HERNDON, Va. — A week before election day, the two top candidates vying to become Virginia’s next governor sought to play on their supporters biggest fears.
For Democrats, it’s the fear that their voters won’t turn out for a typically low turnout off-year election. Terry McAuliffe turned to his biggest supporter, former President Bill Clinton, to remind Democrats that only their vote could save them from an extreme GOP ticket.
On the other side of the vote-rich Fairfax County, where both men hail from, Republican Ken Cuccinelli’s last ditch effort was to paint the November 5 vote as a referendum on Obamacare. The Cuccunelli campaign hoped its surrogate, Sen. Rand Paul, could stop voters from choosing a Libertarian third party candidate.
Eight days before the commonwealth picks its next governor–and Democrats hope they can break the jinx that the president’s party loses the Old Dominion contest–a Washington Post poll showed McAuliffe widening his lead to double digits, up 12 points over Cuccinelli, and leading with female voters by a stunning 24 points as Democrats hammer him on social issues and women’s health. The Libertarian candidate, Robert Sarvis, was taking 8%–votes Cuccinelli can’t afford to lose if he hopes to close the gap.
‘Dealmaker’ McAuliffe looks to close the sale
McAuliffe, midway through a three-day campaign swing with Bill Clinton, his close friend and political mentor, looked to Clinton to talk up his positive attributes even as Republicans eagerly remind voters of his history controversial business deals and investigations into his former electric car company.
“He will be a very good governor because he is a very good person. I see it in the eyes of his children, even when they’re fighting and stuff,” Clinton laughed, recalling the long friendship he and Hillary have had with McAuliffe and his wife Dorothy.
“People say ‘Terry’s just a dealmaker,’” said Clinton–a frequent criticism from Republicans of the former DNC chairman and fundraiser.
But, Clinton said, he wished there had been a dealmaker during the recent government shutdown, telling the crowd. “The Constitution of the United States should be subtitled, ‘Let’s Make a Deal.’”
The former president reminded the crowd though that Cuccinelli’s supporters were passionate and would turn out to the polls–and that Democrats had to too next Tuesday.
“If you can make people paranoid and ideological and angry all the time, if you can forcefeed them venom against people in another party so that steam comes out of their ears instead of lightbulbs going off in their head–they will come out and vote,” said Clinton.
Eric Fielding said Clinton’s presence brought him “from two-thirds to 100%” in favor of spending his Monday night at the rally.
Imperiled by a Third Party?
On the other side of Fairfax County a few hours earlier, Cuccinelli made a last gasp attempt at shoring up his passionate base he hopes will be the ones to turnout in next Tuesday’s low turnout election–with Tea Party favorite Rand Paul by his side.
The GOP attorney general didn’t focus on social issues, which Democrats have hammered him on. Paul also stayed away from the socially conservative rhetoric he’d used at an earlier rally in Lynchburg.
At that earlier event at Liberty University, founded by Jerry Falwell, Paul said that DNA testing and abortion could lead to eugenics, allowing the government to “select out the imperfect among us.” He cited the sci-fi dystopia in the movie “Gattaca” as an example of what might happen. But Rachel Maddow pointed out on her show Monday evening that many sentences and phrases from his speech were strikingly similar to the Wikipedia page about the movie. A plagiarism scandal by a top surrogate would be a distraction that the Cuccinelli campaign cannot afford.
At his rally, Cuccinelli repeatedly stressed he would fight for liberty and constitutional issues–critical to keeping his slipping base intact and stopping them from bleeding to Sarvis.
Both Paul and Cuccinelli took the stage with Big Gulps–a not-so-subtle slam against New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, whose gun control super PAC has dropped $1.1 million into the race’s final weeks to boost McAuliffe.
“I figured after he got my Big Gulp, he was coming for my guns,” the Kentucky senator laughed.









