Race for governor in Virginia set after
tight primary race
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[June 14, 2017]
By Gary Robertson
RICHMOND, Va. (Reuters) - Virginia's
lieutenant governor will face a former Republican national committee
chairman in a November general election to become the state's next
governor in a race seen as a bellwether for next year's mid-term
congressional races.
Lieutenant Governor Ralph Northam bested former congressman Tom
Perriello in the Democratic primary, while former Republican National
Committee Chairman Ed Gillespie topped President Donald Trump's former
Virginia campaign co-chairman Corey Stewart, according to unofficial
returns posted online by the Virginia Department of Elections.
The gubernatorial race in Virginia, the only state other than New Jersey
electing a new governor this year, is seen as a key test of Trump's
popularity ahead of the 2018 mid-term elections for the
Republican-controlled U.S. Senate and House of Representatives.
The winner in November will succeed incumbent Democratic Governor Terry
McAuliffe, who is barred by term limits from running again.
Northam sought to stoke Democrats' anger toward Trump, calling the
president a "narcissistic maniac" in statewide ads.
"Tonight, we're one step closer to building a Virginia that works for
everyone - no matter who you are, no matter where you're from," Northam
said in a Twitter post declaring victory.
In the Republican primary, Gillespie beat Stewart 44 percent to 42
percent with Frank Wagner earning 14 percent of the vote. On the
Democrat side, 56 percent vote went to Northam and 44 percent went to
Perriello, unofficial returns showed.
The governor's race in Virginia, a swing state where a recent Washington
Post and George Mason University poll showed 59 percent of voters
disapprove of Trump's performance, is shaping up as a pivotal
battleground with national implications.
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Ed Gillespie, senior political advisor of U.S. Republican
presidential nominee Mitt Romney, speaks during the Romney election
night rally in Boston, Massachusetts November 6, 2012. REUTERS/Mike
Segar
"Virginia will be more hotly contested than ever," said Stephen
Farnsworth, a University of Mary Washington political analyst. "All
the national money and national attention will be coming this way.
... Republicans want to claim that the Trump movement is doing well
and the Democrats want to claim it is not."
Northam was backed by every statewide Democratic officeholder, while
Perriello drew support of Democratic progressives, including U.S.
Senators Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren.
Gillespie was endorsed by a raft of state and national Republican
leaders. On the campaign trail, he largely avoided talking about
Trump, who has not weighed in on the race.
Republican strength has eroded in recent Virginia elections, with
Democrats now holding all statewide offices. Virginia, once a
Republican bulwark in presidential polls, has gone Democratic in
three straight elections.
(Additional reporting by Ian Simpson and Brendan O'Brien; Writing by
Steve Gorman; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Grant McCool)
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