Thursday, April 08, 2021

On Politics: Can Anyone Take On Terry McAuliffe in Virginia?

The governor's race there is shaping up as a case study in the complex politics of race and power.
Gov. Ralph Northam, left, and Terry McAuliffe.Steve Helber/Associated Press

Two years ago, when a racist blackface picture emerged from the 1980s that appeared to include Gov. Ralph Northam of Virginia, the blowback was swift and severe. There were mounting calls for his resignation.

But in the end, polls showed that most voters said he shouldn't step down — and some of his most unwavering support came from Virginia's Black voters. He weathered the scandal, and he's still on the job.

There are now exactly two months until the Democratic primary election that will most likely determine Northam's successor, as the state has become decidedly blue (the Democratic candidate has won all 13 statewide elections there since 2012). And once again, Virginia is shaping up to be a case study in the complexities around the politics of race and power.

Northam, who continues to enjoy widespread approval, particularly from Black voters, today endorsed Terry McAuliffe, a former Virginia governor and one of the two white candidates in a five-person Democratic field. McAuliffe directly preceded Northam in the governor's mansion and now wants to succeed him, too.

In a statement, Northam portrayed McAuliffe as a strong steward of the economy during his four years in charge. "It's critical that our next governor has the plans and experience to continue the fight to rebuild Virginia into a stronger, more equitable future," he said. "That's why I am so proud to support Terry McAuliffe to be our next governor."

A former banking executive, prolific Democratic fund-raiser and onetime chair of the Democratic National Committee, McAuliffe was prevented from running for re-election in 2017 because Virginia does not allow its governor to serve consecutive terms.

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There's been scant polling in this race, but McAuliffe is regarded as a clear front-runner, partly because of his formidable connections and résumé, and partly because his challengers have similarities — albeit some superficial — that could split their support. Aside from Lee Carter, a 33-year-old Marine veteran and member of the House of Delegates, the three other candidates — Jennifer McClellan, Jennifer Carroll Foy and Justin Fairfax — are Black, younger than McAuliffe and generally to his left.

Like Northam four years ago on the crooked road of the Virginia campaign trail, and Joe Biden last year in the presidential race, McAuliffe has been deliberate about outflanking his less-established Black opponents. He has emphasized his ties to the Black elite in Virginia politics, and from the day he announced his candidacy he has ensconced himself in endorsements from Black officials.

But on Tuesday, in a televised debate, McAuliffe faced attacks from a unified team of rivals, and things boiled over when Fairfax, the state's lieutenant governor, criticized him for calling in 2019 for Fairfax's resignation. As Northam was engulfed in his own scandal, two women publicly accused Fairfax of sexual assault. Fairfax denied the allegations and, like the governor, managed to remain in office, mostly by just moving on.

At the debate Fairfax went all the way after McAuliffe, reminding voters of the long and disgraceful history in America of false accusations and violence by white people toward Black men.

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"He treated me like George Floyd, he treated me like Emmett Till — no due process, immediately assumed my guilt," Fairfax said. "I have a son and I have a daughter, and I don't want my daughter to be assaulted; I don't want my son to be falsely accused. And this is the real world that we live in. And so we need to speak truth to power, and we need to be very clear about how that impacts people's lives."

But even before that, Fairfax had partly undercut his own argument by pointing out that it wasn't just McAuliffe: All of his Democratic rivals onstage had called for him to resign in 2019.

Besides, as the Times reporter Astead Herndon observed on Twitter, "'what happened to me is like what happened to George Floyd and Emmett Till' is not a thing a living person can say."

McClellan, a state senator, picked up on the theme of racial justice but went after McAuliffe on substantive policy grounds. She said he had underfunded the state's parole system as governor, and called him a latecomer to the movement for justice reform.

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McAuliffe pushed back by pointing to his order restoring voting rights to more than 200,000 felons in 2016, and said he supported equipping all police officers in the state with body cameras — two major goals of civil rights advocates.

For now, Fairfax has been unable to define his candidacy aside from the allegations against him, leading some close observers to anticipate that the next few weeks will be a face-off between McClellan and Carroll Foy, a former state delegate. If one emerges as the clear alternative to McAuliffe, it would most likely be because she persuaded enough major funders to come out of the woodwork to back her campaign and provide much-needed advertising dollars.

As one Democratic insider in Virginia put it to me in a phone chat today: "McClellan has a track record to sell. Carroll Foy has a track record and an approach to sell. But if they're only selling it on Twitter, then Terry McAuliffe will be the nominee."

Can Brian Kemp use Georgia's voting law to escape Trump's wrath?

By Lisa Lerer and Reid J. Epstein

Gov. Brian Kemp of Georgia became an outcast in his own party after infuriating former President Donald Trump by resisting his demands to overturn the state's election results. He spent weeks fending off attacks from fellow Republicans and right-wing media, and Trump vowed to retaliate by sending a hard-right loyalist to oppose him in the primary next year.

But the sweeping new voting bill Kemp signed two weeks ago has provided him a lifeline. The bill severely curtails the ability to vote in Georgia, particularly for people of color. Kemp has seized on it as a political opportunity, defending the law as one that expands voting access, condemning those who criticize it and conflating the criticism with so-called cancel culture.

It's an argument he believes may restore him to the good graces of Georgia Republicans after being publicly derided by Trump, a predicament that has proved fatal to the career aspirations of other ambitious conservatives.

"He knows that this is a real opportunity and he can't blow it, because I don't think he gets another layup like this again anytime soon," said Randy Evans, a Georgia lawyer who was made ambassador to Luxembourg by Trump, and who is a close ally of Kemp.

Since signing the bill into law on March 25, Kemp has done roughly 50 interviews, 14 with Fox News, promoting the new restrictions with messaging that aligns with Trump's baseless claims that the election was rigged against him.

Kemp's argument is designed to pump adrenaline into the conservative vein, by focusing on two of the most animating topics of the political right: election mechanics and an ominous portrayal of the Democratic left.

"They folded like a wet dishrag to the cancel culture," he said, responding to businesses that publicly objected to the legislation, in an interview on Fox Business on Tuesday. "Americans and Georgians should be scared. I mean, what event are they going to come after next?"

If he manages a political reversal of fortune, Kemp would be the most prominent Republican to find a way to overcome Trump's campaign of retribution, and perhaps would provide an early test of the former president's ability to impose his will on the party's electoral future.

But whether Kemp will be able to make amends with Trump remains unclear. Late Tuesday, the former president signaled how difficult it would be to win him over, releasing a statement slamming Kemp and Georgia Republicans for not going far enough to restrict voting access in the new law.

"Kemp also caved to the radical left-wing woke mob who threatened to call him racist if he got rid of weekend voting," Trump said. "Well, he kept it, and they still call him racist!"

POLITICAL FUTURES

Read the full article about how Georgia's new voting law could affect Kemp's political fortunes.

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Correction: Tuesday's newsletter misstated what Gov. Greg Abbott's executive order on coronavirus vaccinations will do. It will prevent many companies from requiring consumers to be vaccinated, not from requiring their employees to do so.

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