Deeds wins in a rout, will again face McDonnell
Deeds gives thanks, others concede
Sen. R. Creigh Deeds thanked his family and supporters while looking to the future race after winning the Democratic nomination for governor Tuesday. Terry McAuliffe finished second; Brian J. Moran...
BOB BROWN/TIMES-DISPATCH
Creigh Deeds savors his victory in the Democratic Primary as he adresses a rally at the Omni Hotel in Charlottesville, on Tuesday, June 9, 2009.
Published: June 10, 2009
Updated: June 10, 2009
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MORE: • Turnout is small for Democratic primary • Fresh updates: Virginia Politics Blog • Democratic primary voter’s guide • Primary results VIDEO: McAuliffe concedes |
State Sen. R. Creigh Deeds scored a come-from-behind victory in the Democratic gubernatorial primary yesterday, setting up a rematch with Republican nominee Bob McDonnell.
Deeds and McDonnell clashed in the race for attorney general in 2005. McDonnell won by 360 votes in the closest general election in Virginia history.
Terry McAuliffe finished second, far behind Deeds and narrowly ahead of Brian J. Moran. About 6 percent of the state's 5.07 million voters cast ballots.
Former Secretary of Finance Jody Wagner of Virginia Beach won an easy victory over Mike Signer of Alexandria in the race for the Democratic nomination for lieutenant governor.
Deeds, ecstatic and seemingly overwhelmed, strode onto the stage at the Jefferson Ballroom in the Omni Hotel in Charlottesville and bear-hugged Del. David J. Toscano of Charlottesville as a crowd of 150 supporters cheered wildly and the Journey song "Don't Stop Believing" blared through the loud speakers.
"No one could have ever imagined what we accomplished here in the state of Virginia tonight," Deeds said, noting that the rain, hail and storms throughout the state did not deter his supporters.
Deeds vowed that if elected, "I will never turn my back on children, the seniors, and the working families who are the backbone" of the Virginia economy.
McAuliffe called Deeds to concede at 8:06 p.m., a little more than an hour after the polls closed. About 150 people gathered at an Arlington County hotel for the McAuliffe event.
"I told him something that I know everyone in this room agrees with -- that he must be the next governor of Virginia and that I will do everything possible to help make sure he is the next governor of Virginia," McAuliffe said. "Virginia needs Creigh Deeds."
McAuliffe later sent an e-mail to his supporters, asking them to contribute to Deeds' campaign.
As Deeds' lead widened, the Moran campaign pulled the live feed of poll results from the big screen at his party in an Alexandria ballroom and put up a slideshow of Moran.
Tears flowed as Moran conceded shortly before 8:10 p.m. Moran made a conciliatory speech promising to work for Deeds' election.
Moran, a former delegate from Alexandria, said it was a spirited campaign. But, he said, "because of this primary, Creigh Deeds is now an invincible candidate."
Before Moran left the stage, he invoked his father, a former football coach.
"Ladies and gentlemen, if at the conclusion of that game, you played every down as though it was your last, win or lose, you can hold your head high," Moran said.
Deeds dominated his rivals, winning vote-rich counties such as Chesterfield, Henrico, Fairfax and Prince William and cities such as Richmond, Roanoke, Norfolk and Virginia Beach. He carried 10 of Virginia's 11 congressional districts; McAuliffe took the 3rd District.
Political analysts said Deeds, as the most moderate of the three candidates, could have a better chance of defeating McDonnell on Nov. 3.
"The McDonnell people were salivating at the chance to run against McAuliffe," Quentin Kidd of Christopher Newport University said.
Before Deeds took the stage in Charlottesville, one of his supporters, Senate Majority Leader Richard L. Saslaw of Fairfax County, made a similar point.
"Believe you me, if I was Bob McDonnell tonight, I'd be scared out of my mind."
McDonnell released a video statement in which he congratulated Deeds on his "well-earned victory" and joked that he was sorry to see the Democratic primary campaign end.
