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Virginia News Headlines: Thursday Morning

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Here are a few Virginia (and national) news headlines, political and otherwise, for Thursday, November 8.

*Barack Obama: celebration time – then straight back to work for the president

*Romney wraps up amid questions about campaign

*Republican Reckoning Begins After Revealing Defeat (Grab some popcorn, this should be fun!)

*Great moments in polling and punditry: 2012 election edition (Among other things, I will NEVER care about another poll by Suffolk University after its polling director said they’d already painted Virginia and Florida “red” a little less than a month from the election. Totally unprofessional, also totally wrong! To quote C-Lo, “forget you!” And Rasmussen? Well, let’s just say nobody should have taken them seriously BEFORE this election, and they certainly shouldn’t take them seriously AFTER this election. Total hacks.)

*Historic showing by Latinos helped propel Obama to win

*Obama again dominated Virginia population centers

*Inside Gallup’s Epic Fail (Yikes, they really need to correct this or they’re going to lose all respect.)

*Va. to use federal health exchange option – for now

*Tim Kaine plans to join “Common Ground Caucus” in Senate

*Editorial: Choosing moderation over extremism (“In electing Tim Kaine to the U.S. Senate, Virginia voters favored collaboration over obstruction.”)

*Mark Warner for governor? It could happen (“Mark Warner appears to be giving serious thought to a run for governor in 2013, according to multiple sources.”)

*Kaine urges Warner to stay in the Senate

*Where does Cuccinelli fit in a blue Va.?

*Va. measure may affect building plans

*George Allen’s chances in politics again? The answer is blurry.

*Will Democrats ever again set foot west of Radford?

*Jeff’s Notes: Winners and losers

*Kaine: Virginia’s Still Purple (“McDonnell congratulates Kaine and Obama, says GOP must look like a ‘fun team to join'”)

*Va. Gov. McDonnell says GOP must broaden its base (Ya think?)

*Martin O’Malley bests Bob McDonnell when it counts

*Governor Who Supported Mandatory Ultrasounds Says GOP Did Poorly in Getting Women’s Votes (Who could have ever predicted THAT?!? LOL)

*Kaine already calling on Congress to avoid ‘fiscal cliff’

*Reeling conservatives face ‘recalibration’ at their core

*Finding meaning and moving on

*Voter turnout wasn’t unprecedented, so what was to blame for delays? (Thank you voter ID law!)

*Mix of factors led to long voting lines in Virginia

*Day after election, Baliles holds slim lead in bid for council seat

*Hurt says he’ll continue his commitment

*A record number of voters turned out in Arlington, county confirms

*Virginia Beach quietly pursuing NBA team for proposed arena

We Do Have a Mandate—- So What?

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Congratulations to all the Democratic grassroots, to an outstanding campaign team, and to President Obama and Vice President Biden.  What, exactly did we all win? Democrats still control the executive branch and half of the legislative, and the Republicans still control the other half of the legislative branch (thanks to some exotic redistricting) and the top of the judicial branch, SCOTUS.

You might think Obama’s strong win was proof that the voters re-approved his message and his accomplishments in his first term; the election could be regarded as a referendum on Obama and his “liberal” policies. Not so fast. Already, we hear The Establishment pundit class stating in no uncertain terms that we are still a “deeply divided nation,” half and half, with the always-to-be-expected insistence that, well, Yes, Obama won, but… but half the country voted for Romney, so, of course Obama must now “move to the middle,” and compromise with the losers— who, remember, lost.  This demand was not, so far as I can remember, imposed upon George W. Bush, who was appointed to his first term not by the voters but by the Supreme Court; he governed as ferociously as if he had received an overwhelming mandate, and charged off down an utterly disastrous road

Progressives have a bitter memory of how Obama did as the pundit class demanded after 2008; he started compromising and, in our eyes, caving in advance, trying to get Republicans to bargain in good faith so he could wash out the simmering rancor of the previous administration, and do what he was elected to do, govern the country.  We all know how that turned out.

Yet, despite that disgusting record of gridlock, when Republicans held America’s credit rating hostage, there are some Democrats already naively saying that, now the voters have spoken, and Obama can no longer be turned into a one-term president, Republicans must modify their behavior; Speaker Boehner will “obviously” have to control his Tea Party caucus. This is, I believe, a foolish, futile hope. Most of the same intransigent ideological gang of self-righteous bullies is still in place in the House. They will fight tooth and nail to force Obama to do their bidding. If you have any doubts, watch this short post-defeat video from the Heritage Foundation:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?f…

In his victory speech, Obama laid out once again his policies, and extended his hand in bipartisanship to his defeated opponent, Mitt Romney, and to the Republican leadership in the House. … much as he tried to do in 2009. Personally, I confess  I do not expect results any different from what happened in his first term, I just hope he has more of a spine this time around.  Here is what I want Obama to do in his second term:

1- First order of business: Immigration reform, and on Obama’s terms. Make the Republicans swallow it or be exposed to the Latino voters (and other immigrants) for the bigots they are—-  bring angry immigrants on the Hill to lobby and thus lock in the Latino voters as Democrats for the mid-terms (and forever), and put the fear of el Dios into Republicans.

2- Obama must spend time and effort building the Democratic Party, which he did not do at all after his victory in 2008; since he cannot succeed himself, OFA has to be integrated somehow into a reformed and strengthened party structure to ensure we do not have another collapse in mid-terms, and Obama can punish or reward Democratic politicians, so they fear not supporting his agenda when the chips are down.

3- Obama must go to the American people  whenever the Republicans engage in obstructionism and hostage-taking:  Tell the voters what a particular policy is, why it is good for us, and exactly how the Republicans are stymying it—- go over the heads of Congress directly to their constituents. His failure to explain and sell Obamacare enabled the Republicans to define it, then demonize it, and is a major reason why (combined with #2) that the 2010 mid-terms were a disaster not just in Congress but at the state and county levels all across the country.

