Bob McDonnell elected Virginia’s 71st governor

Bob McDonnell elected Virginia’s 71st governor

DEAN HOFFMEYER/TIMES-DISPATCH

Bob McDonnell enjoyed a moment with volunteers earlier today after voting at Henrico County’s River’s Edge Elementary School.

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Bob McDonnell led a Republican sweep of Virginia’s statewide races tonight, restoring the Republicans to power after eight years out of the governor’s office.


The dominant victories by McDonnell, Lt. Gov. Bill Bolling and Ken Cuccinelli, the party’s nominee for attorney general, reversed a recent string of defeats for Republicans, who lost races for the U.S. Senate in 2006 and 2008 and the presidential election in Virginia in 2008 for the first time in 44 years.


The three top Republicans garnered roughly 60 percent of the vote to their opponents’ 40 percent.


Republicans were hoping that the statewide sweep would also result in GOP gains in the House of Delegates. The House election is important because the party in power will be in charge of redistricting in 2011.


Virginia and New Jersey were the only states electing a governor today. Those elections, along with a special election for a congressional seat in upstate New York, drew national attention because they are the first significant contests since Obama won the presidency.

 
The defeat of Virginia’s Democratic ticket was a blow to Gov. Timothy M. Kaine, Obama’s hand-picked chairman of the Democratic National Committee.


National media packed into the ballroom of the Richmond Marriott to cover the Republican victory party. The Associated Press called McDonnell’s win at 7:55 p.m., less than an hour after the polls closed.


Michael Steele, the chairman of the Republican National Committee, who came down from Maryland for the victory party, said the result “will serve as a nice springboard for 2010,” when all seats in the House of Representatives and more than 35 U.S. Senate are up for election.


He attributed the McDonnell victory to a convergence of two forces: “the national debate over health care and the candidate’s attention to transportation” and other state issues.


Former Sen. and Gov. George Allen, who also attended the victory party, was asked if a win here would make McDonnell a new star in the GOP.


“Bob will be a star because of the campaign he ran and the person that he is,” Allen said.


McDonnell’s victory continued a remarkable political phenomenon. Since 1976, Virginians have followed every presidential election by electing a governor from the opposing party a year later.


McDonnell’s landslide election was a far cry from four years ago, when he defeated Deeds for attorney general by 360 votes in the closest statewide election in history.


Pundits said that in capturing Virginia McDonnell created a model for other Republican candidates. He emphasized jobs creation and de-emphasized social issues.


Obama came to Virginia twice to campaign for Deeds. But the president’s appearance with Deeds in Norfolk a week before the election appeared to do the Virginia Democrat little good. Polls showed Deeds losing ground in Hampton Roads in the campaign’s final days.


Both political parties poured millions of dollars into the Virginia race. McDonnell had a clear fundraising edge. He raised more than $21 million, while Deeds raised $10 million in the general election and $6 million in a Democratic primary.


Deeds upset victory over two better-funded rivals in the June 9 primary gave him a lift in the polls, but also left his treasury empty. Deeds spent the summer raising money while McDonnell, who was unopposed for the GOP nomination, was on television defining himself as a moderate jobs creator.

 
Throughout the fall, Deeds spent much of his money on ads attacking McDonnell.


On Aug. 30 The Washington Post reported on a graduate thesis that McDonnell wrote 20 years ago while attending Regent University in Virginia Beach. In that thesis, McDonnell appeared to demean working women. He disavowed those views.


The thesis appeared to give Deeds momentum and the polls tightened, albeit briefly, before McDonnell extended his lead.


The two fought often over transportation. Both agreed the state needs more and better transportation. McDonnell would sell bonds, impose tolls and privatize the state-run ABC stores, but would not raise taxes. Deeds said he would assemble a blue ribbon commission to come up with a plan, but did not rule out a tax increase.


McDonnell also spent much of the campaign trying to tie Deeds to cap-and-trade environmental legislation and pro-union legislation on Capitol Hill that is unpopular with many Virginia voters.


As the campaign progressed, McDonnell and his running mates gained widening leads in the polls. Democrats grumbled that McDonnell had run a more disciplined campaign.


McDonnell, 56, had a background in the military, as a businessman and as a local prosecutor, before winning election to the House of Delegates in a Virginia Beach district in 1991. He became chairman of the House Courts of Justice Committee before resigning from the House in 2005 to run for attorney general.

 
McDonnell, whose roots are in the conservative movement, gained a reputation for running the attorney general’s office in a non-political manner.


For Deeds, the defeat probably marks his last bid for statewide office, but he still holds onto his state Senate seat. He represents the 25th district, which stretches from Charlottesville west to Deeds’ home county, Bath County.


