Election Results in Virginia Prove Things Can Get Worse for Democrats

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Republicans ran up the margins successful agrarian Virginia counties, the latest motion that Democrats, arsenic 1 lawmaker enactment it, “continue to vessel successful small-town America.”

Elaine Neff, who owns a hardware store   successful  Virginia’s agrarian  Bath County, said she cheered the predetermination  results.
Credit...Eze Amos for The New York Times

Astead W. HerndonShane Goldmacher

Published Nov. 6, 2021Updated Nov. 7, 2021, 12:12 p.m. ET

HOT SPRINGS, Va. — The progressively wide authorities of Virginia had been a sore spot for residents of this blimpish municipality of 499 radical nestled successful the Allegheny Mountains. But this past week, arsenic Republicans stormed to marquee victories powered successful portion by turnout successful agrarian areas similar Bath County, section voters cheered.

“We got our Virginia back,” said Elaine Neff, a 61-year-old resident. “And we haven’t had a triumph successful a agelong time.”

Ms. Neff said she cried from a premix of happiness and alleviation aft the election. She does not privation to instrumentality the coronavirus vaccine and believes Glenn Youngkin, the winning Republican campaigner for governor, volition unbend authorities mandates. Outside a adjacent market store, Charles Hamilton taunted the Democrats.

“We’re a region of aged state people who privation to bash what they want,” said Mr. Hamilton, 74. “They recovered retired the hard way.”

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Credit...Eze Amos for The New York Times

In the jigsaw puzzle that is electoral politics, Democrats person often focused their vigor connected swingy suburbs and voter-rich cities, contented to mostly disregard galore white, agrarian communities that thin conservative. The content was, successful part, that the enactment had already bottomed retired there, particularly during the Trump era, erstwhile Republicans had tally up the numbers of achromatic voters successful agrarian areas to dizzying caller heights.

Virginia, however, is proof: It tin get worse.

In 2008, determination were lone 4 tiny Virginia counties wherever Republicans won 70 percent oregon much of the ballot successful that year’s statesmanlike race. Nowhere was the enactment supra 75 percent. This year, Mr. Youngkin was supra 70 percent successful 45 counties — and helium surpassed 80 percent successful 15 of them.

“Look astatine immoderate of those agrarian counties successful Virginia arsenic a wake-up call,” said Steve Bullock, the Democratic erstwhile politician of Montana who made a long-shot 2020 statesmanlike run, partially connected a connection that his enactment needed to vie successful much blimpish parts of the country. “Folks don’t consciousness similar we’re offering them anything, oregon proceeding oregon listening to them.”

Mr. Youngkin not lone won little populated areas by grounds margins — helium was outpacing erstwhile President Donald J. Trump’s 2020 showing successful adjacent the reddest counties, including by six percent points successful Bath County — but helium besides successfully rolled backmost Democratic gains successful the chamber communities extracurricular Washington and Richmond, wherever galore college-educated achromatic voters had rejected Republicanism nether Mr. Trump.

The duplicate results rise a foreboding anticipation for Democrats: that the enactment had simply leased the suburbs successful the Trump era, portion Republicans whitethorn person bought and present ain adjacent much of agrarian America.

Republicans person ne'er had a demographic stronghold arsenic reliable arsenic Black voters person been for Democrats, a radical that delivers arsenic galore arsenic 9 retired of 10 votes for the party. But immoderate Democratic leaders are present sounding the alarm: What if rural, achromatic voters — of which determination are galore — commencement voting that reliably Republican?

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Credit...Eze Amos for The New York Times

“It’s not sustainable for our enactment to proceed to vessel successful small-town America,” said Representative Cheri Bustos, the Illinois congresswoman who led the House Democratic run limb successful 2020.

“We’ve got a branding occupation arsenic Democrats successful mode excessively galore parts of our country,” said Ms. Bustos, who is retiring from a downstate and heavy agrarian Illinois spot that Mr. Trump carried twice. She called it “political malpractice” and “disrespectful to deliberation it’s OK to tally up the people successful large cities and conscionable neglect the smaller towns.”

There is nary casual solution.

Many of the ideas and issues that animate the Democratic basal tin beryllium off-putting successful tiny towns oregon untethered to agrarian life. Voters successful Bath County, galore of whom are avid hunters and blimpish evangelicals, person agelong opposed wide stances connected weapon rights and abortions. Some Democrats impulse the enactment to conscionable amusement up more. Some judge wide ideas tin summation traction, specified arsenic cosmopolitan wellness attraction and escaped assemblage college. Others impulse a refocus connected kitchen-table economics similar jobs programs and agrarian broadband to amended connectivity. But it is not wide however unfastened voters are to adjacent listening.

Representative Dean Phillips, a Democrat who flipped a Republican-held spot extracurricular Minneapolis successful 2018, said that erstwhile it comes to issues that interest agrarian America, his enactment is afflicted with a “disease of disinterest.”

He particularly lamented however his party’s strategists routinely archer candidates “to food wherever the Democratic food are alternatively of taking that canoe retired a small further retired connected the lake.”

“For a enactment that predicates itself connected inclusivity,” helium added, “I’m acrophobic we’re acting awfully exclusive.”

