Opinion

Virginia’s closest Senate race is the first skirmish of 2024

By Karen Tumulty

Associate editor and columnist|AddFollow

Updated November 3, 2023 at 1:44 p.m. EDT|Published November 3, 2023 at 6:00 a.m. EDT

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That is because Virginia is the last Southern state where the procedure has remained widely available after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022. Abortion in Virginia is legal up to 26 weeks of gestation.

Youngkin has proposed banning it after 15 weeks, with exceptions in cases of rape, incest and where the life of the pregnant woman is threatened. (More than 93 percent of abortions take place at or before 13 weeks, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.)

So, the Virginia election is being watched by both parties as a signal of whether abortion will be the 2024 silver bullet that many Democrats are hoping for, or whether Youngkin has created a safe middle ground for Republicans on the issue.

Diggs supports the governor’s proposal, which he says is “another example of Republicans being able to bring people together,” and vows not to go any further toward restricting abortion. “Some people are going to vote on the issue alone, and if we don’t stick to our promise on that, we don’t deserve” a victory, he told me.

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But, as might be expected of someone who served more than two decades as a sheriff, Diggs would rather talk about crime and public safety — which have been common themes of Republicans across the state. Both candidates are seasoned campaigners, though their demeanors could hardly be more different. Mason, 55, is gregarious and engages with every voter he sees; Diggs, 11 years older, is stiffer and more reserved. At a car show in Yorktown this past weekend, the former sheriff stood to the side of the festivities and made his pitch only to those who approached him. “You saw me at Dairy Queen!” one man reminded him.

This close to the election, both candidates are past the point of persuasion. Their chief goal is getting people to the polls — a challenge given that turnout in these off-off-year elections tends to be low. I spent part of last Saturday with each of them as they knocked on doors, at houses where they knew likely supporters live. I heard little discussion of the issues; both focused on reminding people that in-person voting is underway and making sure they knew where their polling places were.

Early voting has been a Youngkin priority, as well, but the effort has not been without its challenges. To the detriment of GOP candidates, former president Donald Trump has sowed mistrust of the expansion of voting that many states, including Virginia, put into place during the covid-19 pandemic. At the car show, retiree Robert Carter, the proud owner of a 1976 Chevy Corvette Stingray, resisted Diggs’s entreaties to take advantage of the fact that the polls are already open. Carter and his wife plan to wait until Tuesday, he told me, because “that way we know that everything is fine.”

Democrats still have an early-voting edge, but the strides that Republicans are making in Virginia are worrying to some Democrats I talked to — a possible sign that the abortion issue is not generating the intensity they had hoped. The latest figures compiled by the nonprofit, nonpartisan Virginia Public Access Project indicate that the GOP share of early voting is up from 2021 and 2022. What won’t be known until Election Day is whether these are people who would have shown up anyway, or a sign that the GOP is bringing in voters who normally skip these legislative elections.

Millions of dollars are pouring in, and the air war is intense. But as it comes down to the finish line, this is a race — and a state — that must be run, and will be won, one doorstep and driveway at a time.

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NEWPORT NEWS, Va. — The sweaty man who came bounding up Antoine Johnson’s driveway didn’t need to introduce himself or explain why he was prowling this suburban neighborhood on an unseasonably hot afternoon. “I’ve been getting emails and texts all week,” Johnson told his state senator, Monty Mason.

For the people who live in this part of the state, it is hard to escape Mason (D-Williamsburg) or his Republican opponent, former York County sheriff J.D. “Danny” Diggs. Or the television spots, mailed fliers and electronic messages with which they are blanketing the Tidewater region. Between the two of them, the candidates have raised close to $9 million and spent more than half of it on ads.

Predictions are that the 24th Senate district could be the tightest contest in Virginia’s General Assembly elections on Tuesday. President Biden won it by about three percentage points in 2020. Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin carried it in 2021 by about the same margin. And it split nearly evenly in last year’s congressional election. “One source involved in this year’s campaigns told us the district could be decided by double-digits — in terms of actual raw votes, not percentage margin, that is,” analysts J. Miles Coleman and Jackson Hamilton wrote in Sabato’s Crystal Ball, the authoritative political tipsheet run by the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics.

Adding to the uncertainty is the fact that the last round of redistricting, conducted by an independent commission, took away about one-third of Mason’s Democratic precincts and replaced them with ones that lean Republican. “We’ve known since the day this district was drawn, this would be a 50-50 race,” he said.

As one Democratic activist put it to me, this race is likely to be the “critical tipping point” — determining whether Youngkin and his fellow Republicans pick up the two seats they need to take a majority of the 40-member Virginia Senate, and with it, trifecta control of all the levers of government in Richmond. That is, unless Democrats do well enough to flip the 100-member House of Delegates, where Republicans currently hold a 50-46 majority.

If Republicans succeed, it will burnish Youngkin’s national reputation and potentially position him for a presidential run, more likely in 2028 than as a late entry in 2024.

A victory would also provide a template for Republicans across the country. Politically, the battleground districts of Virginia are not all that different from the suburbs around Philadelphia, Milwaukee, Phoenix and Atlanta, “where the congressional, Senate and presidential races will be decided in 2024,” noted Dave Rexrode, Youngkin’s senior political adviser. Rexrode also runs the governor’s political action committee — which has raised upward of $26 million over the past two years.

