Winners and Losers: 2022 Mid-Terms Edition

by Shaun KenneyThe first wall to fall was pushed over in 1980 in the Polish shipyards. Later, other symbolic walls came down, and the Germans, of course, tore down the literal wall in Berlin. The fall of the Berlin Wall makes for nice pictures. But it all started in the Gdansk shipyards.

— Lech Walesa on the Fall of the Berlin Wall (2009)

First and foremost, today is the anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall. I remember watching this on live television as reporters were at first incredulous that it was even happening followed up with reports that Berliners — East and West — were swarming the wall and using hammers to pry it apart.

The impossible now seemed possible. Just two years later, the Soviet Union was mere weeks from moving from memory to history — and on Christmas Day in 1991 of all days.


So much for predictions of a red wave, eh?

The RCP projections for a R+2.5 generic ballot did not produce the three point “shy Tory” bounce many were expecting. Instead, the generic ballot may have been a few points shy of the RCP projections themselves (the pollsters working for Politico had the numbers as high as D+5 — which would have been not just historic but unparalleled).

There is some effort today in Virginia to argue that the reaction against both Hung Cao in VA-10 and Yesli Vega in VA-07 can only be explained by Democratic racism against minority candidates and White Republicans who refused to support either — which is specious nonsense. VA-07 had over $30 million spent in that race, whereas Cao came within a razor’s edge of beating an entrenched Democrat. If a few more resources had been devoted to Cao, maybe the result in VA-10 would have been different?

The fact of the matter is that the red wave simply wasn’t there. In states where mainstream conservative candidates ran — DeSantis, Abbot, Kemp — Republicans had a Roman triumph of an evening. Yet in states where more populist candidates won their primaries, the results were catastrophic in Pennsylvania and Georgia.

The difference between Kemp’s gubernatorial bid and Walker’s Senate bid? Eight points.

WINNERS

DeSantis, Kemp and Abbott
— Republicans who ran conservatives rather than populists won by huge margins against well-funded Democratic opposition, indicating that the voting public in all three states are more than prepared to vote for conservatives, but will go out of their way to punish Trump-style populists.

Dobbs v. Jackson and a post-Roe America — In the states that passed some of the most restrictive measures against abortion? Republicans didn’t just carry the day, but carried it in numbers. Nowhere in America was abortion a deciding factor, and despite the millions spent to defend the practice, most Americans find the practice of leaving a baby to die on a cookie tray in a botched abortion abhorrent. Go figure, right?

Representative-elect Jen Kiggans (VA-02) — So she didn’t win by 13 points… but if you figure a built-in R+2.5 during the Youngkin race in 2021, it probably means we were closer to even in the generic ballot. Nevertheless, Kiggans ran a picture-perfect campaign from start to finish and it showed.

Representative Bob Good (VA-05) — One almost hesitates to put Good in the winner’s column any more than we might put Cline or Griffith in a winner’s column. After all, it has to be a contest first, right? Good easily dispatched his Democratic opposition in just about every area of VA-05 except Albemarle County and Charlottesville. More notable for local races, you now have a new theoretical maximum for taking back local boards of supervisors and (perhaps more importantly) recalcitrant school boards. . .

Hung Cao (VA-10) — There’s no way Cao should have even come close in this race. If Cao had a fraction of the cash being spent in VA-07? Either way, if conventional wisdom is that you need to run twice in order to bump off an incumbent, I look forward to a victorious run in 2024.

Former Governor Jim Gilmore (R) — Not only is the former governor holding feet to the fire in Washington on Ukraine, but Gilmore actively crisscrossed the Commonwealth for candidates across the board. As one of the few governors able to unite both the conservative and populist constituencies of the GOP, that deserves both appreciation and notice.

Former Governor George Allen (R) — If you’re not following Allen’s exploits across Virginia and elsewhere, do so. Talk about a guy who just loves Virginia.

Yard signs — Consultants hate yard signs because they are damn near expensive and don’t vote (and worse, don’t line the pockets of consultants). Voters love yard signs because they remind your neighbors that it is OK to be a Republican in an institutional environment (media, academia, public education, entertainment, etc.) that loathes anything that isn’t Democracy! (TM) and all that nonsense. Something to be said for the bandwagon effect. . .