4- Obama and the Democrats must continuously engage the electorate, explaining and raising the profile of Democratic principles, values, and policies. Obama successfully framed the 2012 election as a choice between two different visions of the country, and the electorate bought it. Now he has to deliver that choice continuously— explain it over and over; I believe people will understand it. Let’s not fall into the trap of “middle ground” which means tacitly accepting the Republican ideology of untrammeled capitalism and their bastardized “free market” theology as a basis for any reforms; that is fighting on hostile ground.

5- Tax reform has to be on the agenda. Beware of striving for a “grand bargain,” in which, suddenly, earned benefits (i.e., “entitlements” in Republi-speak) are sneakily slashed in exchange for, say, higher taxes on millionaires. What we want, and what we must get, is a more progressive over-all tax structure, one fairer and, if possible, simpler…. Not just the income tax but also payroll taxes, for example.

6- Austerity has failed spectacularly as a recovery policy in Europe, and under no circumstances can Democrats permit this pernicious policy (the Ryan Budget, for example) to be part of the negotiations on deficit reduction. How we spend our money tells us what kind of country we want to live in; Tim Kaine was good at this when he was Governor. Will there be a “peace dividend?”  The government can and does create jobs (take that, Ayn Rand), in research, development, infrastructure, green energy, education even. Why not?

7- Get that jobs bill passed, raise the minimum wage. Past experience shows that dong so does not, repeat not, kill jobs. When Republicans balk, see #3. Supply side economics or trickle down economics is a farce. What we have now is a shortage of demand; higher minimum wage and more wage-earners means theat money will be spent immediately, creating the demand that producers need to see before they fire up their factories and the economy can take off.

8- Clean up Citizens United and the Wall Street casino (we’ve made a start, but more needs to be done). Corporations are not people; this may involve a constitutional amendment and tougher disclosure laws, as well as funding Consumer protection.

9- What I have suggested here also means that President Obama will have to bring in some other economists and financial and budget gurus who have a rather different economic philosophy than those tiresome free market theorists and practitioners (like Larry Summers or Geithner). Milton Freidman free marketeers are not the only (or even the best) capitalist economists. Only with new faces and minds outside The Establishment can he achieve that real change he promised.

Video: Polling Place Disaster in Prince William County, Virginia

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Our friends Annabel Park and Eric Byler are up to no good LOTS of good again! 🙂

Shocking New Footage of the Polling Place Ordeal of the most African-American District in Virginia’s Prince William County

Video is part of new Web Series and Documentary Examining the Deep Divisions in the American Electorate:  “Story of America: A Nation Divided”

Washington, DC – Producers of a new web series called “Story of America: A Nation Divided” released today shocking new polling place footage from River Oaks Precinct, the most African American precinct in Virginia’s Prince William County.  Filmed in the waning hours of the 2012 Presidential election on November 6, 2012 at Potomac Middle School, the video captures footage and commentary from voters who spent hours in lines with the last vote coming in at 10:45pm, nearly four hours after the polls officially closed.

According to Woodbridge District Supervisor Frank Principi, Virginia law requires that one voting machine be assigned per 750 registered voters. By contrast, Maryland law requires one voting machine per 200 registered voters. This polling place did not appear to adhere to Virginia’s law, with only six voting machines and over 5,000 registered voters.

Story of America: A Nation Divided is a web series produced by Annabel Park that engages Americans from across the country in a dialogue about the deep divisions that exist in America today and how we can bridge them to achieve greater unity, democracy and prosperity as a nation.

Americans are invited to log on to learn more (http://www.storyofamerica.org) and to share their stories of what it means to be an American today and find solutions to how we can heal the divide in our country.  On instagram and twitter, posters should use #thisismystory.

In the coming weeks and months, the project will explore the impact of the 2008 financial crisis and its relationship to rising economic inequality, the deepening divisions between red states and blue states and between rural and urban regions, and, the fragmentation of America across racial, political and cultural lines. The project will eventually be edited into a feature-length documentary.

About Annabel Park

Story of America is a project of the acclaimed documentary filmmaker and political activist Annabel Park.  Ms. Park studied Philosophy at Boston University and Political Theory at Oxford University as a Marshall Scholar.  She is a co-founder of the Coffee Party USA, a grassroots, non-partisan movement that aims to restore the principles and spirit of democracy in America. Her previous work includes “9500 Liberty”, an award-winning documentary web series and film that chronicled the eight weeks in American history when the Arizona immigration crackdown was in effect. Produced in partnership with a team of filmmakers including Eric Byler, “9500 Liberty” is the winner of four film festival awards. It was released theatrically in more than 30 cities and picked up by MTV Networks for a Sept. 26, 2010 cable premiere.

Winners and Losers: Election 2012

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Here are a few winners and losers (note: this list is FAR from comprehensive, and was put together on little sleep, so take it for what it’s worth – probably not much!) from this (endless) election cycle that I think are worth highlighting. I’m not going to dwell much on the obvious winners (Obama, Kaine, Virginia incumbent Congressmen) and losers (Romney, Allen, Virginia congressional challengers), but instead pick out other things that sprung to my mind. Enjoy (or not)! 🙂

Winners

1. Nate Silver/538 Despite all the attacks on him by pundits jealous they don’t have 1% the brainpower he does, as well as by Republicans frustrated that the math simply wasn’t adding up their way, no matter how desperately they tried to “unskew” it, Silver appears to have predicted ever state correctly, pending results in Florida. That means Nate has now nailed 2008, 2010 and 2012. Any further doubters, other than the delusional?

2. The Kaine campaign (Mike Henry, Mo Elleithee, Brandi Hoffine, etc.): Mike and Mo had a rough 2008 (Hillary Clinton for President) and 2009 (Terry McAuliffe, Steve Shannon, Creigh Deeds), but bounced back strong this year with an impressive campaign against George Allen. The basic lesson here: when it comes to running general election races in Virginia, Mike Henry and Mo Elleithee (this year, add Kaine campaign Communications Director Brandi Hoffine to the mix) are pretty much the gold standard. Congratulations!

3. Federal employees Would have faced grave threats to their job security, benefits, you name it under a Romney/Ryan administration. Now, it’s not as if happy days are here again, but they certainly dodged that deadly bullet.

