A little-known underdog named Dave Brat defeated House Majority Leader Eric Cantor in the GOP primary race to represent the 7th Congressional district in Virginia on Tuesday night.
Quickly, everyone scrambled to get to know the newest tea party darling who had defeated the seven-term Republican—the first primary challenger to unseat a majority leader since the position was created in 1899.
Brat, an economics professor and political novice, will face off against Democrat Jake Trammell in the November general election, but his district leans right and he’s already the favorite to win.
Here are the top five things you need to know about Virginia’s fresh-faced tea party politician.
1. “Miracles” happen: underdogs can still win in modern politics
Cantor out-spent Brat by a 26 to 1 margin, spending more on steak dinners alone than Brat did on his entire campaign, yet Brat won handily in the Republican primary, snagging 55% of the vote to Cantor’s 45%.
“If you go door-to-door knocking, the American people know the country is headed in the wrong direction, right? I mean, the debt, the deficit, the economic growth is terrible, the regulatory burden is terrible, and the representation in D.C. won’t address those major issues,” Brat told Fox News host Sean Hannity by phone. “I think the people are just ready for some major changes in this country and I was blessed, it’s a miracle. What do I attribute it to first? I attribute it to God and I’m utterly humbled and thankful. I’m a believer and so I’m humbled that God gave us this win…It’s just an unbelievable miracle.”
2. It’s all about the free markets
Brat, who earned a PhD in economics from American University, really, really loves free markets. In his interview with Hannity, Brat turned the conversation to free markets five different times, explaining that supporting free markets will fix our economy and feed the people, too.
“It’s not about right or left, free markets are indisputably the cause of our wealth. China right now is the perfect case and point. They are feeding 1.2 billion people for the first time in world history due to only one thing. Answer: free markets. As Republicans, that is the number one issue in our creed and that is a compassionate position, we are feeding 1.2 billion people!”
He believes it can not only fix the economy —it can improve our educational system, too.
“I’m with Reagan, I’m optimistic always about what the American people can do, but we gotta take off the shackles of the regulatory burden. Something like 2 trillion dollars out of the 17 trillion economy. If you get rid of that you can unleash the American economy and they’re ready to roll,” Brat said.
3. He’s pretty sure he’s a better Republican than you
Brat ran on the narrative that Cantor was too moderate and too out-of-touch with the people. On his victory, pundits declared that it was another sign the Republican Party has become more extremist.
“The results tonight will move the party further to the right, which will marginalize us further as a national party,” New York Republican Rep. Peter King said.
But Brat swore throughout the interview that he’s not that conservative—he’s just a better Republican than you.









