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In today’s edition of Americana, an important special election in Virginia and a big announcement in͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌ 
 
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January 10, 2023
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David Weigel
David Weigel

In this edition: Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin faces a special election test tonight, California’s Senate race kicks off faster than Sen. Dianne Feinstein wanted it to, and the negative ads are flying in the Windy City.

David Weigel

The obscure Virginia election that could make or break Glenn Youngkin’s governorship

Glenn Youngkin and Kevin Adams.
David Weigel

THE NEWS

VIRGINIA BEACH – Republicans are fighting to hold on to a state senate seat in today’s special election after a short and pricey campaign that pitted Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s political operation against Democrats who want to make him irrelevant.

“We’re at that moment where either that rocket is going to hit its afterburners, or it might fizzle out,” Youngkin told more than a hundred voters at a Saturday rally for the GOP nominee. “Kevin Adams is going to lock arms right with us and help us get this done.”

The highly competitive race for Virginia’s 7th state senate district won’t change the balance of power in Richmond. A Republican win would leave the party one vote short of controlling the chamber ahead of November’s off-year election. A victory for Virginia Beach city councilman Aaron Rouse, the Democratic nominee, would give his party a 22-18 majority.

But both parties see the race as a test for Youngkin, and for their broader off-year election strategy. The GOP campaign has centered the popular governor and his tax-cut plans, and warned that Rouse would be soft on crime. Democrats and their allies have focused on abortion, warning that Republicans could pass a 15-week ban on the procedure if Democrats don’t have the votes to block it.

If Republicans capture both houses of the General Assembly in November, Youngkin can spend 2024 and 2025 passing conservative bills. If not, Democrats are eager to stymie the rest of his agenda.

“My birthday is going to be the 50th anniversary of when Roe v. Wade was decided,” State Senate President L. Louise Lucas told Rouse and other Democrats who were heading out to knock doors on Saturday. “You think I’m going to let them turn it back? Hell fuckin’ no!”

Rouse, a 39-year old former NFL star, raised more than $1.1 million to campaign for the open seat, which Republican Rep. Jen Kiggans narrowly won in 2019 and vacated to take her place in Congress. Adams, a 61-year old Navy veteran, has raised nearly as much money for his first-ever race. Youngkin’s Spirit of Virginia PAC has given a boost to Adams, while Planned Parenthood Advocates of Virginia, though its own PAC, has bought ads and dispatched volunteers to knock Democrats’ doors.

“It’s an opportunity to pick up a seat and safeguard abortion rights in the commonwealth,” said Jamie Lockhart, the executive director of PPAV, who said she’d personally knocked on 184 doors over the weekend. “We were warning folks that the governor would be hostile to abortion rights. He excelled, during the campaign, in not answering questions about it.”

DAVID’S VIEW

The race to replace newly sworn-in Rep. Jen Kiggans lasted only 50 days, and both major parties treated it like a speedrun of last year’s midterms.

If the GOP’s campaign tactics work here, it’s a good sign for Youngkin everywhere. The Hampton Roads region, which includes Virginia Beach, hasn’t seen the kind of crime increase that powered backlashes to Democrats in New York last year. The attorney general’s probes of public education in northern Virginia, a serious focus for conservatives, get little coverage in the region.

In the midterms, Kiggans beat ex-Rep. Elaine Luria narrowly, but not in the precincts that make up the new senate seat. Luria won them by around 4 points, and the abortion issue helped close the gap.

“This is a totally winnable district,” Luria said in an interview, days after wrapping up her term and her service on the Jan. 6 select committee.

She and other Democrats worry that a loss could give Republicans a window to pass abortion legislation even without technically flipping the chamber, because state Sen. Joe Morrissey, an anti-abortion Catholic with a colorful biography, might vote with the GOP on the issue. At the same time, the Republican speaker of the House of Delegates has said he doubts that “anything of substance” on abortion could pass this year.

