GOP wins Va. gov race a year after Obama won state
By BOB LEWIS
Associated Press Writer
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - Republican Bob McDonnell easily won the
Virginia governor's race Tuesday as independent voters who last
year helped deliver the state to President Barack Obama handed the
party a convincing victory.
Unofficial results showed McDonnell, a conservative and former
state attorney general, with about 60 percent of the vote over
Democrat R. Creigh Deeds. He will be the state's first Republican
governor in eight years.
``I just got tackled by my five kids and my wife, and there are
a lot of tears on my cheeks right now,'' McDonnell told The
Associated Press.
When the TV screens at his headquarters flashed that he had won,
his supporters in a crowded Richmond hotel ballroom screamed, waved
signs and began chanting, ``Go, Bob, go!''
At a hotel a few miles away, Deeds addressed a somber crowd.
``We've got a whole pile of work in front of us, and just
because we didn't get the right result tonight doesn't mean we can
go home and whine,'' he said.
The race, along with the contest for governor of New Jersey, was
viewed as the first referendum on the president and the Democratic
Congress before the 2010 midterm elections.
``I hope this will kind of send a message to Congress that you
better do what we want or we won't re-elect you,'' said Linda
Doland, 60, a nanny in suburban Richmond who voted for McDonnell.
Ali Ganyuma, 39, a physical therapist in Richmond, hoped his
vote for Deeds also would send a message to Washington.
``The biggest reason why I voted for Creigh Deeds was in the
national politics, not local politics, because the right wing might
take these as an ultimatum, a verdict on Obama's administration,''
he said.
A year ago, Obama became the first Democrat in 44 years to carry
Virginia in a presidential race.
This time voters expressed angst about major Obama initiatives
such as health care, energy and stimulus spending. But McDonnell
dominated the campaign's central issues: jobs and the economy.
In Associated Press surveys at polling places statewide, about
eight in 10 voters said they were worried about the direction of
the nation's economy, and the majority of those favored McDonnell.
McDonnell, 55, never trailed in polls, even though his lead
narrowed in September after news reports of a graduate thesis he
wrote in 1989 that disparaged working women, gays and unmarried
``cohabitators.'' He dismissed it as a forgotten academic exercise
and said raising three daughters had changed his views.
McDonnell will succeed Gov. Timothy M. Kaine, chairman of the
Democratic National Committee, who is barred by state law from
seeking a second term. Kaine directed $6 million in DNC money into
Virginia for Deeds and other Democratic candidates.
Deeds, a moderate country lawyer and state senator, never
energized the party's liberal activists despite campaigning twice
with Obama, who last year powered a political tsunami that swept
three of Virginia's 11 U.S. House seats from the GOP. It also put
both U.S. Senate seats in Democratic hands for the first time since
1970.
Republicans were in disarray after the 2008 loss, but took
advantage of public unease over major Obama initiatives on health
care, energy and stimulus spending legislation.
Exit polls showed nearly a third of voters in Virginia during
the day described themselves as independents and they preferred
McDonnell to Deeds by almost a 2-1 margin.
Voters were split on Obama's job performance. While many said
the president was not a factor in their votes for governor, about a
quarter said their vote for McDonnell was also a rejection of
Obama.
The exit poll of 2,124 Virginia voters was conducted for AP by
Edison Research in a random sample of 40 precincts statewide.
Results were subject to sampling error of plus or minus 3
percentage points, higher for subgroups.
In other Virginia races, Republican Lt. Gov. Bill Bolling won
re-election over Democrat Jody Wagner, and ticketmate Kenneth
Cuccinelli was elected attorney general over Democrat Steve Shannon
with about the same share of the vote as McDonnell. All 100 seats
in the House of Delegates were up for election, with contested
races for 69 seats.
On the Net:
Methodology: http://surveys.ap.org/exitpolls
Associated Press writers Michael Felberbaum and Dena Potter
contributed to this report.
(This version DELETES incorrect reference to independents
breaking for Obama in Va. in 2008.)
11/03/09 21:28
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