4. Virginia voters: Showed up in huge numbers, stayed in line for however long it took, showed what democracy is all about. Now, let’s do it next year and make sure that Ken Cuccinelli does NOT become our next governor (god forbid)!

5. Loudoun County and Prince William County Democrats: Great work carrying these crucial, swing counties for Obama and Kaine! Prince William was particularly impressive, with Obama winning 57%-42% there. Nice!

6. Latino Americans. Related to that last point, about Loudoun and Prince William Counties, is the rapidly growing clout of Latino Americans. That clout was certainly demonstrated yesterday in Virginia, as well as across the country, as Latino voters broke heavily for Democrats, and also helped propel Maryland’s DREAM Act to victory. Si, se puede!

7. African Americans Despite attempts by Republicans to suppress their vote, including by cutting down on early voting and making them wait in line for 5, 6, 7 hours, African Americans showed true grit and determination to NOT be intimidated by the bullies, staying in line as long as it took and making their voices heard. Impressive!

8. Clean energy and the environment A Republican victory would have been disastrous for clean energy and the environment. Not that it will be nirvana under Democrats, but remember that President Obama invested more money in wind, solar, energy efficiency, and other clean energy sources than this country’s ever invested before. That needs to continue over the second 4-year term and beyond, as we move from dirty energy to a sustainable, clean energy-powered economy that works for everyone.

9. Congressional Redistricting. As much as I hate to say it, Congressional redistricting was effective, both here in Virginia (where every incumbent won easily) and across the country (where Democratic gains were minimized). Sad, but until we get nonpartisan redistricting instead of “incumbent protection,” this is going to keep happening.

10. Earned media. Proved to be far more effective than paid media, in my view, with the big stories “moving numbers” including the Democratic convention, the 47% video, the first presidential debate, and Hurricane Sandy. None of those had anything, really, to do with paid TV advertising.

11. Women’s rights: Republicans like Romney, Ryan, Akin and Murdoch would have tried as hard as possible to roll back women’s rights to the 1950s or earlier. Thank goodness they lost. (Note: I’d also note that a number of superb female candidates won last night, such as Elizabeth Warren and Heidi Heitkamp).

12. Sandra Fluke: She emerged a champion during this election, despite vicious attacks on her by crazed misogynists like Rush Limbaugh. She also gave an excellent speech at the Democratic National Convention. Thank you, Sandra Fluke!

13. Nuns on the Bus: They showed that religion, at its best, is progressive, cares about the same people Jesus cared about – the poor, the powerless, the downtrodden, etc. – and not the wealthy and powerful. Nice job by the Nuns on the Bus showing what religion at its best is all about!

14. Big Bird/PBS: A Romney/Ryan victory could have meant Big Bird ended up in the trash can with Oscar the Grouch. Instead, Big Bird lives to preen his feathers another day. 🙂

15. The auto bailout, stimulus, Obamacare…. A bunch of Obama administration policies in the first term not only worked, but also helped President Obama win election (or didn’t hurt him, as in the case of Obamacare, where people in this country are pretty much evenly divided). As for Obamacare, that’s a HUGE winner, as it is now 100% guaranteed to be the law of the land for years to come, having dodged Supreme Court and election bullets.

16. LGBT Americans: Again, a Romney/Ryan victory would have been bad news. Instead, Barack Obama – who has been the best friend to LGBT Americans they’ve ever had in the White House, by a wide margin at that – was reelected. As if that’s not good enough, gay marriage scored major victories yesterday in Maine and Maryland, while an anti-gay-marriage amendment was defeated in Minnesota. Great stuff!

17. Bruce Springsteen: I just wanted to thank Broooce for being the working-class conscience of our country, a national treasure, and a citizen willing to step up when he’s needed to fight for what’s right. In this case, that meant speaking out and appearing at rallies for President Obama. Go Brooooooce! 🙂

18. Bill Clinton. Any lingering anger at Clinton for the nasty 2008 primary is long gone at this point. Today, Bill Clinton is one of the most beloved Americans, certainly among Democrats. He also was a huge help to President Obama’s reelection, as well as to other Democratic candidates this year. Next up, electing Hillary Clinton to the White House in 2016? Stay tuned! 🙂

19. John Boehner and Eric Cantor. Sadly, both are winners, as they maintained their party’s control of the House. Unfortunate, but maybe they’ll show some statesmanship in the next four years that they certainly didn’t show in the last four (Can’tor was actually far worse than Boehner).

20. Ben Tribbett. Once again, nailed his predictions last night, showing once again that he’s the Nate Silver of Virginia. Of course, the media didn’t listen to him, waiting for hours to “call” Virginia, even after it was obvious to everyone that the numbers simply couldn’t add up for Romney.

21. Clark Mercer. The DPVA political director was everywhere this election cycle, helping Democratic committees be as strong as possible, and generally working indefatigably to put Virginia Democrats in position for election day 2012, as well as for 2013 and beyond. In an organization that, admittedly, we haven’t been big fans of here at Blue Virginia, Clark Mercer exudes competence and political savvy.

22. Reality. Was under serious, sustained assault, mostly by Republicans but also by many in the corporate media, this election cycle. In the end, reality won out, as it usually does.

23. Turnout/Democracy: Despite Republican attempts to suppress voter turnout, it appears that Americans showed up at the polls yesterday in huge numbers. A clear victory for democracy.

24. Mark Warner and Jim Webb. Both campaigned for Tim Kaine and Barack Obama, although Warner was far more active than Webb, and both were very helpful in Kaine’s and Obama’s Virginia victories.

25. Virginia’s inexorable migration to “blue” status. The changing demographics of Virginia make our state’s eventual “blue” status all but inevitable. It’s already there at the presidential and U.S. Senate levels, the question is how long it will take to get there at the gubernatorial and Congressional levels. Let’s hope not too long.

26. PPP, Pew, and other top-notch pollsters. There are many bad pollsters out there, which is why it’s great that we have gems like Public Policy Polling (#1 again this cycle), NBC/WSJ, CBS/NY Times, Pew, also Quinnipiac and a few others. Nice job!