Lucas and other Democrats call the Virginia Beach seat a potential “buffer,” helping them block Youngkin’s agenda until the November election. Republicans agree with that assessment, and portray Lucas’s Democrats as obstructionists in a district that voted Republican up and down the ballot when Youngkin won.

“We’re one vote away from an abortion ban in our Commonwealth,” Rouse said in an interview. “That makes this race even more important.”

Democrats pounced at every chance to elevate the abortion issue, from Morrissey’s own remarks, to Youngkin’s December budget update that earmarked money toward setting up a potential 15-week ban on abortion, which Adams also supports. (Virginia law currently bans the practice after 26 weeks and six days of pregnancy.)

During the 2021 campaign, a progressive undercover reporter pushed Youngkin on how he could “take it to the abortionists” if he won. Democrats waved around tape of his answer — he said he’d “start going on offense” with majorities, but the issue “won’t win my independent voters” as a campaign issue — to warn that the ex-Carlyle Group CEO had a hidden agenda.

Youngkin and the GOP ticket swept the election after that, though the state senate wasn’t on the ballot. Now, Democrats are reviving the episode with the legislature back in play.

In the special election, Republicans haven’t touched on abortion at all. Youngkin’s PAC, which has raised nearly $5 million since the governor took office last year, has treated this race as the first stage of the November election. On TV, commercials for Adams show the two men together, ready to work on policies like the end of taxes on all veterans’ benefits.

Their case against Rouse starts with remarks that he made at a rally after the murder of George Floyd. “America may have freed the slave, but not the Black American,” Rouse said at a June 2020 event at a church outside the district, describing the fugitive slave laws once enforced in Virginia. “The similarities between the slave patrols and modern American policing are too salient to dismiss or ignore.”

Republicans used the quotes to portray Rouse as anti-police. At Saturday’s rally near an early voting center, where Adams spoke for just 90 seconds, Youngkin and two of his GOP predecessors in Richmond urged their base to prevent a cop-hater from joining the state senate.

“His opponent does not back the blue,” said Youngkin.

“His opponent made these derogatory remarks insulting police officers as being akin to slave traders,” said former Gov. George Allen.

“He’s going to defeat the philosophy of the criminal apologists, who’ve put forth these very liberal laws that have led to decreasing arrests,” said former Gov. Bob McDonnell.

The ex-governor’s own 2014 conviction on corruption charges was overturned two years later by the Supreme Court, but everybody knew what he was talking about: The fear that criminal justice reform would lead to higher crime.

NOTABLE

  • The Washington Post’s take on the election focuses on the abortion question, and how much money’s come in to fight it out.
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The Map

National: Rachel M. Cohen checks in on the social conservatives mobilizing to ban abortion pills… Will Saletan looks at how the Club for Growth/Congressional Leadership Fund concord could help the MAGA movement win more primaries… Dave Wasserman analyzes the real impact of redistricting on the midterms, finding that in some cases it was a boost to Democrats… Shelby Talcott asks anti-abortion activists how the GOP is fumbling their issue.

California: Burgess Everett, Sarah Ferris, and Holly Otterbein hear the latest on who’s running for Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s seat.

New York: Brian Schwartz talks with Republican donors who wish they hadn’t opened their checkbooks for George Santos… Errol Louis gets inside Gov. Kathy Hochul’s fight with Democrats and unions over her state court pick.

Wisconsin: Matt Rothschild calculates how much more money has flowed into state supreme races since 2010.

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Ads
An image from an ad supporting Lori Lightfoot.
YouTube/Lightfoot For Chicago

Early voting for Chicago’s mayoral primary starts in 34 days, and Mayor Lori Lightfoot is starting to get company on the airwaves, as she goes negative on the Democrats who’ve been leading her in polls.