Rep. Abigail Spanberger (D) — Notice how she won — she unloaded the campaign war chest early trying to define Vega before she could define herself, then pivoted towards the center. Challengers require two things to bump off an incumbent: (1) a reason to hire the challenger and (2) a reason to fire the incumbent. Vega’s consultants should have seen this coming from a mile away and protected their candidate accordingly. . . and didn’t, which quite frankly drives me up a damn wall. Spanberger is most likely the lead Democratic candidate for governor in 2025, so keep tabs on this one in a district where Republicans can (and should) challenge her every year.

PUSH

PWC Supervisor Yesli Vega (VA-07) — As a candidate, person, and leader, Republicans really could not have asked for a better soul than Yesli Vega to lead in VA-07. Her resume is outstanding, her record in PWC stellar, and her faith genuine. Republicans picked the right candidate to represent them in the PWC and Fredericksburg area, and the energy was genuine and real.

Vega could have won and by rights should have won in a district that had turned into a national race. The problem was that her consultants allowed Spanberger to define Vega early, thus creating the problem of introducing herself to the district under fire. The energy for Vega was clearly there, but the same Axiom Strategies who won lazy in 2021 with Youngkin ran lazy in 2022 for Vega — and this time there was no rural Virginia to cover up the lackadaisical, rookie effort.

Yesli deserved better from her consultants. The good news is that she has plenty more to offer Virginia politics and will hopefully consider another stab at things in 2024 — with superior advisors who actually win.

The Republican Party of Virginia (RPV) — Once again, we are parachuting paid staffers from out of state to tell local volunteers who work — for free — how to do their jobs. Perhaps the problem is intractable, but the grumbling is back again. Nevertheless, the improvement from the previous era is noticeable. Let’s hope that keeps going with every turn of the wheel.

Virginia House and Senate Republicans — It should be dawning on just about everyone now that the 2023 House and Senate races will be nationalized referenda on Trump — especially if the former president announces on 15 November as speculated (which I doubt if for no other reason than he would have to file with the FEC, and who wants that headache). If Georgia is any indicator, an eight point impact. Needless to say though, if Youngkin is going to have any chance at passing his Day One or Day Two agenda, Republicans need the State Senate — this is not optional if we want to roll back the Northam era.

LOSERS

Governor Glenn Youngkin (R) — Why are we campaigning outside of Virginia (ostensibly for POTUS) when we can’t even get our own candidates across the finish line inside Virginia? The Old Dominion has been viewed as a springboard to higher office by most occupants of the Governor’s Mansion. There’s a job to do here, Your Excellency. . .

Jeff Roe and Axiom Strategies — Every 10 years or so, some new flash-in-the-pan consultant storms onto the scene in Virginia with the intention of telling the folks who have been here how the game is really played. Until they start playing the game. . . and drop winnable races.

Democrats on Twitter — Notice how quiet it is?

Virginia’s legacy media outlets — The pretense of objectivity now gone, it will be difficult if not impossible for them to re-establish where just 20 years ago they might have had a semblance of being a public square, but today merely reduced organs of the political left. Damn shame, because Virginia’s newspapers used to be about a lot more than just the AP wire and repeating worn talking points. Until there is more balance in their op-ed pages, expect the trend of Republicans simply refusing to talk to legacy media outlets to continue in the digital age.

Social media influencing — Not sure that either the Democrats or Republicans really leveraged social media apart from YouTube advertising. Once upon a time, there were recommendations to spend at least 5-10% of a campaign budget online. Yet given the way Facebook and Twitter have handled themselves in recent months, why would any campaign risk being throttled?

Something to consider as well. If we are the sort who counts their chickens before they are hatched? The elections may have disappointed.

Yet in the grander scheme of things, did Republicans make advances? Are we even slightly better off than we were last week? The answer to that is an overwhelming yes in places where we did gain ground — VA-02, Florida, Georgia, Texas.

Overall, Republicans have a clearer sense of what it will take to beat the Democrats in 2024. Meanwhile, the places where Democrats made “gains” are in states that are effectively in decline — California, New York, Illinois — whereas the states where Republicans are faring well — Georgia, Florida, Texas — are states that are growing.

Long term? The future is brighter than it appears. Short term? We have actual work to do if Virginia is going to be a part of that brighter future.