Across Virginia, abortion has become the overriding issue on the airwaves for the Democrats, highlighted in more than 40 percent of their ads. Republicans are talking about it in only 3 percent of theirs, according to the tracking firm AdImpact. But Mason noted: “People bring it up to me. I don’t have to lead with it in a lot of places.”

That is because Virginia is the last Southern state where the procedure has remained widely available after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022. Abortion in Virginia is legal up to 26 weeks of gestation.

Youngkin has proposed banning it after 15 weeks, with exceptions in cases of rape, incest and where the life of the pregnant woman is threatened. (More than 93 percent of abortions take place at or before 13 weeks, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.)

So, the Virginia election is being watched by both parties as a signal of whether abortion will be the 2024 silver bullet that many Democrats are hoping for, or whether Youngkin has created a safe middle ground for Republicans on the issue.

Diggs supports the governor’s proposal, which he says is “another example of Republicans being able to bring people together,” and vows not to go any further toward restricting abortion. “Some people are going to vote on the issue alone, and if we don’t stick to our promise on that, we don’t deserve” a victory, he told me.

But, as might be expected of someone who served more than two decades as a sheriff, Diggs would rather talk about crime and public safety — which have been common themes of Republicans across the state. Both candidates are seasoned campaigners, though their demeanors could hardly be more different. Mason, 55, is gregarious and engages with every voter he sees; Diggs, 11 years older, is stiffer and more reserved. At a car show in Yorktown this past weekend, the former sheriff stood to the side of the festivities and made his pitch only to those who approached him. “You saw me at Dairy Queen!” one man reminded him.

This close to the election, both candidates are past the point of persuasion. Their chief goal is getting people to the polls — a challenge given that turnout in these off-off-year elections tends to be low. I spent part of last Saturday with each of them as they knocked on doors, at houses where they knew likely supporters live. I heard little discussion of the issues; both focused on reminding people that in-person voting is underway and making sure they knew where their polling places were.

Early voting has been a Youngkin priority, as well, but the effort has not been without its challenges. To the detriment of GOP candidates, former president Donald Trump has sowed mistrust of the expansion of voting that many states, including Virginia, put into place during the covid-19 pandemic. At the car show, retiree Robert Carter, the proud owner of a 1976 Chevy Corvette Stingray, resisted Diggs’s entreaties to take advantage of the fact that the polls are already open. Carter and his wife plan to wait until Tuesday, he told me, because “that way we know that everything is fine.”

Democrats still have an early-voting edge, but the strides that Republicans are making in Virginia are worrying to some Democrats I talked to — a possible sign that the abortion issue is not generating the intensity they had hoped. The latest figures compiled by the nonprofit, nonpartisan Virginia Public Access Project indicate that the GOP share of early voting is up from 2021 and 2022. What won’t be known until Election Day is whether these are people who would have shown up anyway, or a sign that the GOP is bringing in voters who normally skip these legislative elections.

Millions of dollars are pouring in, and the air war is intense. But as it comes down to the finish line, this is a race — and a state — that must be run, and will be won, one doorstep and driveway at a time.

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Virginia’s closest Senate race is the first skirmish of 2024

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03.11.2023

Opinion

Virginia’s closest Senate race is the first skirmish of 2024

By Karen Tumulty

Associate editor and columnist|AddFollow

Updated November 3, 2023 at 1:44 p.m. EDT|Published November 3, 2023 at 6:00 a.m. EDT

Follow this authorKaren Tumulty's opinions

Follow

That is because Virginia is the last Southern state where the procedure has remained widely available after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022. Abortion in Virginia is legal up to 26 weeks of gestation.

Youngkin has proposed banning it after 15 weeks, with exceptions in cases of rape, incest and where the life of the pregnant woman is threatened. (More than 93 percent of abortions take place at or before 13 weeks, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.)

So, the Virginia election is being watched by both parties as a signal of whether abortion will be the 2024 silver bullet that many Democrats are hoping for, or whether Youngkin has created a safe middle ground for Republicans on the issue.

Diggs supports the governor’s proposal, which he says is “another example of Republicans being able to bring people together,” and vows not to go any further toward restricting abortion. “Some people are going to vote on the issue alone, and if we don’t stick to our promise on that, we don’t deserve” a victory, he told me.

Advertisement

But, as might be expected of someone who served more than two decades as a sheriff, Diggs would rather talk about crime and public safety — which have been common themes of Republicans across the state. Both candidates are seasoned campaigners, though their demeanors could hardly be more different. Mason, 55, is gregarious and engages with every voter he sees; Diggs, 11 years older, is stiffer and more reserved. At a car show in Yorktown this past weekend, the former sheriff stood to the side of the festivities and made his pitch only to those who approached him. “You saw me at Dairy Queen!” one man reminded him.

This close to the election, both candidates are past the point of persuasion. Their chief goal is getting people to the polls — a challenge given that turnout in these off-off-year elections tends to be low. I spent part of last Saturday with each of them as they knocked on doors, at houses where they knew likely supporters live. I heard little discussion of the issues; both focused on reminding people that in-person voting is underway and making sure they knew where their polling places were.

Early voting has been a Youngkin priority, as well, but the effort has not been without its challenges. To the detriment of GOP candidates, former president Donald Trump has sowed mistrust of the expansion of voting that many........

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