"And Creigh, after your victory, I'd say take a break, you deserve it, long vacation, relax for a few months, take some time off," McDonnell said.
Gov. Timothy M. Kaine, chairman of the Democratic National Committee, praised all three Democratic candidates but said "tonight is Creigh Deeds' night."
"Creigh Deeds has always been able to bring people together, build consensus, and deliver results," Kaine said.
Deeds had a potential disadvantage in the primary because he lagged in fundraising, but he won't have that problem in the general election, Kidd said. Both parties will provide ample funds to the candidates, he said.
Virginia and New Jersey are the only states holding gubernatorial elections in the fall. Republicans, having suffered a string of recent losses, hope to make a comeback in Virginia, which Democrat Barack Obama carried in November.
Polls showed that McAuliffe, who spent more money and had more paid staffers, leading until the closing week, when Deeds passed him. Moran, who tried to appeal to the liberal Democratic base, never seemed to gain much traction.
A former chairman of the Democratic National Committee and a prolific fundraiser for President Bill Clinton, McAuliffe hoped his connections and larger-than-life personality would put him over the top. But Moran began attacking McAuliffe's business dealings, which appeared to help Deeds more than Moran.
An endorsement of Deeds by The Washington Post gave his campaign a big boost, Kidd said.
Coming from behind, Deeds husbanded his resources until the closing weeks and was able to buy considerable television advertising time near the end.
The three candidates spent more than $14 million on the contest but had trouble getting the voters interested. Some observers blamed voter fatigue after last year's presidential election.
The name of Stephen C. Shannon, the Democratic candidate for attorney general, was not on the ballot because he was unopposed for the nomination. Shannon, 38, has served in the House of Delegates, representing a Fairfax County district, since 2004.
McDonnell was unopposed for the gubernatorial nomination. Lt. Gov. Bill Bolling, seeking re-election, and state Sen. Ken Cuccinelli of Fairfax County make up the rest of the GOP ticket.
Deeds, a 51-year-old lawyer from the second-smallest county in the state, represents a mostly rural state Senate district that also includes Charlottesville. He was in the House of Delegates for nine years before moving to the state Senate in 2001.
Last night, Deeds became emotional toward the close of his 10-minute acceptance speech when he paused to thank his family -- his wife, Pam, their four children and his mother.
"Only in Virginia can a mother who still works as a mail carrier in Bath County send her son to college with four $20 bills in his pocket -- that was all -- and have her son stand before you as the Democratic nominee for the next governor of the commonwealth of Virginia."
Deeds also made his first general-election promise:
"Virginia, I promise you, every single day you will have a governor who is always on your side," he said.
The loudspeakers blared Bruce Springsteen's "Born to Run" -- and Deeds was off and running.
Contact Tyler Whitley at (804) 649-6780 or
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Staff writers Olympia Meola and Jeff E. Schapiro contributed to this report.
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Reader Reactions
gqrich ,Bush may have embarrased you but Obama scares me.I’d rather be embarrased.
In Afghanistan, Obama is just duplicating Bush’s surge in Iraq,What a genius!!And why is Afghanistan the ‘real war on terror’ and Iraq wasn’t.Is it because you say so.Neither country invaded us but both supported those who did.So either they are both necessary or they both aren’t.Oh Thats right you get to have it both ways.I forgot.
Plans to bring home troops from Iraq…last I heard (yesterday) were estimates saying we’ll have troops there ten more years.OBAMA LIED!!!!
He may not have uttered I’m sorry but read the speech,its online.In his mind America was just some repressive regime until ALAS we(or you) elected him president.Now all is well…he says.
For all his genius,politeness and contriteness, I haven’t seen one scintilla of additional support from anyone.But he does talk a good game Uh…Uh…Uhh….as long as he’s reading it that is.
Ahmadinejad was unpopular before Obama ever left Chicago so don’t try and take credit for that.
The sun came up this morning,was that Obama ? Don’t answer.