Mixed

1. Terry McAuliffe. Supposedly, if a Democrat’s in the White House, Virginians always elect a Republican as governor. On the other hand, Barack Obama has proved a number of those supposed truisms wrong, so maybe not. Also, T-Mac has the opportunity to use what Obama and Kaine built this year for his gubernatorial run next year.

2. Ken Cuccinelli. The flip side of what I just wrote about T-Mac. Also, this campaign cycle showed once again the severe limitations of extremist, Tea Party candidates running in general elections statewide. On the other hand, Cooch is pretty slick about pretending to be a “nice guy” and not a frothing-at-the-mouth Akin/Murdoch type (even though he’s no different on the issues).

3. Dave “Mudcat” Saunders. Was a winner in that he made a nice amount of money consulting to Wayne Powell, also got on TV a lot. Was a loser in that, as Mudcat’s former colleague Steve Jarding once told me, in politics “if you win you’re a genius, if you lose you’re an idiot.” Well, Mudcat’s client certainly didn’t win, let’s put it that way. 😉

4. Rep. Jim Moran. Won reelection easily, which would put him in the “winners” category. However, also dealt with a scandal involving his son, Patrick, and possible election fraud. So, mixed bag for Jim Moran…

Losers

1. Pathological lying. In the end, all that pathological lying by Romney/Ryan didn’t win them the election. And that’s no lie! 🙂

2. Bob McDonnell. Not a good year, as he tried desperately to get on the Romney ticket as running mate, but was sabotaged by “transvaginal ultrasounds” and other lunacy from his fellow Virginia Republicans. Also, Romney’s loss means no cabinet position for McDonnell either. So sad, huh?

3. Tea Party Possibly the biggest loser of this cycle, as they singlehandedly may have cost Republcians the U.S. Senate, as well as any respect as a serious, major party in this country. If Republicans are smart, they will ditch these people once and for all.

4. GOP Primaries, caucuses, straw polls The entire process of picking the GOP nominee was demeaning, a freak show, utterly absurd, and ultimately harmful to their nominee. Also, I must say, the attention given to the Iowa “straw poll” (who won that again? oh yeah, Michele Bachmann – lol) and to the Iowa caucuses (who won THOSE again? oh yeah, Rick Santorum – lol) is equally absurd and harmful to the Republicans’ eventual nominee. They really should change their system of picking a nominee, if they’re smart (but are they?).

5. Virginia’s constitution> Once again, it’s been sullied by the inclusion of a ridiculous, unncessary, poorly written amendment – this time on “eminent domain” – that has no business there. #FAIL.

6. Old white men. As these number show, old white men are pretty much the last major bastion of Republican Party support in this country. The rest of the country is moving in a different direction, while these guys get angrier and angrier (GET OFF MY LAWN!!!). Sad.

7. Donald Trump, Sheldon Adelson, John Sununu, Foster Friess, etc.: Speaking of angry, old (and crazy!) white guys. Adelson, by the way, should be in jail. Trump should be in an insane asylum. Sununu’s just a disgusting racist. Friess is a misogynistic freak. What a bunch – major Romney surrogates, supporters and contriburors all!

8. Money’s influence on elections. After all the angst over Citizens United – which, don’t get me wrong, is an abomination that should be repealed! – I see very little evidence that money made a major difference in this election cycle. Can you name one race that would have ended up differently if there had NOT been all that money poured into it? Got me.

9. Paid media, particularly ads on TV. Speaking of money in politics, were any of you swayed by the torrent of ads on TV? I doubt it. Yet the advertising-consultant-industrial complex is a powerful one, highly lucrative to those that make the ads, buy the ads, place the ads, and run the ads. Other than that, we’d all be far better off with none of this garbage.

10. The Des Moines Register Editorial Board: So, how’d that Romney endorsement work out for you? Wait, Obama ended up winning Iowa easily despite your tremendous influence? Heh.

11. Corporate Media’s Desperate Attempts to Be Relevant, Force a Narrative: It was pathetic to watch the corporate media – not all of it, of course, but large swaths – try desperately to maintain their relevance in an age of increased social/bottom-up media and declining top-down media. That included sponsoring the endless, insane Teapublican debates last winter and spring; trying desperately, no matter what the evidence said, to impose their narrative on this election (“virtual dead heat!” “within the margin of error!”). Combine that with their largely substance-free, lame, horse-race/personality-driven coverage of American politics, and it’s really just a sorry situation.

12. The Koch brothers, Dirty Energy Interests. They spent a ton of money trying to buy this election, but in the end failed miserably. As Simpsons bully Nelson Muntz would say, “HA HA!”

13. Gallup, Rasmussen, Suffolk: These pollsters proved themselves to be completely out to lunch (in the case of Gallup) and/or 100% shills for Republicans (in the cases of Rasmussen and Suffolk). See here and here for more on that subject. I do hope that Gallup gets its act together, but as for the rest of ’em…I just hope they are ignored by everyone from now on.

14. Purveyors of “conventional wisdom”> They should know who they are, but they’re generally so oblivious and non-self-aware that they probably have no clue. Hint: it’s people like the utterly insipid Mark Halperin and many others…

15. Really bad musicians. Can we never hear from Meat Loaf or Ted Nugent, both horrible musicians as well as nutcases (especially in Nugent’s case – the guy should be locked up), ever again? Also, why is it that Republicans always have the worst musicians and actors supporting them, while Democrats have the best?

16. Mitch McConnell. I think it’s time for him to have a good, long cry, as his dreams of becoming Senate Majority Leader by making “Obama fail” have come to an end. Such a shame to happen to such a nice man, huh? LOL

17. Brain-dead “rules”. Two that must die after this election are: a) that a president can’t get reelected with unemployment over x%; and b) that if the Redskins lose at home, the challenger for president wins. Where do people come up with this crap, anyway, and who listens to them?!?

