Here's what's at stake in today's Virginia election
An election official wipes down a table after every voter in Buckingham County, Nov. 3, 2020. (Parker Michels-Boyce / For the Virginia Mercury)
November 02, 2021
by Staff Report, Virginia Mercury
November 2, 2021
More than one million of Virginia's nearly 6 million registered voters have taken advantage of early voting to cast ballots for today's election, when voters will select a governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general and all 100 members of the House of Delegates. For those voting today, polls open 6 a.m. and close at 7 p.m. (If you're in line by 7, you can still vote.) To find your polling place and access other information, go here.
The campaign for governor has been particularly combative, with former Democratic Gov. Terry McAuliffe battling GOP nominee Glenn Youngkin, a former private equity executive, in a race that has narrowed dramatically over the final months and is being closely watched across the country because of what it might portend for national politics, particularly next year's congressional midterm elections.
Cheat sheet: Youngkin and McAuliffe on the issues
In tight Virginia governor's race, policy takes a backseat to culture wars
McAuliffe has been determined to try to make the contest about former President Donald Trump, whose deep unpopularity with voters here proved devastating for Virginia Republicans, who lost control of the state Senate and House of Delegates during his four years in the White House. With Youngkin, though, a first-time candidate who has lasered in on culture war debates, particularly racial equity controversies gripping school systems, they see themselves within striking distance of the executive mansion for the first time since Bob McDonnell was elected in 2009.
Del. Hala Ayala, D-Prince William, is vying with conservative firebrand Winsome Sears, a former Republican state delegate, for the lieutenant governor job, a largely ceremonial office that involves presiding over the state Senate and breaking ties in that chamber.
No matter who wins, history will be made. No woman of color has ever held statewide office and there has never been a woman lieutenant governor.
'We not me': Hala Ayala focuses on 'collective work' in run for lieutenant governor
'Who knew Nixon was a homeboy?' A Q&A with lieutenant governor hopeful Winsome Sears
Both women are attempting to leverage personal narratives — Ayala as a single working mom and child of an immigrant father and Sears, an immigrant from Jamiaca who became the first Black woman Republican elected to the House of Delegates — to an office often see as a stepping stone to the governor's mansion.
Attorney General Mark Herring, a Democrat, backed away from a gubernatorial run to seek a third term in his current job. He'd be the first attorney general to win election to a third term since 1945. His opponent, Republican Del. Jason Miyares of Virginia Beach, has his own shot at history.
'Our work is not done': A Q&A with Attorney General Mark Herring
'It's a humbling thing': Jason Miyares eyes chance to become first Latino attorney general
If he wins, the conservative son of a Cuban immigrant would be Virginia's first Latino attorney general. They offer dramatically different visions for the office, with Miyares vowing a crackdown on crime and Herring pledging to continue to defend progressive legislation passed by the Democratic majority in the General Assembly.
Will the conservative momentum that has made the statewide races so competitive carry over into the battle for the House of Delegates? Democrats currently hold a 55-45 majority they won two years ago that allowed the passage of an array of progressive priorities, from a minimum wage increase, gun restrictions and criminal justice reforms to easing voting restrictions and reducing carbon emissions.
Democrats on defense as their new House majority faces its first electoral test
Republicans are targeting vulnerable Democrats in 10 competitive districts that Democrats hope to hang onto whilst ousting a few incumbent Republicans elsewhere.
In Virginia Beach, the commonwealth's largest city, residents will vote on a referendum asking if they support a real estate tax increase to pay for up to $567 million in flood protection projects that would be rolled out over the next 10 years.
In the most vulnerable city on the East Coast to sea-level rise, the measure will be a big indicator of whether and how much residents are willing to pay to protect themsleves.
And in Richmond, voters will consider a referendum that would allow a hotly debated casino project to move forward.
For more of the Mercury's 2021 election coverage, clickhere.
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