Way to go yellowhound. Couldn’t agree with you more, nicely said.
mrright as usual you couldn’t be more wrong! LOL
God how I wish Bush would have been smart enough to use a teleprompter, maybe the world wouldn’t have laughed at him so much and he wouldn’t have embarrassed the country the way he did.
President Obama isn’t following Bush’s plans in Iraq or Afghanistan because Obama actually has a plan for bringing our troops home unlike Bush. Also, he has added troops to the real battle front on terrorism Afghanistan again unlike Bush. And I have heard President Obama speak in Cairo and Turkey but not once did I hear him say “I’m sorry.“ Hmmm.
As far as the results of those speeches, you now have villagers in Afghanistan standing up to the Taliban and running them out of their villages and you also now see Ahmadinejad on the brink of loosing in the upcoming elections in Iran.
frbbill: You should work on your proofreading. The article claims the closest election in Va history was Deeds and Mcdonnell, this election was won easily by Deeds.
Hey yellowhound I’d take Bush back in a second over this clown who’s in there right now.You know that genius who can’t say goodmorning w/o a teleprompter.You know the guy who has quadrupled the ‘mess’ he inherited.The same guy who’s basically following Bush’s plan in Iraq and Afghanistan.And hasn’t the Obama apology tour produced magnificent results?
Bush is gone,buddy.Get over it and revel in the stellar accomplishments of your guy, Obama.That ought to cure your Bush Derangement Syndrome quicker than anything else
drhoagie, you’ve put forward some real howlers here. For one, Deeds ran on continuing the Warner-Kaine legacy. While he was the most moderate of the three Democratic candidates, he’s still a Democrat and his nomination is hardly an indictment of President Obama.
And I think most of us know who was “the most inept president in the history of our country”—President “Brownie, you’re doing a heckuva job”. President “Mission Accomplished”. The president who inherited a surplus and left behind a staggering deficit. The president who fired competent U.S. attorneys to make room for partisan hacks. The president who managed to turn widespread international goodwill following 9/11 into equally widespread loathing and condemnation.
The president who lied us into a war, then ineptly mismanaged the occupation, refusing to insist that Donald Rumsfeld’s Pentagon use the State Department’s reconstruction plan even though it had none of its own. The president who allowed the Iraq Museum be looted while guarding the oilfields, who disbanded the Iraqi army unloosing thousands of bitter, unemployed men with guns, who unthinkingly de-Baathified the country, removing any administrative competence from the government, and who let billions of dollars of Iraq reconstruction money vanish unaccountably into thin air. The president who was so fixated on Saddam Hussein that he let the hunt for bin Laden become a sideshow.
The president who uttered the following memorable quotes:
“Rarely is the question asked: Is our children learning?“
“I know how hard it is for you to put food on your family.”
“I know the human being and fish can coexist peacefully.“
“It is clear our nation is reliant upon big foreign oil. More and more of our imports come from overseas.“
“If the terriers and bariffs are torn down, this economy will grow.“
“They want the federal government controlling Social Security like it’s some kind of federal program.“
“I glance at the headlines just to kind of get a flavor for what’s moving. I rarely read the stories, and get briefed by people who are probably read the news themselves.“
“There’s an old saying in Tennessee—I know it’s in Texas, probably in Tennessee… that says, fool me once, shame on… shame on you. Fool me… you can’t get fooled again.“
Buyers’ Remorse for sure.
Virginians are embarrassed by Tim Kaine and his association with the most inept president in the history of our country.
McAuliffe is another DC insider who would put Virginia second, party first.
And Moran is too liberal in this time when liberalism is being exposed as a reckless boondoggle.
This vote by Democrats in Virginia is an indictment on Obama and Tim Kaine.
“I’m glad we have a centrist democrat running too. Moderation is the best, Virginia’s too good of a state to let it be had by the radicals on either side.“
I couldn’t agree more.
If you ever get the chance, do yourself a favor and go hear Deeds speak. A breath of fresh air.
Hey VCU; explain to me how someone can lose an election, yet “almost trounce” their opponent?
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