ONE MORE THING…

Keep your eyes on this story where Democrats spent millions of dollars pushing weaker candidates against conservatives in key races:

Democratic groups spent at least $51.5 million in Republican primaries this year, according to a Reuters tally. But they didn’t always get the result they wanted: in races in Colorado, Nevada, California and Virginia, the candidate they were supporting did not win the primary.

So much for interfering in our elections. Yet it does go to show how — since 2014 in primary races in Virginia — Democrats have shown a proclivity for pushing weaker candidates they believe they can crush in general elections.

The Democrats seem rather pleased with their investment.

Shaun Kenney is the Senior Editor for The Republican Standard. This article has been republished with permission from The Republican Standard.


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72 responses to “Winners and Losers: 2022 Mid-Terms Edition”

  1. LarrytheG Avatar

    Vega lost in her OWN county – where she was a supervisor and she lost so BIG that it overcame Spanbergers losses in all the other counties save Fredericksburg.

    https://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/5e381dc625872a194702847c3cca5bde4ec4adc52847a10aeecb1b08547919d5.jpg

    1. Virginia Gentleman Avatar
      Virginia Gentleman

      No way Vega should be a “Push”. And as long as the RNC continues to think that Gilmore and Allen are “winners” from this election, I like the Dems chances in 2023.

      1. LarrytheG Avatar

        This blog is proof positive of the LA LA LAnd that the GOp does live in these days.

        It makes no never mind as to the why and how the GOP performed this way…. nope… it’s ONWARD! geeze

  2. Virginia Gentleman Avatar
    Virginia Gentleman

    The Democrats are quiet on social media because they are not aholes – trust me there is a lot of really happy Democrats in America right now. With inflation, Biden’s popularity, and the historical loses that come in mid term elections, the Dems are just watching the Republicans eating their their own for miserable election results. When that happens, the worse thing the Dems could do is get in the way.

    1. LarrytheG Avatar

      100% coooorrrrect!

  3. Nancy Naive Avatar
    Nancy Naive

    Greatest pork chop tenderizer ever. Brine a +1″ chop (bone off) for 3 hours at room temperature. Then take a heavy mil ziplock bag and an old rag. Put the chop in the bag, evacuate air, and wrap in the rag. Now, take a floor jack, and raise one front tire about 3″ off the ground. Wipe the tread on the bottom and place the chop….

  4. Stephen Haner Avatar
    Stephen Haner

    Your comment on 2023 and the Virginia legislative races should have led the pack. And first test out of the box will be picking a replacement for Kiggins to serve in the ’23 session. That will not be a cakewalk. I agree the impact of the abortion issue is often overstated, but it was a strong turnout booster for Democrats. I was stunned by the turnout in my Henrico precinct given the totally sleepy Wittman-Jones race. The Dems turned out for something other than that (although many of them did believe Spanberger was still on our ballot, incorrectly.)

    1. James Wyatt Whitehead Avatar
      James Wyatt Whitehead

      Do you think rank choice primaries hurt or helped this time around?

    2. James McCarthy Avatar
      James McCarthy

      You tell ‘em, Steve.

    3. Nancy Naive Avatar
      Nancy Naive

      Take our rights, lose your job. If it weren’t for gerrymandering…

  5. James McCarthy Avatar
    James McCarthy

    LOL!! CA, IL, and NY are “in decline”? NY’s new gov is the first woman to achieve that office while crushing a GOP election denier and voter to reject AZ and PA electoral results. While FL can be characterized as a “gain” the results in GA are not a gain. TX continues to purple. The Red Wave died with WINRED shoveling money to Trump and his lawyers. GOP race to the bottom continues and will worsen as it attempts governance in Congress. Optimism can cause myopia if not blindness.

    1. Nancy Naive Avatar
      Nancy Naive

      The age-race demographic the GOP has is 60+ white. They were in the minority in all others.

      1. LarrytheG Avatar

        Well, they still feel they can win with voter suppression although now days they call it election integrity!

        😉

        1. Merchantseamen Avatar
          Merchantseamen

          “they can win with voter suppression”
          So…you are an admitted election denier? Really?

          1. LarrytheG Avatar

            an observer of a lot of documented history as well as modern day conservatives opposed to anything but in person voting on day of election.

            that’s reality.

