Cuccinelli’s impending loss in the Virginia governor’s race today to a weak
Democratic candidate, the affable Terry McAuliffe, has exposed a major problem
on the campaign trail for the deeply divided Republicans as we head into 2014.
The GOP has
virtually no campaign surrogates, except maybe Paul Ryan, who can go into a
state or congressional district and receive applause from the entire audience.
The tea party types would love to see Ted Cruz or Rand Paul or Mike Lee
campaigning for the Republican candidate in a general election. The
establishment Republicans would be happy with Chris Christie or Jeb Bush or even
John McCain.
these guys are divisive within the GOP ranks – a magnet for disdain either from
the segment on the right or the group closer to the center — and would hold
down the crowd size at any campaign rally. They would dampen enthusiasm for the
candidate. They might even draw some boos from a portion of the crowd.
That was a key
problem faced by Cuccinelli, a tea party favorite, in his very winnable race.
James Hohmann
of Politico points out that McAuliffe has had President Barack Obama, Vice
President Joe Biden and Hillary and Bill Clinton hit the trail for him.
Cuccinelli’s
big-name supporters appearing at campaign events were Marco Rubio, Scott
Walker, Bobby Jindal and Ron Paul.
mismatch.
contrast in surrogates in the home stretch of the Virginia governor’s race is
another reminder of the GOP’s larger leadership vacuum and the civil war for
the soul of a party still reeling from last year’s thrashing,” Hohmann wrote. “Simply
put, the party lacks a single unifying figure who appeals to every wing of the
party, let alone matches the star power of the Clinton-Obama tandem.”
doesn’t help that Cuccinelli, the state’s attorney general, was previously
associated with right-wing positions such as mandatory vaginal probes for women
contemplating an abortion.
It also doesn’t
help that the government shutdown was highly unpopular in Virginia.
Worse yet,
Cuccinelli is associated with a party that has, in the space of one year,
thoroughly failed in its post-2012 election reassessment which called for
courting female and minority voters and expressing more tolerance for gays.
A new poll found that only 23 percent of Republicans said it
would be a good thing if Congress had more women (and wasn’t dominated by old,
rich white guys). In fact, two-thirds in the GOP said the issue didn’t really
matter to them.
bar people from being fired from their job because they’re gay or their boss
thinks they’re gay. Sounds pretty basic. But not when the tea party and
ultraconservatives like Cuccinelli are pulling your party members to the right.
A spokesman
for John Boehner said the speaker would oppose the bill because it will
“increase frivolous litigation and cost American jobs.” Much like the
poll cited above, it sounds like Boehner and the GOP want to protect jobs for
heterosexuals but he’s not much interested in preserving employment for the
LGBT folks.
choosing a path toward winning elections, the 2013 version of the Republican
Party, the right-wing base, dismissed former President George W. Bush as “a
squish.”
But that’s the
kind of talk that turns off independent and moderate voters. As he goes down in
flames, Cuccinelli has made some bold statements about the stakes in the
Virginia election that certainly made the national party leaders cringe.
“Virginia once
again has an opportunity … to show the country that conservatism isn’t dead,”
he has said. He also claimed that today’s vote in the commonwealth is a
referendum on Obamacare, with Republicans sending a message by handing him a
victory.
course, will portray the outcome as a repudiation of those statements.
Yet, I doubt
that a parade of semi-popular surrogates, plus an embrace from the tea party, and
a heaping helping of Cuccinelli’s brand of politics could possibly lead to the
conclusion that the Virginia election shows that people truly do like what they
see in Obamacare.