Don’t It Make My Red State Blue?

Is Virginia swinging from a red state to a blue state? Despite high-profile victories in campaigns for Governor and U.S. Senate, Democrats aren’t likely to take control of the General Assembly any time soon, writes Jeff Schapiro in the Sunday Times-Dispatch:

Even with John Chichester, Vince Callahan and five other GOP legislators retiring, Democrats may be in for a rude reminder: that Virginia, at least at the General Assembly level, is Republican at heart.

This has nothing to do with the disposition of voters and almost everything to do with redistricting. Current districts, drawn in 2001 by Republicans to protect Republicans, will give the party an important, albeit artificial, advantage in protecting its shrinking majority.

Meanwhile, concludes Schapiro, the retirement of Chichester and Russell Potts suggest that a Republican-ruled state Senate will tilt to the right.

Although I take issue with the biases embedded in Schapiro’s writing, I credit him with being a shrewd observer of Virginia’s political scene. He’s done a good job of anticipating political shifts inside the General Assembly throughout the transportation debate.

Speaking of Schapiro’s biases, can there be any question as to where Schapiro’s sympathies lie throughout the transportation debate? Writing about a post-Chichester General Assembly, he says:

Dead and gone would be the bipartisan coalition that collapsed this year because of the betrayal of Chichester over transportation by such supposed fellow centrists as Tommy Norment, Ken Stolle, Walter Stosch and Marty Williams.

Got that? Norment, Stolle, Stosch and Williams — all four of them — “betrayed” Chichester by backing a compromise with conservatives in the House of Delegates. Chichester didn’t “betray” them by bucking the party and working with Dems to scuttle the GOP compromise.

Norment, Stolle, Stosch and Williams have their centrist credentials called into question — they are only “supposed” centrists — because their plan would provide a mere $1 billion a year or so in tax/fee/penalty increases for transportation, plus borrowing $2.5 billion, while the true moderate Chichester has called in the past for tax increases significantly higher — tax increases that the Times-Dispatch’s own opinion surveys show are not supported by the public.

The interesting question now, to my mind, is the impact of a Republican shift to the right. The atrocious transportation package passed by the General Assembly is the outcome of four years of Chichester-induced stalement. Were it not for that breakdown in the legislative process, GOP legislators would not have passed a panicky, patched-together bill to make it look like they’re “doing something.” As House Speaker Bill Howell grows into his job — even Warren Fiske at the Virginian-Pilot has noticed — the GOP may become more effective as well.

If a more conservative GOP caucus focuses on devising imaginative, low-tax, market-based solutions for Virginia’s problems, Republicans might well receive a ringing endorsement from voters. If they settle for pushing hut-button issues dear to the cultural right but not the rest of the electorate, Democrats can start plotting the eventual take-over of the Assembly.


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5 responses to “Don’t It Make My Red State Blue?”

  1. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous

    Because the districts are larger and less effectively gerrymandered, the Senate is the bellweather — not the House. The GOP jump to 18 in the Senate in 1991 was the harbinger of today’s majorities, and many of today’s Senate leaders were in that class.

    A Republican Party where people like Hawkins, Chichester, Stosch and Hanger are considered insufficiently conservative is a truly frightening prospect — their only sin being to tell the voters if this is what you want, this is what it will cost, and you ought to pay in cash, not borrow the money from your kids. Those four men, two now gone and two fighting for survival, are the very soul of rational conservatism — and a party that doesn’t welcome them does not get my vote anymore.

    Such a right wing party will not hold the Senate this election and will not hold the House much longer. The June primaries will hold the key. The party is carrying enough baggage with the voter anger over Iraq, and yes, that will reach down to this level for some voters.

  2. E M Risse Avatar
    E M Risse

    We do not often endorse Anon posting but Anon 8:41 has a point.

    There is open season on RINO Hunters.

    RINO Hunters will embrace the views of RINOs or they will be a minority party that reflects the percentage of those who believe in the RINO Hunters Code.

    Bloomberg for President in 2008 anyone?

    EMR

  3. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous

    Bloomberg? Let’s not overdo it…

  4. Groveton Avatar

    Demographics favor the Democrats.

    The growth of urban and urbanizing areas in Virginia is changing the state’s demographics.

    The voters in the urban and urbanizing areas are getting more liberal with each election.

    Meanwhile, the Republicans seem obsessed with having no message, no vision and no leadership. The Democrats may not be much better but they have demographics on their side. They also, for now, have a population largely dissatisfied with the current President and that will “reach down” to state elections to some extent.

    Regarding the upcoming Presidential election – my very preliminary thinking is:

    1. I can’t bring myself to vote for New Yorkers or Bostonians. Those are nice places and the people who live there are fine folks. But politically they are on a very different wavelength from what the rest of the country and a very different wavelength from me. So, I eliminate Romney, Bloomberg, Guiliani and Clinton.

    2. McCain will be too old. 73 on Inaguration Day just seems like a bad idea.

    3. Edwards lost me when he declared that his 28,000 sq ft house was “carbon neutral” – whatever that exactly means.

    4. Jim Gilmore is, has been and always will be a joke as a Presidential candidate. Typical of the hallucinations suffered by most of Virginia’s elected officials and former officials. Warner was the only guy who ever had a prayer and he decided not to run.

    And that leaves ….

    Barack Obama

    At least with him – you seem to get what you see. And that’s an improvement over the rest of the crowd (IMHO).

  5. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous

    Forget Red and Blue, Virginia is slowly but surely turning Green.

    As Virginia ages, the environment and health care will become increasingly important. Frankly the Rad and Blue are all over the place when it cames to those issues. Green is where its at.

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