18. Rick Santorum, Rick Perry, Sarah Palin, Herman Cain, other extremist Teapublicans. Where do Republicans find these wackos? Anyway, they all made fools of themselves the past couple years, and hopefully will never be seen or heard from again. Sadly, I doubt that’s the case.

19. Faux “News”. If there was any doubt that this network’s a total right-wing joke (with the occasional exception, Chris Wallace showing integrity now and again for instance), this election cycle should have put that to rest.

20. The GOP in Northern Virginia’s inner suburbs. Basically, they were utterly demolished in Alexandria and Arlington yesterday. Just a thought here, guys, but perhaps if you’d nominate moderate, sane Republicans up here, you might at least have SOME chance of winning?!?

21. Nancy Pelosi. I love the woman, but maybe it’s time for her to move on? I mean, she gave it her all, but in the end, House Democrats made minor if any gains, leaving them in the minority with Boehner and Can’tor in charge. Sigh. [UPDATE: Add DCCC head Steve Israel to this one.]

22. Third Parties. This cycle, third parties – Green, Libertarian, Constitution, whatever – had almost no impact whatsoever on the election, either in terms of changing any outcomes, or in terms of driving the debate. Zzzzzzz.

P.S. Oh yeah, and let’s not forget the worst political pundits in America, starting with the demented Dick “Toe Sucker” Morris and Karl “Turd Blossom” Rove…

Virginia News Headlines: Wednesday Morning (4 More Years Edition!)

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Here are a few Virginia (and national) news headlines, political and otherwise, for Wednesday, November 7. One of the sweetest days of our lives! 🙂

*A SECOND TERM (Wait, you mean the Post still isn’t saying it’s a “virtual dead heat?” LOL)

*Obama’s second term: Change you can really believe in

*A big win for Democrats and liberals (“Mere months after everything seemed against the president, he won reelection resoundingly.”)

*Latino Voters In Election 2012 Help Sweep Obama To Reelection (We’re going to be seeing a LOT more headlines like that in coming years if Republicans don’t seriously change their ways…)

*What’s next for the Republican Party after last night’s many defeats? (I couldn’t agree more with Waldo; it’s time for the once-great GOP to shed its anti-intellectual and anti-science attitude, its John Bircher wackos, etc., and give the nation a REAL “second party to participate in the political process.” Right now, sadly, we don’t have one.)

*Dionne: Obama’s victory should settle argument

*President Obama’s second term: Now the hard work really begins.

*Democrats retain majority in Senate (Thank you Tea Party for Todd Akin, Richard Mourdock, and all the other unelectable wackjobs you keep insisting on nominating over more moderate Republicans who would have been 100% locks for reelection. Brilliant!!!)

*Kaine beats Allen in $80M Va. bid

*Analysis: Kaine’s message worked; Allen’s didn’t (Wait, you mean people don’t want their soft teeth smashed down their whiny throats? They don’t like being called racial epithets by a bully? They don’t like a “my way or the highway” approach? They want a Senator who isn’t a puppet of the Dirty Energy industry? They want a Senator with a BRAIN?!? Go figure!)

*How Kaine won the Va. Senate race (“The Democrat’s strategic decisions in the race against George Allen proved correct”)

*Virginia vote reflects shift in changing demographic (This state is inexorably turning “blue,” as the demographics shift towards a more diverse population. Republicans will need to either adapt or keep losing elections.)

*Fresh from reelection, president finds himself on brink of a ‘fiscal cliff’ (Let’s see if Republicans will finally agree to a balanced approach to dealing with our nation’s fiscal issues, or whether they’ll continue demanding an absurd/disastrous all-cuts approach.)

*Northern Va. incumbents sail to reelection

*Democrats expand Senate grip but fail to win House

*Schapiro analysis: Chesterfield offers clues on Dems’ victory in Virginia

*Gov. Bob McDonnell statement on Tim Kaine’s Senate win

*Results: Rigell keeps 2nd Congressional District seat

*Cantor routs Powell in 7th (As expected, sadly…)

*Wittman cruises to 3rd term

*Democratic Rep. Gerald E. “Gerry” Connolly re-elected to 3rd term in Virginia’s 11th District

*Eminent domain, veto amendments pass overwhelmingly (Big mistake on the eminent domain amendment, the problem is it seemed fine on the surface – but it most definitely isn’t. Sigh.)

*Bob Goodlatte cruises to victory once again (Too bad, but Andy Schmookler should be proud of the race he ran! If he had only had some money to get his message out…sigh.)

*Schmookler concedes Sixth District race (Andy’s a class act all the way, as this statement demonstrates.)

*Wolf garners 17th term in office (Hey, didn’t this guy promise to be term limited about…oh, more than 17 years ago? So much for that promise…)

*Robert Hurt defeats John Douglass in 5th District

*Editorial: An election about second chances (“President Obama and congressional leaders cannot afford to sacrifice another four years to shabby partisan games and perpetual failure.”)

*Light-rail referendum on track to approval in Virginia Beach

*Arlington voters set to reelect Garvey to board

*Alexandria Democrats unseat GOP incumbents (Finally – bye bye!)

P.S. Oh, and Can we give Nate Silver his due? And can we PLEASE never hear from Donald Trump, Sheldon Adelson, Karl Rove, Richard Mourdock, Todd Akin, Allen West, or any of these wackos ever again? Yeah, I know, no such luck. Heh.)

National Election Results Open Thread / Live Blog

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The polls are about to close on the Eastern United States.  At 7 pm EST we’ll see polls close in Virginia, South Carolina, Georgia, and across most (but not all) of Florida.  Virginia is of course, the first of the major swing states to close.  So, to start out the night the big question:  Are “you on your own” or we “all in this together”?

IF YOU ARE IN LINE, STAY IN LINE.  DO NOT LEAVE THE LINE!

Electoral College Total of Called Races:  Obama 303 – Romney 203.

Update 1:00am:

President Obama’s Victory Speech:

*  “These arguments we have are a mark of our liberty.”

*  “Our economy is recovering, a war is ending, and a long campaign is over. Whether I earned your vote or not, I have listened to your voice … and I will return to the White House more determined than ever.”

