The
Lincoln Project said it was behind the use of tiki torches
outside a Republican candidate's bus that mimicked the rally by
white supremacists in Charlottesville. The earlier event turned
deadly when a car driven into a crowd by a self-described
neo-Nazi killed a counter-protester.
Tuesday's close vote between Republican former private-equity
executive Glenn Youngkin and Democrat Terry McAuliffe, a former
governor, is widely seen as a foretaste of next year's midterm
elections.
"Today's demonstration was our way of reminding Virginians what
happened in Charlottesville four years ago, the Republican
Party's embrace of those values and Glenn Youngkin's failure to
condemn it," the Lincoln Project said in a statement.
On Friday morning, five people wearing white shirts, khaki
pants, dark sunglasses and baseball caps and carrying tiki
torches approached Youngkin's campaign bus. They reportedly
said, "We're all in for Glenn," and remained in front of the bus
during his campaign event.
Youngkin said the demonstrators were sent by his opponents. The
Democratic Party of Virginia denied involvement.
Trump, who was president during the Aug. 11, 2017 "Unite the
Right" rally, was criticized for initially saying there were
"fine people on both sides" of the dispute between neo-Nazis and
their opponents at the rally.
Recent polls show McAuliffe slightly ahead or in a statistical
dead heat in a state where President Joe Biden beat Trump by 10
percentage points last year.
The two parties have spent heavily on the race, a test of how
Republicans will fare when Trump is not on the ballot and
whether they have momentum in their bid to win back control of
the narrowly divided houses of Congress next year.
(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Bengaluru; Editing by William
Mallard)
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