Heraldnet.com
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 8, 2009 6:10 pm
LocalNorthwestNation & WorldPoliticsSpecial ReportsPhotosColumnistsMultimedia 
Blog
Jerry Cornfield
Guv hires a new spokesman
Your town news
Kristi O'Harran
Columnist Kristi O'Harran writes about people in Snohomish County.
•Latest: Jail inmates’ meal complaint omits a crucial fact
Latest gallery

12-8 the day in pictures
December 8. 2009 (6 photos)
[More Herald photos]
 
WEEK IN REVIEW
Monday


Pearl Harbor's voices of the past
Taxes needed to close state's growing deficit?
Grant could help county's residents all be heal...
Sunday


Swine flu lingers, making traditional flu seaso...
Two vie to serve as Snohomish County prosecutor
Families get an early gift: free Christmas trees
Saturday


Gift charity draws Snohomish County families in...
Fears over commercial air service at Paine Fiel...
Donated safe gives Marysville museum a mystery
Friday


From behind bars, pal tells Colton Harris-Moore...
Commercial airlines would cause few problems at...
Fund set up to benefit children of couple kille...
Thursday


5 die of swine flu in Snohomish County
Red Cross honors acts of heroism, many by ordin...
Barista clothing rules delayed by County Council
Wednesday


Father gets 13 years in 6-year-old's fatal shoo...
‘One bad choice' blamed in death of 4 fri...
Reps. Larsen, Inslee split on Obama's plans for...
Tuesday


Lynnwood swimmer turns therapy into competitive...
Highway 9 crash is worst alcohol-related accide...
Crash victim warned his students against DUI
 

ADVERTISEMENT

Nation & World   Print This Article  Email This Page  Subscribe Now! facebook digg reddit del.icio.us fark stumble

Associated Press  (click to enlarge)
Republican gubernatorial candidate Bob McDonnell waves to supporters at his polling place in Glen Allen, Va., today.
 
ADVERTISEMENT

 
 
CONTACT THE HERALD
Do you have a news tip?
newstips@heraldnet.com | 425.339.3400
 
Published: Tuesday, November 3, 2009

McDonnell wins Virginia governorship for GOP

WASHINGTON — Virginians elected Republican Robert McDonnell the Commonwealth’s 71st governor today, halting a decade of Democratic advances in the critical swing state.

The state’s former attorney general defeated Democratic state Sen. Creigh Deeds with a promise to create jobs in the down economy and fix the state’s clogged roadways without a tax increase.

McDonnell, 55, boosted by a political mood shift that has left many voters cool to Democrats, prevailed with a disciplined economic message and a campaign that steered clear of the hot-button social issues that in recent elections had alienated voters in northern Virginia and other urban centers. The Republican also benefited from a lackluster Democratic opponent voters came to know in good part from a video clip in which he waffled and stammered when asked if he would raise taxes.

Deeds, 51, failed to recreate the voting coalition that last year helped Barack Obama become the first Democratic presidential candidate to capture Virginia in more than four decades. Many of the black and young voters who had helped send two Democrats in a row to the governor’s mansion and two Democrats to the U.S. Senate stayed home Tuesday. In the campaign’s final days, Deeds made an explicit appeal to Obama voters that a vote for him was a vote in support of the president. But earlier he had distanced himself from Obama’s agenda, especially on health and energy policy.

McDonnell’s lead came as he dominated Deeds among independent voters.

McDonnell inherits a state government burdened by a severe budget crisis and a transportation network so underfunded that Virginia will soon lack the matching funds necessary to secure federal dollars for road building.

From the start, McDonnell had history on his side: Since 1977, no party that has won the White House has gone on to capture Virginia’s governorship the next year.

McDonnell’s campaign — supported, like Deeds’, with millions of dollars from his national party — was on the defensive for only a few weeks, starting with the publication in August of a Washington Post report detailing a master’s degree thesis the candidate wrote in 1989 at what is now Regent University in Virginia Beach. In the thesis, written at the Christian-oriented school founded by televangelist Pat Robertson, McDonnell, then 34, outlined an action plan for strengthening the traditional family and wrote that working women were detrimental to the family.

Deeds seized on the thesis, making it the centerpiece of an advertising campaign designed to convince voters that McDonnell was a right-wing extremist who had undergone a disingenuous campaign-year makeover.

The strategy appeared to work for a time, as polls tightened. But McDonnell fought back with a series of TV spots featuring supportive testimonials from his daughter, an Army veteran who served in Iraq, and a gallery of professional women who had worked for him in the attorney general’s office. Increasingly, voters said they saw Deeds’ campaign as a largely negative one that failed to define his own vision for the state.

McDonnell campaigned on his opposition to federal policies. He criticized the Democratic-led effort to change the nation’s health care system and sided with southwest Virginians who believe that proposed federal legislation designed to curb greenhouse gases would cost jobs in the coalfields of that region.

The Republican also relentlessly attacked Deeds over the Democrat’s willingness to raise taxes for transportation improvements. A key turning point in the campaign came in September, when Deeds was caught on camera flailing when swarmed by reporters asking whether he would raise taxes to pay for road improvements.

The moment, immediately cut into TV ads aired repeatedly by McDonnell and the Republican Governors Association, highlighted Deeds’ stammering speaking style, caught him snapping at a reporter and made him appear indecisive on the critical issues of taxes and transportation.

READER COMMENTS
Be the first to comment.
You must be a registered user and verify your e-mail address to post comments to blogs or articles on HeraldNet.

To register, click here. To read other terms and conditions, click hereLog out

1. Man arrested in fatal shooting of brother
2. Highway 9 crash victims memorialized
3. Taxes needed to close state's growing deficit?
4. Confrontation led to elderly man's death, police say
5. Fire sends shoppers fleeing JC Penney at Alderwood
6. Snohomish salon owner has a venture with style
7. Pearl Harbor's voices of the past
8. Vikings’ Henderson breaks leg against Cardinals
9. Boeing shares soar as 787 first flight draws near
10. New law aims to deny some felons bail
Enterprise Newspaper Snohomish County Business Journal
Wildcats fall to familar foe in semis
‘Nutcracker' times three
Road warrior
Mavericks reloading
Holiday Lightings & Santa Sightings
Cities prepare for winter blast repeat
Wolfpack duo takes last shot at state tourney
This Weekend in Your Town
Tips for the stormy season
The Enterprise Online Newspaper


$2.99 Chili Dog
$3.99 Fish Burger

Always Free
Transmission Diagnostic

25% off Bath & Groom
New Customers

Holiday Specials
up to 25% off!

FREE 6 lb. Pad w/
40yd Carpet Purchase

20% Off Re-Upholstery
or Custom Furniture!

$5 Off
Stylecut

$95 Dryer Vent Cleaning!
$99 Whole House Duct Cleaning!

Special Rebate Offers!
Plus Additional 30% OFF!

Holiday Getaway
$99 dbl Occupancy

Over 1 Million Lights
Lights of Christmas

Buy 1 Dinner Entree
Get 2nd 50% Off

75% OFF
Many Items. Hurry!

Oil - Snohomish County
Low Prices - Fill Now!

20% Off Dinner
Up to $75 Value!

15% Off
All Repairs!

Nutcracker
Family Packs Available

Buy 1 Get 1 FREE
Lube Oil Filter

$2 OFF
at Box Office

Nutcracker
Family Packs Available
Pacific Northwest Ballet
TODAY'S TOP JOBS
 View All Top Jobs 
Top Cars
Top Homes

ADVERTISEMENT