*  The President identifies his Second Term Agenda:  Deficit Reduction, Immigration Reform, Energy Independence.

Update 1:00am:

Mitt Romney concedes, graciously.

Barack Obama Wins Virginia!

Update 12:15:

Mitt Romney is disputing the election results in Ohio, but with the President’s victory in Colorado this point is now moot.  With or without Ohio, President Obama has been reelected.

Update 12:00:

President Obama wins Colorado and Nevada.

President Obama leads Virginia and Florida but they are still too close to call.

In an astonishing and pitiful move, the Romney campaign is disputing the Ohio result.  A fitting end to a truly despicable campaign.

Update 11:12:

PRESIDENT OBAMA REELECTED!

OBAMA WINS OHIO, IOWA, OREGON

Update 11:00:

Obama Wins California, Washington, and his home state Hawaii.

Romney Wins Idaho and North Carolina.

Oregon, Iowa, Nevada Too Early to Call, Leaning Obama

Florida, Ohio, Virginia, Colorado Too Close to Call.

Update 10:00:

CONGRATULATIONS SENATOR ELECT TIM KAINE (D)!

Obama wins Minnesota

Romney wins Missouri

Update 9:50:

NEW HAMPSHIRE GOES FOR OBAMA!

Update 9:45:

OH-Sen: Sherrod Brown (D) Wins!

MA-Sen: Elizabeth Warren (D) Wins!

IN-Sen: Joe Donnelley (D) Wins!  Richard “Rape is God’s Will” Murdock (R) ends his political career with a whimper.

Update 9:15: OBAMA’S RUST BELT FIREWALL HOLDS:   PROJECTED TO WIN PENNSYLVANIA, WISCONSIN, AND MICHIGAN.

“Romney’s pathways to 270 are closing and they are closing fast!” – Obama Spokesperson Stephanie Cutter.

President Obama just took the lead in the Electoral College projections.  He will not give up that lead again.  period.

Update 9:00:

NBC PROJECTS: REPUBLICANS WILL KEEP CONTROL OF US HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES.

Too close/early to call: Arizona (Romney Leads)

Too close/early to call: Wisconsin, Pennsylvania (Obama Leads)

Too close to call:  Ohio, Virginia, Florida, New Hampshire, Colorado, Missouri – STAY IN LINE!!!

Obama takes Michigan, New Mexico, New Jersey

Romney takes Kansas, Nebraska (4 of 5 ECV), Texas, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming.

PA-Sen:  Bob Casey (D) wins!

Update 8:30pm: CT-Sen Chris Murphy (D) wins! How many millions did Linda McMahon waste.  If things keep going this way, this will be a huge  story from 2012:  Wasted GOP $$$$.

Also:  Romney takes Arkansas.  Not a surprise.

Update 8:16pm: Bill Nelson (D) will win FL-Sen.

New Jersey voting will be extended until FRIDAY due to the effects of Hurricane Sandy. So, we may not get a projected winner there tonight.

Update 8:00pm: Obama projected to win CT, ME, MD, DE, RI, DC, MA, IL.

Romney projected to win MS, OK.

NJ, MO, PA too early to call.

Ohio, Virginia, North Carolina, Florida still too close to call.

Update 7:49pm: Polls are about to close across the heartland from Maine to Kansas, including swing states Pennsylvania and the rest of Florida.  Get ready for some amazing numbers…

Update 7:37pm: CNN exit polls of Ohio — Obama leads state by three, Sherrod Brown leads by more than five.  REMEMBER THESE ARE EXIT POLLS

Update 7:30pm: NBC calls WV for Romney.  Ohio, NC, and VA are still too close to call.  GA and SC, too early to call.  Joe Mansion (D) holds his US Senate Seat in WV.  ECV Totals:  Obama 3, Romney 33.

Update 7:22pm: Polls close in 8 minutes in West Virginia, North Carolina, and OHIO!!!

Update 7:01pm: NBC Calls Vermont for Obama, Indiana, Kentucky for Romney.  Obama 3, Romney 19.  Bernie Sanders I-VT will hold his US Senate seat.  Virginia is too close to call.  South Carolina too early.

Virginia Election Results 2012: Live Blog

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So, I’m going to be live blogging Virginia’s election returns as they come in. Among other things, I’ll be focusing on localities that came close to matching the overall Virginia results in 2008 (which were 52.62%-46.33% Obama): places like Winchester (52.02% Obama in ’08), Loudoun County (53.66% Obama in ’08), Montgomery County (51.73% Obama in ’08), and Nelson County (53.98% in ’08). I’ll also be looking at specific precincts that came close to matching their locality’s overall results in ’08. Finally, I’ll be looking at turnouts and margins compared to ’08 to try to get an idea how Virginia will go tonight. Stay tuned…

P.S. My main source for Virginia election data will be the State Board of Elections website. I’ll also keep an eye on the Fairfax County Board of Elections numbers, as they are sometimes faster than the SBE.

UPDATE 11:22 pm: Barack Obama has now taken the lead in the State Board of Elections count, and that will only grow given where the outstanding votes are remaining (BLUE areas!). YES!!!! 🙂

UPDATE 10:54 pm: George Allen is now conceding to Tim Kaine on TV. Also, @PeterHambyCNN has called VA for Obama.

UPDATE 10:52 pm: Ben has called Virginia for Obama, and I agree, having crunched the numbers myself. With all the votes in NOVA still out, plus Norfolk and Portsmouth, plus lots of people still waiting in line to vote, and with Obama within 21,000 votes, I agree with Ben — Obama’s going to win Virginia and with it the White House! 🙂

UPDATE 10:17 pm: Del. Scott Surovell (@ssurovell) tweets, “44th District performing as expected. Precincts with long lines (Democratic howitzers) reporting soon. Watch Obama/Kaine numbers jump.”

