, the state’s attorney general and the son of Kentucky’s last Democratic governor, made public education the cornerstone of his campaign, choosing a public high school assistant principal as his running mate and accusing Bevin of bullying schoolteachers who protested against proposed pension reforms.

Bevin, who accused protesting teachers of acting “thuggish” and said school closures as a result of their actions would lead to children suffering sexual abuse and ingesting poison, said he did not regret his words. Beshear promised he would never bully anybody as governor.

Bevin, meanwhile, fought on broader, national and cultural issues, highlighting his relationship with Trump and his support for the second amendment, while touting himself as the “most pro-life” governor in America.

While Bevin performed well in much of the state, in parts of Kentucky’s largest city, Louisville, one could drive by dozens if not hundreds of “Stop Bevin - Vote Beshear!” yard signs before passing any sign of support for the Republican.

At the Democrats’ election party at an event center in the predominantly African-American Louisville neighbourhood of Smoketown, the mood turned from nervous to jovial as returns showed Beshear taking the lead.

Kentucky’s race was one of several closely watched elections in states across the US on Tuesday. Republican Daniel Cameron made history in a resounding win in Kentucky’s election for attorney general, becoming the first African American to win the office.

The elections offered insight into Trump’s popularity among Republicans as he battles an accelerating impeachment inquiry. Democratic-aligned groups pumped huge amounts of money into the contests as a way to test-drive messaging and campaigns ahead of the 2020 cycle, particularly on gun control and clean energy. 

Donald Trump rallied Republican voters on Twitter but stayed out of Virginia, which he lost in 2016.

Democrats have pledged that when they take power, they will pass an agenda that Republicans have blocked for years, including stricter gun laws, a higher minimum wage and ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment.

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