    2. The Republicans in Texas keep winning because voting for Republicans is the only way to keep Mexican-Americans from taking over the state government. In Georgia, the Democratic Party is the defacto black party. Thus it is either vote for Kemp or vote for the black party.

      1. Matt Adams Avatar

        You should probably research things before you state them, bub.

        “Republican Mayra Flores rejected from all-Democratic Hispanic caucus”

        https://www.texastribune.org/2022/10/26/mayra-flores-congressional-hispanic-caucus/

        1. there is a history of that happening. J.C. Watts when he was in Congress was not allowed to be a member of the Congressional Black Caucus.

          1. Matt Adams Avatar

            So you didn’t read the article and are okay with bigotry. Cool story at least that’s in the open.

            I’ll take that as your admission you made a false statement and we can move on.

          2. Why would a group of Democrats want a trouble maker who would be nothing but a disruption during any meeting. Adding her to the group means every email or text would be immediately sent to various Republican staffers and NGOs.

          3. Matt Adams Avatar

            “Teddy007 a few seconds ago
            Why would a group of Democrats want a trouble maker who would be nothing but a disruption during any meeting. Adding her to the group means every email or text would be immediately sent to various Republican staffers and NGOs.”

            It’s not a caucus based upon party afflation, it’s based upon ethnicity/race (just like the CBC). Considering she’s the only Mexican-American member of the Texas Congress (the very thing you said Republicans were fighting against) kinda blows up your statement. Oh and your statement is again, also bigoted. At least we know you’re a full on racist pr*ck now, though so you’ve got that going for you.

          4. There are other mexican americans who are Republicans from TExas in Congress. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tony_Gonzales who took over the district that Will Hurd moved from the blue column to the red column. Of course, Will Hurd was not a member of the Congressional Black Caucus. And having a trouble maker (who was not re-elected) makes the caucus not functional.

          5. Matt Adams Avatar

            I thoroughly enjoy you assuming people are “Mexican-Americans” because they have a Hispanic name. Not at all racist (it is).

            “And having a trouble maker (who was not re-elected) makes the caucus not functional.”

            Again, another bigoted statement. You can’t seem to help yourself.

          6. The last name is what makes one eligible for affirmative action and 8a government set asides. i do not make the rules. And what is bigoted about pointing out that having a MAGA Trumpist Republican on a committee for and by Democrats is pointless. it is the same play that homosexuals students do in college when they try to join a student religious group so that they can disrupt it.

          7. Matt Adams Avatar

            “The last name is what makes one eligible for affirmative action and 8a government set asides.”

            That’s not the point you made, you made a specific claim about “Mexican-Americans” and assume anyone with a surname that remotely Hispanic is “Mexican”. Much like I’d surmise you think they like the term latinx, which they don’t.

            “blindly devoted to some creed, opinion, or practice”

            You should probably use a dictionary more often.

            Congressional committee’s are bi-partisan and caucuses are without party.

            “it is the same play that homosexuals students do in college when they try to join a student religious group so that they can disrupt it.”

            Oh so now you’re a homophobe too, man clearly you in a party of tolerance.

          8. That Congressman is from San Antonio. The chance of him being mexican-American is almost 100%. And please stop with the word games, It does not make one look clever.

          9. Matt Adams Avatar

            “Teddy007 7 minutes ago
            That Congressman is from San Antonio. The chance of him being (sic) mexican-American is almost 100%. And please stop with the word games, It does not make one look clever.”

            Umm I know lots of people from San Antonio that aren’t “Mexican-American”, so that statement isn’t remotely true. It’s just more bigotry from you.

            What word games would those be? The one’s where when confronted with your statements (which are overtly bigoted) and are called out for that behavior?

          10. Virginia Gentleman Avatar
            Virginia Gentleman

            No — I think it is the words that have more than one syllable.

          11. Matt Adams Avatar

            Porque?

          12. Merchantseamen Avatar
            Merchantseamen

            Trump apparently lives rent free in your head along with many others. LOL

  6. Eric the half a troll Avatar
    Eric the half a troll

    “Cao came within a razor’s edge of beating an entrenched Democrat”

    Sorry but 6 points in the new VA-10 during a midterm with an unpopular Dem in the Whitehouse (according to Republicans) is not even close. Wexton won handedly – it will be worse during a presidential election. Nice spin… but not…

    1. Cao was a horrible candidate. He had zero charisma and came off on TV as a nutcase.

      1. DJRippert Avatar

        He did run a very questionable set of TV commercials.