Lightfoot for Chicago, “More.” The first negative ad against Rep. Jesus “Chuy” Garcia, from the incumbent, accuses the congressman of corruption for the usual Chicago reasons (friendship with the state’s indicted ex-speaker of the house, donations from a red light camera company) and a brand new reason. A JibJab-esque cutout of Sam Bankman-Fried showers Garcia with gold coins in this ad, to dramatize how “this crypto crook” supported Garcia. The congressman gave Bankman-Fried’s personal donation to charity, but he was one of the Democrats on a crypto-regulating committee who got support from the FTX founder’s Protect Our Future PAC, even though Republicans weren’t targeting his safe seat. Bankman-Fried is an investor in Semafor.

Vallas for Mayor, “Crime is Out of Control.” Days before he won the Fraternal Order of Police endorsement, former Chicago schools chief Paul Vallas went up with a spot focused on crime, with a promise to put “more police on our streets and on public transportation.” He blames “combative leadership” for foundering over the crime problem, a swipe at Mayor Lightfoot that doesn’t need to invoke her name.

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Polls

Who could possibly have enjoyed last week’s marathon of failed votes for House speaker? There’s an answer to that: Republican voters. By an 8-point margin, self-identified conservatives say here that they approved of the way the speaker vote unfolded; Trump voters approved by a 14-point margin; and people who identify as Republicans approved of it by a 28-point margin.

Other political cohorts and demographic groups disapproved of the process, but GOP voters had a higher opinion of it than they did of Kevin McCarthy himself. Trump supporters, Republicans, and conservatives, all give McCarthy an approval rating in the mid-20s.

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California

The race for Dianne Feinstein’s Senate seat begins

REUTERS/Brian Snyder

California Rep. Katie Porter announced her candidacy for U.S. Senate on Tuesday, with a 90-second video and donor appeal that quickly raised a quarter of a million dollars.

“I refuse to take corporate PAC and lobbyist campaign money. I don’t want it,” Porter said in the launch clip. “And I’m leading the fight to ban congressional stock trading.”

Porter, a protege of Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, narrowly flipped an Orange County seat in 2018. She became one of the party’s best fundraisers, spending $28 million to win re-election last year, and she did that with head-turning work on oversight committees and subcommittees. It started with a May 2019 hearing where she stumped then-HUD Secretary Ben Carson with questions, and jargon, about foreclosed homes; it continued with her use of the “whiteboard of justice” to rapidly break down convoluted fiscal topics.

But she isn’t the only Democrat interested in a seat that, strictly speaking, is still taken. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, who turns 90 this year and has been urged to retire by nervous liberals, has not yet said whether she’ll run again. “I will make an announcement concerning my plans for 2024 at the appropriate time,” Feinstein said in a statement. Other ambitious Democrats, like Rep. Adam Schiff and Rep. Ro Khanna, said that they were focused on the “historic weather conditions” currently hitting California, and that they’d make their minds up later.

“It looks a bit premature and unseemly,” said California Democratic strategist Garry South of Porter’s decision to announce before Feinstein said anything about 2024. “I would have waited until a bit later this year, giving Feinstein more time to make her intentions clear.”

Too late for that. Porter’s move forces other Democrats to think now about how to navigate California’s first truly competitive Senate race in at least 13 years, and the first since the top-two system eliminated their primary. (Every candidate competes for one of two runoff spots in November.) Schiff could jump into the race with $21 million to spend left over from his easy re-election, while Khanna had $5.4 million at the end of last year. Bay Area Rep. Barbara Lee had nearly no cash on hand and will turn 78 before the election, but is beloved by much of the activist left, and said in a statement that the Senate was “sorely lacking the presence of people of color.”

Republicans immediately took another look at Porter’s 47th district, which she won by 3.4 points last year after Joe Biden carried it by 11 points. Scott Baugh, who lost to her in November, released a statement boasting that Porter had “to spend $28 million to barely win re-election.”

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Next
  • 42 days until the special election for Virginia’s 4th district
  • 49 days until Chicago’s mayoral election
  • 84 days until Wisconsin’s state Supreme Court election
  • 663 days until the 2024 presidential election
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