Wipeout: Democrats Drub Republicans Across the Country
How big of an Election Night did Democrats have on Tuesday? And
how rough was it for Republicans one year after Donald Trump’s surprising
victory in 2016? Consider all of these results across the country:
·
In the marquee gubernatorial contest in Virginia, Ralph Northam
defeated Republican Ed Gillespie by 9 points, 54 percent to 45 percent,
marking Democrats’ biggest gubernatorial win in the state since 1985;
·
Also in Virginia, Democrats swept the statewide races for
lieutenant governor and attorney general, and they have a shot at winning
control of the House of Delegates, which was unthinkable going into last night;
·
In New Jersey, Democrat Phil Murphy bested Republican Kim
Guadagno by 13 points in that state’s gubernatorial race, 56 percent to 43
percent;
·
In Washington state, it appears Democrats won control of
the state Senate;
·
In New Hampshire, Democrat Joyce Craig defeated incumbent
Republican Ted Gatsas to become Manchester mayor, per New Hampshire political
reporter Paul Steinhauser.
·
In Georgia, Democrats picked up two state legislative seats in
special elections;
·
And in Maine, a ballot initiative to expand Medicaid in the
state easily passed.
The one bright spot for Republicans was their special
congressional victory in Utah, where Republican John Curtis beat Democrat
Kathie Allen in the race to fill former Rep. Jason Chaffetz’s, R-Utah, seat.
Add it all up, and you can clearly see that the political winds
are at Democrats’ backs right now, on the same day when two more House
Republicans announced their retirements.
And while off-off year elections are hardly a guarantee to
predict what will happen in the following midterms, remember that 1993 (when
Republicans George Allen, Christine Todd Whitman and Rudy Giuliani won big)
told us a lot about how 1994 would play out, and ditto 2009 (when Republicans
Bob McDonnell and Chris Christie won) for the 2010 midterms.
What was extraordinary about last night was that it featured generic
Democrats and Republicans, Northam vs. Gillespie in Virginia, Murphy vs.
Guadagno in New Jersey, Medicaid expansion vs. not to expand it — and Democrats
came out on top.
So last night was more than Virginia’s increasingly blue tint,
or the power of the Northern Virginia suburbs. It was a drubbing across the
entire country.
Heading into last night’s gubernatorial race in Virginia, we
asked the question: Which would be the more powerful force — the environment or
campaign tactics?
In Virginia, 57 percent of voters said they disapproved of
Trump's job performance, according to exit polling in the state. And those
voters broke for Northam, 87 percent to 11 percent. By contrast, 40 percent
said they approved of the president's job, with Gillespie winning those, 90
percent to 8 percent.
Perhaps more importantly, half of voters in Virginia said that
Trump was a factor in their vote, and they opposed the president by a 2-to-1
margin — 34 percent oppose, 17 percent support.
Trump's standing was even worse in New Jersey, where 36 percent
of voters said they approved of Trump’s job. And among the 39 percent of voters
in New Jersey who said Trump was a factor in their vote, 28 percent said it was
to oppose him, versus 11 percent who were supporting him — a nearly 3-to-1
margin.
Make no mistake: Democrats are still a party without a leader
and without a clear message. Only one thing was the secret to their success
last night: the man residing at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave.
What was especially
striking about Northam’s victory last night was that he EXCEEDED Barack Obama’s
and Hillary Clinton’s margins in Virginia’s key urban suburbs and exurbs:
In 2014, Ed Gillespie came within ONE POINT of defeating Sen.
Mark Warner, D-Va. But last night, he lost to Ralph Northam by NINE POINTS.
We wrote that, on paper, Gillespie’s biography (former RNC
chair, former George W. Bush aide) gave him the potential to overperform in the
Northern Virginia suburbs, while picking up Trump’s voters in the rural parts
of the state. Threading that needle was his path to victory.
But there was no needle to thread last night. Despite his
biography, Gillespie lost Northern Virginia by a bigger margin than Trump and
Mitt Romney did. And despite utilizing the Trump playbook (hitting Northam with
ads on immigration and crime, calling to keep Virginia’s Confederate
monuments), rural voters didn’t come out in droves.
Trump tweeted last night that Gillespie didn’t embrace
him. “Ed Gillespie worked hard but did not embrace me or what I stand for.
Don’t forget, Republicans won 4 out of 4 House seats, and with the economy
doing record numbers, we will continue to win, even bigger than before!”
According to exit
polls, Northam won female voters by a huge 22 points. That’s five points better
than Hillary Clinton performed among female voters in the state last year.
Among white women with
a college degree, Northam captured 58 percent of the vote compared with 42
percent for Gillespie; among married women, Northam won by ten. And Democratic
women made up about a quarter of the electorate — the largest share of any partisan
gender group by far.
FROM NBC.com
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