        1. LarrytheG Avatar

          He demonstrated the clueless GOP “thinking” these days!

        2. Eric the half a troll Avatar
          Eric the half a troll

          Between the gun sight campaign sign and his kickboxing ad, he was feeding his violence-obsessed base is all. I don’t think the rush hour traffic jam his supporters created Monday night at 7 and 9 helped him very much, btw…

          1. LarrytheG Avatar

            Yes, and why would you do that kind of appeal in a district with a lot of Dems and Independents that you need because your base is too small to win just with it?

        3. They were horrible. And I never saw him try to get any earned media outside of the conservative media.

          1. LarrytheG Avatar

            re: “earned media”.

            interesting term

            seems like Youngkin tended that way also …. mostly conservative media.

            Ditto Santorum….

            and others….

          2. Earned media means media that one does not have to pay for. Trump was the master of it in 2016 since most everyone would bring him on live under his terms because they thought he was a joke.

  7. Donald Smith Avatar
    Donald Smith

    Nicely done. On to 2024. Hopefully Vega and Cao will run again.

    1. Nancy Naive Avatar
      Nancy Naive

      Yes. Please do put them up again.

      1. LarrytheG Avatar

        Yep. the hard right of the GOP can do wonders for the Democrats – more! more!

        The religious right, pro-lifers and Donald Trump still decides who runs – like these two.

  8. Nancy Naive Avatar
    Nancy Naive

    New word: trumping — noun — to be on the losing side of a Pyrrhic victory. “Those at the Alamo sure took a trumping from the Mexican Army.”

    1. DJRippert Avatar

      New word: bidening — noun — to idiotically try to extrapolate a minor victory into a major win. “Antonio López de Santa Anna was bidening when he flipped the bird toward Texas after winning the Battle of the Alamo.”

      1. LarrytheG Avatar

        who you going to believe?

        Biden or the Deniers?

    2. LarrytheG Avatar

      new phrase: ride or die Trumpers….

  9. Warmac9999 Avatar

    Vote fraud issues are still the 800lb gorilla in the room. Funny, everybody is searching for explanations and playing deaf, dumb and blind when it comes to the prospect that vote fraud is still very much in play in democrat cities and states. The integrity of the vote is still a big issue and has not been effectively addressed – and in some cases deliberately so.

    1. LarrytheG Avatar

      sez Sidney Powell, Rudy Giuliani, Michael Lindell but no judge who asked them provide evidence…..

      1. Warmac9999 Avatar

        Drop and roll in Georgia senate election. Slow walking in Arizona and Nevada. Double drop and roll in Michigan.

        1. LarrytheG Avatar

          real evidence a Judge will see?

  10. energyNOW_Fan Avatar
    energyNOW_Fan

    Ban plastic yard signs?
    NoVA democrats assigning highest priority to banning plastic bags including yard waste bags (when we really need them). Makes no sense as we have waste-to-energy plants. According to one supervisor, plastic bags for lawn debris results in microplastics which are wreaking havoc with human health. Really? How about plastic voter signs?

  11. Loser – made up issues like teaching CRT in K-12. It’s a figment of the right’s imagination, not a campaign issue.

    1. Nancy Naive Avatar
      Nancy Naive

      The Republicans have issues. Lots and lots of issues. No solutions.

  12. The Democrats won in Michigan to include winning control of the state senate because of abortion (and nut case Trumpist). Democrats won all of the state wide offices in Wisconsin and abortion was a driving force. The Republicans have picked up one governorship (Nevada) while losing two. Republicans running for governor trying to be extreme social warriors like Mastriano and Cox lost in routs.

    1. Warmac9999 Avatar

      Drop and roll was involved in the Michigan Governor election. There were 2 specific drops for Whitmer while the red line was pretty much constant.

      1. You need to expand on this by using non-jargon language that would be clear to everyone.

        1. Warmac9999 Avatar

          Drop is a sudden large infusion of votes for one candidate. This implies a collection of ballots being dumped dump not sequential personal vote one at a time. Roll is a mechanism where one candidate always leads by the same percentage which is not going to happen unless computer reprogramming is involved. These are easy to see – gateway pundit has a lead story on this.

