Election Day 2013 What happened?
In the battle for governor of Virginia,
Democrat Terry McAuliffe pulled out a narrow victory Tuesday over
Republican Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli, the Associated Press
projected.
With 94 percent of precincts reporting, McAuliffe
led by a percentage point in a contest that saw his opponent take an
early lead and hold it for more than two hours after the polls closed.
He becomes the first Virginia governor elected from the same political party of the president since 1977.
2013 Election Results Offer Clues About 2016
Speaking to supporters in Northern Virginia tonight, McAuliffe pivoted
back to local issues, pledged to govern in a bipartisan fashion, focused
on infrastructure, education investments, and the expansion of the
Medicaid program as a part of the Affordable Care Act.
"This election was never a choice between Democrats and Republicans, it
was a choice about whether Virginia would continue the bipartisan
tradition that has served us so well over the last decade," McAuliffe
said in Northern Virginia tonight.
Cuccinelli, however, blamed his loss on being outspent by $15 million by
McAuliffe's campaign and he insisted that Virginia voters had still
sent a message to Washington about the health care law.
"Despite being outspent by $15 million, this race came down to the wire
because of Obamacare," Cuccinelli said in Richmond, Va. tonight.
"Though we lost, tonight you sent a message to the President of United
States that you believe that Obamacare is a failure, and you want to be
in charge of your health care not the government."
On infrastructure, education and health care, McAuliffe pledged to bring Republicans to the table.
"Over the next three months I'm going to work hard to reach out to every
single Republican in the General Assembly," McAuliffe said. "I'm going
to work hard to reach out to them and I'm going to work with them so we
can advance our shared goals."
Virginia's odd year governor election and the state's status as a
pivotal swing state has made this race the most-watched contest this
year for both the Democratic and Republican parties.
Democrats believe that McAuliffe's victory over tea party-backed
Cuccinelli will send a signal that voters will hold Republicans
accountable for the government shutdown in the 2014 midterm elections.
"The American people reject tea party extremism, they reject the idea
that it's okay to hold the economy hostage in the name of denying
quality affordable health care and they simply want us to work
together," Democratic National Committee Chairman Debbie Wasserman
Schultz told ABC News tonight. "I think through the 2014 midterms you'll
see that very stark contrast."
"The tea party and the Republican Party are equated by voters and they
can't get away from the extremism even though they might try," she
added.
Both political parties have poured vast resources into this race.
McAuliffe, a prolific Democratic fundraiser and personal friend of
former President Bill and Hillary Clinton, outraised his opponent by
more than $33 million to $21 million. And his outside group allies,
including Planned Parenthood, and a pro-gun control group funded by New
York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg have spent millions on the airwaves
attacking Cuccinelli.
Both men, however, were flawed candidates who are odd fits for Virginia's deepening purple hue.
McAuliffe is better-known as one of the Democratic Party's most skilled
political animals than the middle-of-the-road candidate he pitched
himself as to voters during the campaign.
And tea party-backed Cuccinelli ran a fiercely conservative campaign in a
state that is becoming less and less Republican with each passing day,
largely as a result of demographic changes in the vote-rich DC suburbs.
Neither candidate inspired voters in this race with their scandal-plagued candidacies.
McAuliffe ran into trouble for ties to a beleaguered green car company, and Cuccinelli was tied to a gift scandal that embroiled the state's Republican Gov. Bob McDonnell.
And many saw a vote for one man as really a vote against the other.
Cuccinelli has been unsuccessful in overcoming the accusations by his
opponents that his social conservative views on abortion, gay marriage
and contraception are too extreme for Virginians. Arguably his
ideological steadfastness, not moderation, was the key part of his
playbook.
"His positions on social issues are well to the right of this
increasingly moderate state," said Larry Sabato, director of the
University of Virginia's Center for politics. "It's a Mid-Atlantic
state, not a Southern state."
Cuccinelli cut his teeth on the national political stage as the attorney
general who became "literally the first human being" to challenge the
Affordable Care Act in the courts once it became law in 2010, as he
often boasts on the campaign trail.
Democrats are painting Cuccinelli's loss as a cautionary tale for his
tea party-tinged brand of conservatism and those in his party with
presidential ambitions who are considering framing their candidacy in a
way that mirrors his gubernatorial campaign.
Election Day 2013 What happened?
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