CHANTILLY, Virginia – Republicans won across the board in Tuesday’s election, winning governor, attorney general, lieutenant governor, and retaking a narrow majority in the House of Delegates, leaving just Virginia’s Senate in Democrat control, according to unofficial results.
“For too long, we’ve been expected to shelf our dreams, to shelf our hope, to settle for low expectations. We will not be a Commonwealth of low expectations, we’ll be a Commonwealth of high expectations. And friends, all of that has changed tonight,” governor-elect Glenn Youngkin said in a victory speech in the wee hours of Wednesday morning at the Marriott in Chantilly.
Delegate Jason Miyares (R-Virginia Beach) won the attorney general race, unseating two-term incumbent Mark Herring. Former Delegate Winsome Sears won the lieutenant governor seat. She will serve as a tie-breaker in the barely-Democratic Senate.
Democratic candidate Terry McAuliffe didn’t concede.
“We’ve still got a lot of votes to count,” McAuliffe said in his speech in McLean. “We’re going to continue to count the vote because every single Virginian deserves to have their vote counted.”
Early in the evening, multiple pundits projected that Republicans would control Virginia’s top elected offices, but slow vote counting delayed final official calls from the media; Youngkin made his speech shortly after both The Associated Press and Fox News called the election around 1 a.m. Wednesday morning.
McAuliffe ran a campaign touting the progress made by Democrats since they gained full control of Virginia’s government in 2019, and painted Republicans as eager to reverse those changes. He also repeatedly linked Youngkin to former President Donald Trump, who is credited with turning some Virginia moderates away from the GOP in 2017, 2019, and 2020.
Youngkin launched his campaign for the GOP nomination with calls for election integrity and was delicate in his comments about the 2020 election. But after the nomination, the former Carlyle CEO kept former President Trump at arm’s length while Trump repeatedly issued endorsements and seemed closely interested in the election.
Trump took some credit for Youngkin’s victory.
In a Tuesday evening press release, Trump said, “I didn’t even have to go rally for Youngkin, because McAuliffe did it for me. Thank you to the MAGA voters for turning out big!”
“Glenn Youngkin won in a stunning victory tonight. It’s a complete realignment. It’s a stunning repudiation of Joe Biden, Terry McAuliffe, and the left-wing, liberal policies that have destroyed Virginia and wrecked the nation,” said The Virginia Star’s Publisher former Trump Virginia chairman John Fredericks.
“The big winner tonight, President Donald J. Trump, who injected himself in this race knowing that if he didn’t get Trump voters out on game day in rural areas, McAuliffe was going to win,” Fredericks said.
Youngkin held the MAGA base while reaching out to suburban moderates with a platform focused on the economy, public safety, and education. Education policy turned into a major issue for the GOP, beginning during the nomination with multiple candidates calling for schools to reopen. At the same time, Republicans began to equate equity and diversity programs with Critical Race Theory (CRT), despite education officials stating that CRT is not in Virginia schools.
After the nomination, Youngkin and the other GOP candidates found a number of issues to focus on in Virginia’s schools: CRT, mask mandates, vaccine mandates, transgender policy, programs for gifted students, school choice, explicit curriculum, and misreported sexual assaults in schools.
Kellie Boyle said that she’s known Youngkin for 12 years; her kids went to school with the Youngkin kids, and her family attends the Holy Trinity Church in McLean which Youngkin founded. She said that although the campaign policy was important, the key to Youngkin’s victory was his convictions and personality.
“He’s all about taking care of families and Virginians. I think that everyone’s tired of all the nasty politics, and he’s not that way. He’s a very positive person, Boyle said. “I just think he was the right vessel for the policy. He wasn’t a Trump. He isn’t a Trump person. But he raises conservative values, and popular values.”
With the success of Youngkin’s message among both Trump-loving hardline Republicans and moderates that Trump alienated, Republicans nationally are likely to take lessons from Virginia for the 2022 congressional midterms.
“I think it’s a big night for Republicans. I think it’s a night that says we are back, and we’re tired of what’s happening nationally, and people are tired in Virginia of what’s happening in Richmond with this liberal left-wing Democratic control,” said former Delegate Tim Hugo, who lost in the 2019 Democratic wave.
Hugo said, “I think we’ve got to continue to work hard, continue to make our argument about why things are good for Virginia and good for America, I think these arguments will prevail, and I think people will say, ‘This is not what we voted for in 2020. This is wrong. We want a change.’ I think 2022 is going to be a great day for Virginia, a great day for America, and a great day for Republicans.”
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Eric Burk is a reporter at The Virginia Star and The Star News Network. Email tips to [email protected].
John Fredericks is the publisher and editor-in-chief of The Virginia Star.
He was also a Trump 2020 delegate and the chairman of the Trump Virginia Delegation.
The current makeup of the Virginia Senate is 21 Democrats and 19 Republicans. Last night Virginia elected a Republican Lieutenant Governor (i.e., the presiding officer in the Virginia Senate). So, a loss of just one Democrat on any issue will give the Republicans control of the Virginia Senate on that issue in the next two years until the next Virginia Senate election. (The Republican Party in Virginia appeared to be dead and gone until last night. Remarkable at what happened yesterday.)