The mood among Virginia Republicans is grim these days. But if there’s one bright spot for them on Tuesday, it’s the thought of attorney general nominee Mark Obenshain.
As Democrats look to complete a historic sweep in the Old Dominion, the attorney general contest is an unusually big deal, with Democrat Mark Herring looking to complete the hat trick against Obenshain.
The race between the two men, both state senators, has been overshadowed by the higher-profile candidates at the top of the ticket.
That’s allowed Obenshain to run a more independent–and savvier–campaign than his ticketmates have, without their damaging soundbites and pock-marked reputations.
“Obenshain is the crown jewel of this ticket and has run a crisp, smart, aggressive campaign that took tactical risks with respect to how they advertised, and that paid off in terms of money,” said national GOP strategist Phil Musser, a former executive director of the RGA. “All of us are hoping and praying that the macro climate doesn’t swamp the Obenshain campaign.”
The close race forced Herring and Democrats into frantically trying to convince commonwealth voters that the Republican would be a Cuccinelli clone; Herring ads have sought to tie Obenshain to the GOP gubernatorial candidate, noting their similar conservative records on social issues.
The last minute money has flowed to both candidates after the sudden burst of intensity in the race. As Democrats have pulled away in the top two races and the attorney general contest has stayed tight, money from both sides has shifted rapidly to the battle for the state’s top attorney. Obenshain has outraised Herring, $3.7 million to $2.3 million, according to the nonpartisan Virginia Public Access Project, and the Republican also outraised Cuccinelli in the final homestretch.
Michael Bloomberg’s Independence USA PAC put nearly $1.3 million in the race last week, hammering Obenshain on his support for a Personhood bill and opposition to closing the gun show loophole. Planned Parenthood has spent another $100,000 on ads, hitting Obsenshain on his opposition to abortion. The Democratic Party of Virginia has also released an ad pointing out that Obenshain voted for a controversial bill last year in that state legislature that would have required women to have a transvaginal ultrasound before having an abortion.
The significance of the AG’s race isn’t lost on Democrats. If they win the trifecta on Tuesday, it will be the first time the party had heled all the state’s constitutional offices and both U.S. Senate seats since 1969.
“Traditionally the attorney general’s race is the hardest one for Democrats to win,” the state’s Democratic Sen. Tim Kaine told MSNBC at a Saturday door-knocking kick-off in Fairfax.
Kaine admitted that Obenshain has a different approach than Cuccinelli that’s helped him build his lead, but said strong Democratic turnout against the rest of the ticket could push Herring to victory.
“They have different styles, I’ll grant them that,” the Democrat said of Obenshain & Cuccinelli. “Mark Obenshain is not personally as combative as Cuccinelli is, but his voting record is very much the same.”
The final Christopher Newport University poll of the race showed the two in a statistical tie, with Obenshain up 45%-43% among likely voters, aided by better results with key blocs Cuccinelli is losing. Herring leads among female voters, 45%-39%– a much smaller gender gap than in the governor’s race, and Obenshain is actually winning independent voters by 15 points.
There’s likely to be heavy ticket splitting that could benefit Obenshain, too: 19% of his voters said they planned to vote for McAuliffe, and 19% also said they planned to vote for Ralph Northam, the Democratic nominee for lieutenant governor.
Obenshain has built a far different coalition than either Cuccinelli or GOP candidate for lieutenant governor E.W. Jackson, as was clear on last week at a fundraiser that drew about 150 donors to the Vienna home of former Rep. Tom Davis, a moderate Republican who’s been critical of the sharp right turn his party’s taken in the changing state.
Cuccinelli’s name was barely uttered. Instead of Tea Party anger, there was a celebration of civility and moderation.
Headlining the event — former Republican Sen. John Warner and former Democratic Attorney General Andy Miller, whose 1976 campaign against each other factors heavily in Obenshain’s own personal story. His father, Dick Obenshain, was the GOP’s nominee for Senate that year until he was killed in a plane crash campaigning around the state. Warner, who’d lost to Obenshain at the nominating convention, was asked by the elder Obenshain’s widow to take his place, and Warner narrowly beat Miller that fall, launching his three-decade long career.
Leaning on a cane as he spoke, Warner bemoaned the negativity that had taken over the airwaves, noting that in his battle with Miller, they “never pointed fingers, never used any negative advertising.”
“Mark Obenshain is ready to fight,” said Warner. “After four years, he’d be a viable candidate to move on [to national office].”
Miller, who has crossed party lines to endorse before and was the only speaker to openly praise Cuccinelli, said he believed the races across the ballot for the GOP were closing, pointing to a Quinnipiac poll that morning that showed Cuccinelli behind by only four points.
“I really believe that the momentum is in Mark’s favor,” said Miller.
Other GOP stalwarts were similarly optimistic, though more critical of Cuccinelli’s operation.
Former Lt. Gov. John Hager told MSNBC that Cuccinelli’s campaign “had some shortfalls” and didn’t do a good job of “putting down the mythology” on social issues — but that Obenshain could still put one race in the GOP’s “win” column.
“There are a lot of people that care about making sure that we win this race and how important this race is, and a lot of dedication to the Obenshain legacy,” said Hager.