Like McDonnell, he is a lawyer and former prosecutor. He has served in the legislature since 1992.


Contact Tyler Whitley at (804) 649-6780 or .


Staff writer Olympia Meola contributed to this report. 

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by John Witt on November 05, 2009 at 1:00 pm

Several readers have asked about the photo of Bob McDonnell and his family on page A7 of Wednesday’s Times-Dispatch. McDonnell is smiling and pointing at a TV showing the Fox News Channel. The caption says McDonnell and his family are watching election returns.

The images on the screen include photos of three young women found dead in North Dakota. Across the bottom of the screen is a crawling caption that shows McDonnell with a substantial lead in early voting in the Virginia governor’s race.

T-D photo director James Wallace says the circumstances and timing of the photo were dictated by the McDonnell campaign.

Access to the McDonnell family on election night was strictly limited. Photographers were given a brief window of time to shoot, and clearly the moment was one the McDonnell campaign wanted to share with the public. The Associated Press photographer, and others present, captured the same scene from slightly different angles. 

It was, as the caption stated, simply a photo of a candidate and his family happy to see that the results were going their way.

Flag Comment Posted by Lord Siouxpreme on November 05, 2009 at 12:02 am

JJ_Richmond07, the girls were killed in North Dakota not South Dakota. I had the same thought you did.

Flag Comment Posted by GodFather on November 04, 2009 at 8:26 pm

“Posted by hahaha on November 04, 2009 at 6:17 pm
Is your hatred for Democrats so strong that you will vote for any Republican?“

Good name haha.  For apparently you are so blinded by hatred you cannot see your own hypocrasy.  Palin?  She skunks Obama in experience, poise grace and style.  And yet you trash her why?  because of your fears and stupidity.

Get over.  Enjoy Obama for the next 3 years.  If you can.  This man-child may not leave anything for a next president.

Flag Comment Posted by mrright on November 04, 2009 at 8:25 pm

hahaha…I have NO hatred for democrats only a love of FREEDOM and LIBERTY and a desire to live my own life and keep MOST of the money I earn.
Obama threatens that.
Can you not undrstand that?
If you think Mr. Gingrich is ‘scuzzier’ than Bill Clinton
I guess you’ll believe anything Keith Olberman tells you.

Flag Comment Posted by JJ_Richmond07 on November 04, 2009 at 6:50 pm

Hey did anyone happen to catch the picture of Bob McDonnel and his family in the election section of the paper today?  Anyone else find the picture funny besides me….. The McDonnel family cheering in front of the TV and on the TV was the 3 pictures of the girls who died in South Dakota yesterday!!!!!!!

Flag Comment Posted by hahaha on November 04, 2009 at 6:17 pm

Is your hatred for Democrats so strong that you will vote for any Republican?

I believe most people vote against people rather than for them. It’s usually associated to party, but how on Earth can anyone think Sarah Palin would be good government representation?

And Newt Gingrich is about a scuzzy as they come! Clinton had set the bar for Presidential Indescretion, but he didnt do anything as reprehensible as Newt when it comes to personal affairs.

Flag Comment Posted by mrright on November 04, 2009 at 6:07 pm

Gingrich/Palin 2012

Flag Comment Posted by DandyAndy on November 04, 2009 at 3:51 pm

Ramgrl, bash Palin all you want.  Personally, I’m more embarrassed by a President of the United States who thinks there are 57 States. 
But if you are so embarrassed by Palin’s daughter, then I’m sure you were equally embarrassed by Bill Clinton when he was having sex in the Oval Office with a girl young enough to be his daughter.  Weren’t you?

Flag Comment Posted by DandyAndy on November 04, 2009 at 3:45 pm

Well, personally, I think Obama has done quite a bit in the 11 months he’s been in office.  He doubled the deficit in only 8 months.  In other words, he built a deficit 8 months that it took Bush 8 years to do.  He has nationalized private industries and has cost the American taxpayer over $24,000 each for some “stimulus” package that only stimulated his rich friends.
Personally, I hope Obama’s “successes” continue.  If yesterday was any indication (and I truly believe it was) then the Republicans will have a super majority in both Houses next year thus ending the Obama error, I mean, era.

Flag Comment Posted by GodFather on November 04, 2009 at 10:09 am

proudAmerican and Grizzman - like him or loath him, Obama has kept most of his promises - to the detriment of the country.

But I will give him credit for at least breaking a trend.  Let’s see, it took Clinton 24 days to break his, Kaine 6 hours, and Pelosi -15 days (that is minus fifteen days).

Obama at least waited until after he was inaugurated to break a few.  But the ones he broke - if anyone believed them, they were fools - were typical “get elected” ones.  Most of us knew he had no intention of keeping those promises.

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