UPDATE 10:12 pm: More detail on that last post, now with 77.7% of precincts reporting. First, Obama’s trailing by just 57,000 votes and Kaine by 7,000 votes, but with plenty of “blue” votes still out there in Fairfax, Arlington, Norfolk, Alexandria, etc. In other words, I think Ben’s right that Kaine will pull this out, and that Obama has a decent shot as well. Hopefully we’ll know a LOT more in the next hour or so…

UPDATE 9:58 pm: With 75.66% of precincts reporting, it’s now Allen 50.29%-Kaine 49.52%; Romney 50.59%-Obama 47.78%. Still plenty of Fairfax and other “blue” areas left to report, so stay tuned! 🙂

UPDATE 9:26 pm: Ben Tribbett – who is almost never wrong about these things – tweets, “9:10 PROJECTION: TIM KAINE (D) DEFEATS GEORGE ALLEN (R) FOR THE OPEN VIRGINIA U.S. SENATE SEAT.” Ben adds, “From the results in so far Obama is favored to win in Virginia- but still a lot of big numbers to report from absentee voting.”

UPDATE 8:59 pm: With 57% of precincts reporting, Romney now leads 52%-46% in Virginia. However, almost nothing from Fairfax County yet. So far, Loudoun’s going 50%-48% for Obama. That compares to the 54% Obama got in Loudoun in 2008.

UPDATE 8:51 pm: On the House races, as I said earlier, it appears that all incumbents are winning handily. Also, both constitutional amendments appear to be winning by wide margins. Also worth noting, third-party candidates are not doing much of anything.

UPDATE 8:45 pm: I was just looking at Arlington precincts currently reporting and comparing them to 2008. I’m not seeing a significant difference, which I think is encouraging for President Obama. Also, note that most urban areas of Virginia haven’t reported yet, so Romney’s lead doesn’t mean much. Looks like  ‏@notlarrysabato agrees with me – “Absolute lies from @johnkingcnn on Northern Virginia- precinct numbers tracking 08 results VERY CLOSELY”

UPDATE 8:30 pm: This is interesting from RT @TPCarney – “Every Fairfax VA precinct that has come in has tracked almost precisely with 2008.”

UPDATE 8:27 pm: I just got an interesting email. “Over a dozen satellite trucks at the Marriott – Kaines election night headquarters. Less than half as many at the Omni – Allen’s local. Think the press have made their own prediction.”

UPDATE 8:20 pm: Interesting results in some Virginia counties that were highly representative of the state as a whole in 2008. First, in Prince Edward County, with all precincts reporting, Obama won 55% of the vote, about 1 point up from his 54% in Prince Edwards in 2008. In Henrico, Obama was at 56% in 2008, this year he’s at 55% with 42/94 precincts reporting. On the other hand, Obama seems to be underperforming in Westmoreland County, where he got 55% in 2008, but is at just 48% with 6/7 precincts counted.

UPDATE 8:10 pm: By the way, I’m projecting right now that every incumbent Virginia Congressman, with the possible exceptions of Scott Rigell (R-2nd) and Robert Hurt (R-5th) will win reelection tonight easily.

UPDATE 8:09 pm: According to @notlarrysabato – “Prince William County has the state’s longest streak of voting for statewide electoral winners- looks headed to Obama.”

UPDATE 8:07 pm: I’ve just about given up on the Virginia State Board of Elections in terms of providing results. So…currently on CNN, with 13% of the votes counted, it’s 59%-40% Romney. Meaningless, of course, as Fairfax and other urban areas haven’t reported.

UPDATE 7:56 pm: Interesting from ‏@CollegiateTimes – “The Va State Board of Elections will pause reporting until 8 pm to ensure voters are not unduly influenced by preliminary results.”

UPDATE 7:48 pm: @David_Gergen tweets, “Remember early exits often wrong but so far, news from Va not encouraging for Mitt. He needs Va big time — exit says tied.” @LarrySabato tweets, “VA is not going to be called quickly. Too many people still in line to vote in some areas (e.g., Hampton Roads).” Also, @HotlineJosh tweets, “@redistict pins Obama target # in Chesterfield Co at 41.64%. With 1/3 vote in, he’s at 43%. It’s close in VA.”

UPDATE 7:44 pm: According to CNN, very similar numbers in Henrico County to 2008. FYI, Henrico went 55.70% for Obama, about 3 points higher for Obama than the state as a whole.

UPDATE 7:39 pm: As @LarrySabato tweets, “Ignore early vote returns on VA boards–mainly strong R counties.”

UPDATE 7:33 pm: Romney now leading Obama 58%-40% in Virginia with just 2% of the vote counted, utterly meaningless – almost all from “red” areas.

UPDATE 7:21 pm: ThinkProgress reports, the Obama campaign has sent an urgent text message to supporters, volunteers need RIGHT NOW in Virginia to make sure everyone in line gets to vote. “Reply with VAPOLLS and an organizer will call you.”

UPDATE 7:13 pm: Interesting by @scontorno – “Demographic breakdowns in #Virginia are almost identical to 2008. 70% white, 21% black, 4% Latino, 3% Asian.”

UPDATE 7:11 pm: Just saw the following tweet by ‏@kenwusa9 – “Headed to PW county. Getting reports of lines so long voters may have to wait there overnight.” Yikes.

UPDATE 7:04 pm: CNN exit polls show Virginia tied, 49%-49%. Exit polls reportedly show Tim Kaine leading. More Virginia exit poll info includes the economy being the top issue, voters favoring keeping abortion legal in most or all cases by a 2:1 margin.

UPDATE 7:00 pm: Polls officially close now, but if you’re in line, you are allowed to vote. DO NOT LEAVE THE LINE – MAKE SURE YOU EXERCISE YOUR RIGHT TO VOTE!

UPDATE 6:57 pm: Just saw this. “Voting lines in Northern Virginia are 4 hours long right now. We’re recruiting MoveOn members to head to the polling places to bring water, snacks, folding chairs, blankets, hot drinks, etc. to help make voters comfortable and help them stay in line and not leave without voting.”

Election Day Open Thread: What Are You Seeing, Hearing?

