Terry McAuliffe, Democrat, Is Elected Governor of Virginia in Tight Race
TYSONS CORNER, Va. — Terry McAuliffe, a longtime Democratic fund-raiser and ally of Bill and Hillary Rodham Clinton, was elected governor of Virginia on Tuesday, narrowly defeating the state’s conservative attorney general, Kenneth T. Cuccinelli II, and confirming Virginia’s evolution as a state increasingly dominated politically by the Democratic-leaning Washington suburbs.
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Mr. McAuliffe, 56, ran as a social liberal and an economic moderate
focused on job creation. Mr. Cuccinelli, a Republican who was the first
attorney general to sue over President Obama’s health care law, ran as a
hard-line social conservative and aimed his campaign almost exclusively
at the Tea Party wing of his party.
Still, despite substantially outraising Mr. Cuccinelli, $34.4 million to
$19.7 million, Mr. McAuliffe won by a margin — just over two percentage
points — that was smaller than some pre-election polls had suggested.
Mr. McAuliffe benefited from an electorate that was less white and less
Republican than it was four years ago. He drew about as large a
percentage of African-Americans as Mr. Obama did last year. Blacks
accounted for one in five voters, according to exit polls conducted by
Edison Research. Mr. Cuccinelli’s strong anti-abortion views also
brought out opponents, with 20 percent of voters naming abortion as
their top issue; Mr. McAuliffe overwhelmingly won their support. The top
issue for voters was the economy, cited by 45 percent in exit polls.
In a victory speech here, Mr. McAuliffe thanked the “historic number of
Republicans who crossed party lines to support me” and invoked a
tradition of bipartisanship in Richmond, the capital. In a checklist of
recent governors who had moved the economy forward, he included the
incumbent, Bob McDonnell, a Republican.
“Over the next four years, most Democrats and Republicans in Virginia
want to make Virginia a model for pragmatic leadership that is friendly
to job creation,” Mr. McAuliffe said.
His tone was notably more conciliatory than that of Mr. Cuccinelli, who
struck a defiant note at a rally in Richmond, interpreting the closeness
of the race to a rejection of Mr. Obama’s health care law. “Despite
being outspent by an unprecedented $15 million, this race came down to
the wire because of Obamacare,” Mr. Cuccinelli said, adding, “We were
lied to by our own government.”
That Mr. McAuliffe was elected in a onetime Republican stronghold while
unapologetically supporting gun restrictions, same-sex marriage and
abortion rights will no doubt be scrutinized by both parties,
particularly by Republicans concerned about the appeal of the Tea Party
in swing states and districts ahead of the 2014 midterm elections. And
Mr. Cuccinelli’s defeat in a Southern state will no doubt be contrasted
with the Republicans’ great success of the day, the dominating
re-election of Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey, who appeals to swaths
of Democrats. But the close result, after a race in which Mr. Cuccinelli
was substantially outspent, could make it difficult to draw firm
conclusions.
Mr. Cuccinelli, 45, whose passionate base seemed to give him an early
edge in a race between two flawed candidates, rattled business-oriented
Republicans. A surprising roster of the party’s establishment —
including Will Sessoms, the mayor of the largest city, Virginia Beach —
endorsed Mr. McAuliffe.
Mr. McAuliffe’s career as a wealthy business investor yielded many
unflattering and, critics said, possibly unethical details. But he
neutralized the issue by arguing that Mr. Cuccinelli’s social agenda,
which included hostile comments about homosexuality, staunch opposition
to abortion and an attempt to discredit a climate scientist at the
University of Virginia, would give the state a retrograde image that
would deter businesses from moving here.
A key issue was Mr. McAuliffe’s embrace of a roads bill championed and
signed by Mr. McDonnell, which Mr. Cuccinelli opposed because it raised
taxes. In rapidly growing Northern Virginia, snarled traffic is the
chief concern of chambers of commerce and Mr. McAuliffe was able to
portray himself as pro-business and bipartisan.
Although a majority of female voters chose Mr. McDonnell four years ago,
Mr. Cuccinelli trailed Mr. McAuliffe among women by nearly 10
percentage points. Nearly seven in 10 unmarried women supported Mr.
McAuliffe.
Both Planned Parenthood and the Susan B. Anthony List, an anti-abortion
group, poured money into the race. Abortion rights groups created
graphic television ads linking the Republican ticket to a failed state
bill in 2012 that would have required vaginal ultrasounds for women
seeking abortions.
The McAuliffe campaign pounded on Mr. Cuccinelli’s support for failed
“personhood” bills that could have banned some common forms of birth
control, and for being one of only three attorneys general in the
country to oppose the federal Violence Against Women Act.
Six months ago, the race seemed Mr. Cuccinelli’s to lose. He was a
conservative of impeccable credentials and a national figure because of
the lawsuit over the president’s health care law in 2010. Mr. McAuliffe
had drawn an unserious self-portrait in his 2007 memoir, “What a
Party!,” including a story about leaving his wife, Dorothy, in the car
with their newborn child to duck into a Democratic fund-raiser.
Mr. McAuliffe’s previous bid for governor, in 2009, ended in a
humiliating defeat in the primary after he was accused of being a
carpetbagger. His effort to strengthen his business ties to Virginia
through an electric car company, GreenTech, backfired when he set up
production in Mississippi and news reports revealed the company was the
target of federal investigators.
But Mr. Cuccinelli was unable to profit from the tarnishing of Mr.
McAuliffe because the attorney general had his own problem with a
political gifts scandal emanating from the governor. A benefactor of Mr.
McDonnell’s who lavished him and his wife with a Rolex watch and other
favors also gave Mr. Cuccinelli and his family vacations at a lake home.
Mr. Cuccinelli secured the Republican nomination in May by packing the
state party with his supporters, who chose to skip a primary in favor of
a nominating convention, ensuring a more ideological slate of
candidates.
In the middle of the federal government shutdown, which hit hard in
Virginia, with its many federal workers and its defense industry, Mr.
Cuccinelli appeared at a family values rally with Senator Ted Cruz of
Texas, the architect of the shutdown. In exit polls, about a third of
voters said the shutdown had affected someone in their household, and
most of them voted for Mr. McAuliffe.
Mr. Cuccinelli spent the final weeks of the campaign barnstorming with
national Tea Party stars. He appeared on election eve with the former
presidential candidate Ron Paul, meant to call home votes from a
third-party candidate, Robert Sarvis, a libertarian.
Meanwhile, with money pouring into Mr. McAuliffe’s campaign, thanks to
his ties to major donors, including supporters of the Clintons, he set
off an avalanche of negative ads. Mr. McAuliffe outspent his opponent by
nearly 75 percent, and beginning in late summer drove up Mr.
Cuccinelli’s unfavorable ratings, where they remained.
Mr. McAuliffe ran a disciplined campaign, touring all 23 community
colleges in the state to highlight work force development and keeping
his message tightly on job creation.
In the last week, Mr. Cuccinelli seized the chance to pivot to the
disastrous debut of the federal health insurance marketplace. The issue
may have narrowed Mr. McAuliffe’s victory margin, but in the end it was
not enough.
Mr. McAuliffe broke a 36-year pattern in which Virginia’s governor,
picked the year after the presidential election, came from the party out
of power in the White House. The political scientist who first remarked
on the trend, Larry J. Sabato of the University of Virginia, ascribed
it to a natural tendency toward buyer’s remorse. But this year, as
unpopular as Mr. Obama and his health care law may be with many
Virginians, “dislike of Cuccinelli is even stronger,” Mr. Sabato said.
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