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Virginia Democrats Working to Catch Second Wave

VCU CNS | September 17, 2019

Topics: 2020 election, abigail spanberger, Debra Rodman, Democratic debates, Democratic Presidential campaign, General Assembly, Henrico County Democrats, Rodney Willett, schuyler vanvalkenburg

From the General Assembly elections this November to the all-important 2020 election, Henrico County Democrats are creating a community around turning the Commonwealth blue.

When the ice cream came out, it felt like a party. 

But this wasn’t a party; it was a political event. 

Bursts of laughter peppered the air. The space on Parham Road that once served as headquarters for Abigail Spanberger’s 2018 congressional run bristled with excitement.

Henrico County Democrats hosted a gathering Thursday night at their “Blue Wave Office” to watch the third Democratic presidential debate. Campaign officials for Dels. Schuyler VanValkenburg, D-Henrico, Debra Rodman, D-Henrico and Rodney Willett helped organize the watch party. Willet is the Democratic candidate for the 73rd District House race.

A motley assortment of chairs was arranged around a projector and screen, snacks were neatly stacked at a table by the front door, and a cardboard cutout of former President Obama smiled from a corner of the room. Some onlookers sprawled comfortably on a couch during the debate, others stretched out on the floor.

If this sounds miles away from the typically staid and often buttoned up campaign events many have come to expect during election season, then that’s the point, said Molly Banta, campaign manager for Rodman’s 12th District Senate race.

“We canvas together; we phone bank together; we elect these incredible Dems together,” Banta said. “We are doing this, and we are in this fight together.”

During the debate broadcast, people cheered when their preferred candidates made a major promise on a particular issue or let loose a pointed criticism of Washington politics. On occasion there were murmurs in the crowd when a candidate flip-flopped or dodged a question, but for the most part the atmosphere stayed genial and at times downright fired up. 

David Aldridge, campaign manager for VanValkenburg’s 72nd House District race, addressed the group during a break in the debate. He thanked them for coming and talked about how their enthusiasm for national races can translate to Democratic wins at the state level. The audience clapped and shouted their approval.

November will see the first state Senate races since Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential win, and political experts believe the 2019 General Assembly races could be a barometer for trends in 2020. Voter turnout in Virginia is traditionally lower the year before a presidential election than the year after one. Voter turnout spiked in the state — the number of absentee ballots soaring to unprecedented numbers in off-election years — following Trump’s win. That helped generate a blue wave in House races that House and Senate candidates hope to catch again. 

Democrats plan to reach this goal by keeping volunteers and voters engaged and working together.

“People want somebody in office who is going to fight as hard for them as they would for their own kid, or for their own neighbor, or for their own community member,” Banta said. “That’s what people have seen from the freshmen that were elected in 2017, from these regular people stepping up to run.”

The party deliberately chose to run multiple campaigns from an office in the heart of Henrico County. 

“We were really hoping to build a community aspect, where every Democrat and every person who is Democratic leaning, whether they consider themselves a liberal or anywhere else, like a progressive or all the various kinds of labels out there, could feel like they had a home,” Aldridge said.

Will voters generate the second blue wave that barrels Democratic candidates into office again this election? 

Voter Arden Stevens believes Virginia Democrats are just getting started. 

“It is more important to have people who you can engage with on a personal level who are, like I said, making decisions that actually matter,” Stevens said. “That’s what matters to me.”

By Morgan Edwards, Capital News Service. Photos by Paul Greiner.

Op-Ed: Can Virginia’s Democratic Party Recover From the Northam Backlash?

Rich Meagher | March 12, 2019

Topics: Debra Rodman, Democratic Party of Virginia, Election 2019, Ralph Northam, state politics

Governor Ralph Northam may be trying to put his blackface scandal behind him. But we are just beginning to see the effects of his missteps, on state politics in general and on the Democratic Party in particular.

Some of these effects extend beyond the Governor’s office. As was widely reported last week, VA First Lady Pam Northam got in hot water by handing out cotton to school kids and asking them to imagine what slavery was like. Some of the students who were there dispute the idea that she singled out black kids. But the whole episode surely would not be an issue without her husband’s blackface incident; the kids on the tour clearly were hyper-aware of the Northams’ recent history. Routine duties like leading a school tour become perilous when everyone wonders if you and your husband are racists.

Still, such a precarious position has not stopped Northam from getting involved with legislative politics. Thanks to some terrific reporting by the RTD’s Patrick Wilson, we learned last week that Mark Bergman, head of Governor Northam’s political action committee, had been talking to Delegate Debra Rodman about making a state Senate run — convincingly so, it seems, as Rodman officially announced her campaign yesterday. Some Democrats think Rodman may be able to challenge conservative Republican Siobhan Dunnavant in the 12th Senate district in purplish Henrico County.

If I were Rodman, I would think twice about a Senate run. I think Deb is great – she’s a colleague of mine at Randolph-Macon College – and she ran a terrific underdog campaign in 2017. But she has only been in office for two legislative sessions, and might not have enough of a record to stand on. (Not to mention that you can see her standing behind Kathy Tran in the viral video from the infamous “Dems want to kill babies” abortion fiasco earlier this year.)

Del. Debra Rodman/via Facebook

Still, maybe Rodman’s platform as a sitting Delegate and her existing network of volunteers and donors could offer a real challenge to Dunnavant. The district voted Democratic last year by 15% (although that may have been more about voters rejecting Corey Stewart than anything else).

There’s just one problem: two Democratic candidates have already announced they are running against Dunnavant. And both – Veena Gupta Lothe and Marques Jones – are ethnic minorities. Rodman is not.

It is true that Lothe and Jones are newcomers with little political experience and not much money in the bank. (Of course, the same could have been said about Rodman in 2017.) So if the party is focused on winning that particular Senate seat, it might make sense to recruit a stronger candidate.

But what about the bigger picture?

First of all, the Party should be wary of taking sides in a primary among good faith candidates. According to the RTD report, the Governor’s PAC asked the state party to conduct a poll in Dunnavant’s district; they shared the results with Rodman, but not Lothe or Jones. Other candidates, activists, and volunteers could lose faith in the fairness of party leaders in an important election year.

Even more importantly, the Governor, at least through his PAC team, appears to be working to support a white woman over people of color at a time when minorities are already suspicious of his intentions.

More than the Governor’s reputation is at stake here. If Democrats want to reproduce the success of the last two elections in Virginia, they need ethnic minorities in the state to turn out for Democratic candidates. They also need volunteers and activists to fundraise, phonebank, and canvass. Thanks to Northam’s yearbook photo, African-Americans and other POC in the state have plenty of reasons to opt out this year.

In any other year, Northam’s actions here might be viewed as demonstrating important party leadership. As unpopular as partisanship is these days, political parties remain the most effective and important means of gaining power and governing in a democracy. If you like Democratic Party policies, you want a strong party voice helping to ensure that Democrats win state elections – and, eventually, win control of the General Assembly. This kind of coordination may involve some tough decisions.

But because of Northam’s blackface, Dem voters and activists may see another narrative in play. Instead of party leadership, they may see the Democratic party taking minority support for granted by promoting white candidates over people of color.

They may see a power play by a Democratic Governor who has absolutely no moral standing on race issues, and who is actively working to undermine minority Democrats, including an African-American.

No matter what happens in this particular Senate district, this episode shows – like so much else over the past few weeks – how Ralph Northam’s case for staying in office makes so very little sense. As long as Northam remains Governor, Democrats will be in disarray.

Note: Op-Eds are contributions from guest writers and do not reflect RVA Magazine editorial policy.

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