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Please feel free to use this as an open thread to discuss what you’re seeing and hearing out there today.  Thanks. Oh, and check out your Virginia Voters’ Checklist – know your rights and call 1-866-OUR-VOTE if you have any questions.

First, here’s a tweet from @MikeSigner – “Very long lines in Arlington and Alexandria-frustrating for voters, I know-but a sign of good Dem GOTV!!”

Tweet from @frankoanderson – “Lorton Station precinct, they forgot to charge 2 machines so they lost power.” and “Centerpointe precinct they’re not letting people vote- electronic poll books frozen. They have paper books but won’t use them.”

UPDATE 10:53 am: Long lines in deep-blue Arlington, I just got back from voting after about a 40 minute wait, couple hundred people ahead of me in line.

UPDATE 12:53 pm: Anecdotal, but a good sign if true: ” just voted in Northern Virginia area [in Prince William County] & the same place/area that Ive voted at for years and can report that turnout is up in general and far more Latinos than Ive ever seen voting”

UPDATE 12:55 pm: Also, just saw this by @ThePlumLineGS. “Dems report long voting lines in Richmond, Newport News, East Henrico, and Arlington–all Dem strongholds in Virginia”

UPDATE 3:03 pm: Mo Elleithee writes, “Seeing VERY high turnout across Virginia. On par with or maybe even HIGHER than 2008 levels. Long lines in many places. Please be patient and stay in line!”

UPDATE 5:26 pm: I’m hearing that Loudoun County turnout is on track to exceed 2008 levels. That’s potentially good news, as higher turnout means more Democratic voters, all else being equal…

UPDATE 6:12 pm: Some exit poll info, I’d take it with a huge grain of salt though…

Thanks from John Douglass; Now Let’s Put the “Hurt” on Hurt!

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From the John Douglass for Congress campaign.

 

We knew this race wouldn't be easy, but thanks to your hard work — by donating, phone banking and canvassing — we have been able run one of the most competitive congressional campaigns in our country.

When I head to the polls today, I know who else I'm voting for — Barack Obama and Tim Kaine. More importantly, I know what I'm voting for. I'm voting to help every Virginian get a chance to learn and work, turn a job into a career, provide for a family and save for retirement. That's the dream we share, which keeps us working harder and harder for more security and more opportunity, so that we, as fellow Americans, continue leading the world.

So I have a feeling that today will be a great day for America and Virginia, as long as we get out every vote. Then we'll have time to celebrate and get some rest, before we continue our work to help Virginia families get a fair chance at a better future.

With deep gratitude and warm regards,

–John

P.S. There's still time to chip in whatever you can to cover our ground game expenses. Thanks again for all you do. 

Virginia News Headlines: Election Day (Go Obama!)

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Here are a few Virginia (and national) news headlines, political and otherwise, for Election Day, November 6, 2012. Go Obama (and Democrats everywhere)! Polls in Virginia are, as always, open from 6 am until 7 pm – go vote, and don’t let anyone you know forget to vote. For more motivation, check out President Obama’s emotional final rally of the campaign, before a huge crowd “where it all began,” late last night in Des Moines, Iowa.

*The trouble with Obama’s Silver lining (Michael Gerson – George W. Bush’s speechwriter, which really says it all! – gets the award for most absurd, most insipid, most idiotic final column of the 2012 election season — and that’s really saying something! Check out the top comments, which begin: “So when Gerson writes a spiteful and hate-filled column about the president every few days, that’s considered part of a ‘noble enterprise’? Spare me. Nate Silver at least doesn’t have a raging moral superiority complex.”)

*Nov. 5: Late Poll Gains for Obama Leave Romney With Longer Odds (Speaking of Nate Silver, who has more intelligence in his left toenail than Michael Gerson has in his entire body…91.6% chance of an Obama victory today. Now let’s do it!)

*President Obama crushes Romney in Hart’s Location, New Hampshire (Hahahaha.)

*Chris Christie Denied Mitt Romney Request To Appear At Campaign Event Days Ahead Of 2012 Election (Hey, it’s the Jersey way! LOL)

*Endorsements for 2012 election (Obama, Kaine, No on Ballot Question #1)

*Now, it’s the voters’ turn to speak in race (“Polls show Obama with edge; Romney to campaign Tuesday in Pa. and Ohio.”)

*Romney changes his tune (“In the last days of his campaign, he is an almost entirely different candidate.” This guy gives me vertigo!)

*Virginia voters finally get to have their say Tuesday

*While polls show Kaine has an edge, GOP turnout and organization could even the equation (Let’s make sure the equation is NOT evened – GOTV!)

*Allen, Kaine bask in glow of top of tickets (“At rallies, Senate rivals share stages with Biden, Romney”)

*Voters settle Virginia’s marquee Senate race today

*Editorial: The election’s end is in sight (“After suffering through a painful, partisan election season, Virginians finally can cast their ballots.”)

*Santorum gives final push for Romney in Harrisonbur (Yep, it’s Mr. “Man on Dog” for Mr. “Dog on Roof!” LOL)

*Valley Campaigns Makes Final Push Ahead of Election Day

*Schmookler talks state of the race on Election Eve (Go Andy!)

*Will Eric Cantor remain a prominent Capitol Hill figure after Tuesday? (Probably, but let’s hope not!)

*Editorial: Virginia’s disenfranchised (“Virginia is still more restrictive than most states in restoring voting rights.”)

*Full report on Vice President Joe Biden’s visit to Roanoke (Gotta love the irrepressible Joe Biden – “Look at that size of that pie! Holy moley!”)

*Ryan to make Election Day stop in Richmond

*The only poll that matters (“Voting remains the single most important means to support our democratic republic, the single biggest civic obligation of its citizens.”)

*Stevie Wonder, backing Obama, plays to capacity crowd in Scope

*State Police spent nearly $33k on OT for October political rallies (Money well spent if you ask me.)

*Obama’s success at filling judicial vacancies in Virginia

*D.C., Maryland residents help mobilize vote in Virginia

*Fairfax hopes for high turnout at new round of transportation meetings

*Shanahan: Quotes misinterpreted

*Freeze warning issued for D.C. area