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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsVirginia 'is turning blue, and the Republicans are . . . turning crazy.'
In late June, John Whitbeck, chairman of the Republican party of Virginia since 2015, resigned his post with little explanation. The decision came just weeks after outsider politician Corey Stewart seized the GOP nomination to challenge U.S. senator Tim Kaine in November, and less than a year after the party sustained widespread state-level losses.
For the GOP in Virginia, Whitbecks departure was the latest in a string of troubling events that have called into question whether the state long considered one of the most significant swing states in the country can remain winnable for Republicans during and after the presidency of Donald Trump.
According to political experts, Virginia can be considered either the northernmost southern state or the southernmost northern state. Recent Democratic successes and shifting demographics seem to favor the latter view. The main areas of recent population growth have been Democratic areas Northern Virginia, just outside the District of Columbia; the capital, Richmond; and Henrico County in the Richmond suburbs. Meanwhile, the population has declined in the southwest and in Hampton Roads, the former a Republican stronghold and the latter a battleground. From 2000 to 2010, Virginias Hispanic population, which tends to support Democrats, increased by 92 percent, with two-thirds of that growth concentrated in Northern Virginia.
One experienced Republican activist argues that Virginia is more like a purple state with a roller-coaster pattern than it is a red state turning blue. But Mike Murphy, a longtime GOP political consultant, says: The state is turning blue, and the Republicans are responding to that by turning crazy. That is a cycle that will electorally wipe out the party, at least at the state level.
Tucker Martin, a veteran political strategist with extensive experience in the state, tells National Review that theres a disconnect between what Virginia is and what many Virginia Republicans believe it to be. The Democrats are on home turf now, and Republicans need to branch out and create their own brand, Martin says. The problem is that the Trump era has made it almost impossible to do that.
Over the last few years, these factors have converged to push Virginia from purple to blue. Even as its quickly changing demographics have favored the Left, a stripe of populist Republican politician has arisen on the right, appealing to a core of supporters who have driven the state GOP even further rightward, distancing moderate voters and, in some cases, encouraging Democratic engagement.
https://www.nationalreview.com/magazine/2018/07/30/corey-stewart-virginia-republicans-turning-crazy/
spooky3
(34,407 posts)And getting higher, but the GOP is doubling down with candidates and policies that appeal only to people who are willfully ignorant.
Scurrilous
(38,687 posts)D_Master81
(1,822 posts)the Republicans are getting crazy and stronger at the same time.
AlexSFCA
(6,137 posts)with its high education levels.
RandySF
(58,511 posts)renegade000
(2,301 posts)that the lessons of a darker history are still here for all to observe.
Part of me thinks that is why we don't have much infighting here amongst the left-leaning coalition. Our progressives are happy warriors like Tom Periello. We take nothing for granted. Tyranny was here, and it can return.