          1. But the ballots have votes for several different offices. Do all of those dropped ballots have the same votes for all offices. And would a roll also create the same percentage for all races or just once race. Remember, the numbers have to balance for all elections. People keep talking about ballots as if there is only one race in the election. In some states, people could be voting in dozens of elections.

          2. Warmac9999 Avatar

            If you are sophisticated enough to coordinate these things, you can certainly process each item separately. There may be a million voters but only a dozen issues on a ballot. My point is you could focus on electing warnock and, at the same time, discard abrams.

          3. Makes no sense to anyone other than a conspiracy truther type.

          4. LarrytheG Avatar

            This is true wackadoodle IMO.

            Think about just how many people would have to be involved to pull something like that off – yet they “believe”.

            It’s nutso and they are in the GOP tent. They have candidates running for office on this idea.

          5. AS the joke goes, anyone who has worked in government in DC or with the associated NGOs in DC knows that on one is that organized to pull off such a conspiracy. People who believe in conspiracy read/ watch too much bad fiction where everything in DC or politics is done by three people.

          6. Warmac9999 Avatar

            I assume you work with data. However, if not then there is no way to convince you. Frankly, I hope I am wrong but it is quite curious to see these sudden drops of votes that overwhelmingly favor one candidate and always a democrat. When you explain that then get back to me.

          7. The Red Mirage has been discussed constantly for the last two years. If one party refuses to vote by mail or vote early (in a state controlled by Republicans) then changes will happen. 538 is currenting giving Masto a 75% chance of winning based upon the outstanding ballots and that almost all of them come from Clark County that votes more than 55% for Democrats. Nitpicking estimates and early data proves nothing. Does one really believe that all of this ballot counting is being done without anyone watching?

          8. Warmac9999 Avatar

            The problem is that a few bad guys can do things out of sight. I think in Nevada they just suddenly discovered a ballot box – how does this happen happen when everyone is watching. How are ballots found in car trunks, closets. How are people prevented from watching when ballots are being counted – see Detroit. Our elections can no longer be trusted – and this goes back to Kennedy and mayor Daley of Chicago.

  13. LarrytheG Avatar

    Pretty sad when you have to listen to the Dems to get the actual truth on how the GOP actually did perform and why! Some call it spin. I call it denial which is becoming endemic to the GOP on a range of issues.

    It’s a miracle they are as competitive as they are in some races – certainly no thanks to the hard-right ideologues, Trumpers, “alternative facts”/skeptics crowd and outright conspiracy mongers.

    The Dems cannot hold a candle to the Width and Breadth of the GOP in moderate GOP to rabid far right.

    Climate deniers. Covid Deniers. 2020 election deniers and now 2022 GOP candidate deniers! geeze!

    1. Stephen Haner Avatar
      Stephen Haner

      Am I a Dem? Funny, you lefties agreed with my analysis. I’m hearing from a lot of Republicans that they hope Trump just fades into the background (Justice Department won’t make that easy, of course, and it is by design.) Amazing that two years in, the folks attacking the election process still don’t understand they are sending a message to their own voters not to show up!!! How freaking stupid is that?

      1. LarrytheG Avatar

        You are not a Dem but you ARE a CINO/RINO to much of the present-day GOP. No?

        Yes, not a denier on most of the issues sans climate!

        The folks that think Trump is done though are deniers IMO. Wishful thinking that the GOP won’t be “officially” split.

      2. Nancy Naive Avatar
        Nancy Naive

        Keeping Trump above the law keeps the Republicans under his thumb. So maybe youse guys need to do something about that, eh?

        BTW, the only reason that we know Trump is under investigation is because he keeps filing court motions and talking to the press. DoJ was quieter than a mouse until they had to use a warrant.

  14. Eric the half a troll Avatar
    Eric the half a troll

    “DeSantis, Kemp and Abbott — Republicans who ran conservatives rather than populists won by huge margins…”

    Only in Florida, Georgia, and Texas…. welcome to the new (old) south…. Laura Kelly is still governor of Kansas, btw… isn’t that where the liberals crushed that abortion ban as well…🤔

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