A loss by Ken Cuccinelli was supposed to have been a wake-up call to the tea party that deeply conservative candidates couldn’t win in swing states like Virginia. Instead, the GOP nominee’s near-miss in Tuesday’s race for governor has only deepened the party’s ideological divide.
Going into Election Day, many Republicans in the Old Dominion and beyond expected their man to suffer a lopsided loss to Democrat Terry McAuliffe, who had hit Cuccinelli hard on social issues, and heavily outspent him.
But when the results came in, and the margin was only three points, many were left wondering whether a win had been within reach. They blamed the GOP cavalry for failing to ride in, believing that Cuccinelli’s framing of the race as a referendum against Obamacare had been a winning message.
“The RNC spent $9 million in 2009 to win and spent $3 million this time, pulling money out of Virginia, to lose by a hair. The RNC truly screwed up in Virginia this time and no amount of spinning can distract from that screw up,” Erick Erickson wrote on Red State.
“National GOP abandoned Cuccinelli in last 5 weeks of campaign,” conservative radio host Mark Levin tweeted, pointing to a Washington Post article quoting Cuccinelli chief strategist Chris LaCivita bemoaning that national funding had dried up on October 1–just after the government shutdown.
“There are a lot of questions people are going to be asking and that is, was leaving Cuccinelli alone in the first week of October, a smart move?” La Civita told the Post just after Cuccinelli’s concession speech. “We were on our own. Just look at the volume [of ads].”
Tea Party Patriots were even more forthright in a release blasting, “GOP Establishment Sells Out Virginians.”
“Because the Republican establishment cut funding to its own candidate by two thirds from the 2009 election, they robbed the people of Virginia of the good governor they almost had,” said Jenny Beth Martin, National Coordinator for Tea Party Patriots. “Even against such extraordinary odds, Cuccinelli came within roughly 50,000 votes and 2 percentage points of McAuliffe. Just think what would have happened if the business and donor classes of the Republican Party would have helped.”
To national strategists though, the blame for Cuccinelli’s loss lies with rightwingers who, with their government shutdown, hurt the party’s standing and took the focus away from the health care law’s implementation problems.
“If we hadn’t done the shutdown and let them beat on that drum for two weeks we would have already been talking about Obamacare,” GOP consultant Rick Wilson, told msnbc. “Another week of that was probably more valuable than millions of dollars of spending.”









