Obama stumps for Virginia candidate in race seen as referendum on Biden
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[October 23, 2021]
By Gabriella Borter
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Former U.S.
President Barack Obama on Saturday joins a roster of high-profile
Democrats campaigning for Terry McAuliffe, a candidate for Virginia
governor in a race seen as a barometer of the country's political
direction after Joe Biden, a Democrat, won the presidency over
Republican Donald Trump a year ago.
Opinion polls show McAuliffe, who served as Virginia's governor from
2014 to 2018, and Republican Glenn Youngkin nearly tied in the countdown
to the Nov. 2 election.
A poll this week by Monmouth University showed Youngkin, 54, had
closed McAuliffe's 5-point lead since September by gaining ground with
independent and women voters.
Youngkin's strength in the polls during the first weeks of early voting
has worried Democrats, who anticipated a comfortable lead in a state
that has trended blue in recent years. Democrats flipped the Virginia
legislature in 2019 and Trump lost the state by 10 percentage points in
November 2020, double his margin of defeat in 2016.
Obama, who served as president from 2008 to 2016, will speak at Virginia
Commonwealth University in Richmond on Saturday afternoon, aiming to
boost McAuliffe, 64, in the final leg of the race. Biden is due to
campaign with McAuliffe next week.
In a television ad broadcast on Wednesday, Obama backed McAuliffe's
stances on climate change, abortion rights and voting rights.
"I watched Terry stand strong on the values we all care about;
protecting every citizen's right to vote, fighting climate change and
defending a woman's right to choose," Obama said of the former governor.
The serving governor, Ralph Northam, a Democrat, cannot seek re-election
because the state bars governors from serving consecutive terms.
McAuliffe can run because he left office in 2018.
Both candidates for governor have dug into hotly contested cultural
issues to stir up voter engagement in the off-year election, including
abortion rights and how schools address the topics of race and racism
with students.
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Candidate for Governor of Virginia Terry McAuliffe speaks during his
campaign rally in Dumfries, Virginia October 21, 2021. REUTERS/Kevin
Lamarque
McAuliffe has sought to paint Youngkin as a far-right
extremist and align him with Trump, who has endorsed the Republican
candidate.
In turn, Youngkin has suggested that McAuliffe is trying to advance
a far-left agenda. A former private equity executive, Youngkin has
focused in part on education - especially the right of parents to
have a say in their children's schooling - which has proven popular
with suburban women, a key demographic.
Youngkin has tread a fine line between welcoming Trump's endorsement
and distancing himself from the former president's false claim that
the 2020 presidential election was stolen.
Last week, Youngkin dissociated himself from a rally held to support
him, which was headlined by longtime Trump aide Steve Bannon and
Trump himself, who spoke by phone. At the event, attendees pledged
allegiance to a flag that event leaders said was present on Jan. 6,
when Trump supporters led an assault on the U.S. Capitol.
Youngkin issued a statement saying it was "weird and wrong" to
pledge allegiance to a flag with Jan. 6 connections.
(Reporting by Gabriella Borter; Editing by Howard Goller)
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