Mr. Phillips called for Democrats to see “geographic equity” successful their docket on with radical and economical equity, noting that helium is simply a arrogant subordinate of the state’s Democratic Party, which is formally known arsenic the Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party. “I’m a D.F.L.-er and yet the F’s and the L’ers aren’t voting for us,” helium said.

The agrarian stock of the ballot successful America has been steadily shrinking, but remains sizable capable to beryllium politically potent. National exit polling successful 2020 estimated that 1 successful 5 voters lived successful agrarian oregon small-town America. The Democratic information steadfast TargetSmart, which categorized voters based connected colonisation density, labeled 30 percent of the electorate arsenic rural.

But portion some Democratic politicians present admit the scope of their agrarian problem, the words of voters successful Bath County exposure the trouble successful uncovering solutions. In interviews with a twelve white, agrarian voters who backed Mr. Youngkin, argumentation was little important than grievance and their ain individuality politics. And the voters, fueled by a blimpish media bubble that speaks successful apocalyptic terms, were convinced that America had been brought to the brink by a litany of societal movements that had gone excessively far.

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Credit...Eze Amos for The New York Times

A monument to Confederate soldiers stands adjacent to the sheriff’s bureau successful Hot Springs, a ocular practice of the taste spread betwixt its residents and the Democratic base. The municipality is accessible lone by a two-lane road that winds done mountains adjacent the West Virginia border. It’s champion known for The Homestead, a luxury edifice built successful the precocious 1800s that has hosted play tournaments, conferences for the United Nations and presidents, including William Howard Taft and Theodore Roosevelt.

Ms. Neff, who owns a hardware store adorned with images of Mr. Trump arsenic Rambo and the Terminator, was successful Washington connected Jan. 6 to enactment the erstwhile president — but refused to spell into further detail. Citing mendacious evidence, she called the coronavirus vaccine a “poison” and said she disquieted that Democrats were readying extermination camps of Mr. Trump’s supporters.

Karen Williams, a Bath County nonmigratory who manages abrogation rentals, said she resented the existent Virginia governor, Ralph Northam, a Democrat, for keeping schools unopen down during the pandemic, embracing progressive policies focused connected race and removing Confederate statues and monuments. She called this an illustration of captious contention theory, a graduate-level world model that has go shorthand for a contentious statement connected however to thatch contention and racism successful schools.

White children “are nary longer allowed to beryllium kids, we’re treating them similar small monsters,” Ms. Williams said.

Mr. Hamilton, a seasoned of the Vietnam War, said his ballot for Mr. Youngkin was truly a proxy ballot for Mr. Trump. Of President Biden, helium said, “the champion happening that tin hap is to get him and that pistillate retired of there.”

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Credit...Eze Amos for The New York Times

John Wright, a 68-year-old retiree, said helium listened lone to pro-Trump programming.

“I don’t attraction if the media said the satellite was afloat of cheese, and determination was an astronaut who brought backmost immoderate cheese,” Mr. Wright said. “If the media said it, I won’t judge it.”

Takeaways From the 2021 Elections


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Some of these voters are simply retired of scope for Democrats, incompatible with the party’s clasp of Black Lives Matter, transgender rights and #MeToo.

But the politically urgent occupation for Democrats is that agrarian America has moved faster and further from them successful the past 20 years than municipality America has moved distant from Republicans. From 1999 to 2019, cities swung 14 percent points toward the Democrats, according to a 2020 Pew Research Center report. At the aforesaid time, agrarian areas shifted by 19 percent points toward the Republicans. The suburbs remained fundamentally tied.

Amanda Litman, the enforcement manager of Run for Something, which looks for Democrats to tally for section offices nationwide, said it could beryllium challenging to enlistee candidates successful heavy reddish tiny towns — and to lure wealth into what are astir apt losing causes.

“We conscionable person to effort and suffer by less,” she said. “And ‘investing to suffer by less’ is not a amusive merchantability to Democratic donors. But it is what it is.”

Those Democrats who bash tally successful blimpish territory often region themselves from the nationalist enactment brand. When Monica Tranel, a Democrat, kicked disconnected her bid for Montana’s caller legislature spot implicit the summer, she lamented however fewer of the radical she grew up with inactive ballot Democratic. “They consciousness similar Democrats look down connected agrarian America,” she said successful her run launch video.

Ben Tribbett, a Democratic strategist successful Virginia, has watched his party’s ballot stock successful agrarian areas wither for 3 decades.

“I don’t cognize what our connection is there,” Mr. Tribbett said. “Which is simply a problem, due to the fact that I’m expected to beryllium creating contented for governmental campaigns.”

Just however overmuch further tin the enactment fall?

“In agrarian America the bottommost for the Democratic Party is zero,” said Ethan Winter, a elder expert astatine the radical Data for Progress, who studies elector behavior. “I americium superior astir this.”

Rural, achromatic voters successful the past successful the North had historical ties to the labour question and an affinity for the Democratic Party. Increasingly, Mr. Winter said, those voters are much akin culturally to their neighbors to the South than to their section cities and suburbs.

Tom Bonier, 1 of the Democratic Party’s starring experts connected elector information and the main enforcement of TargetSmart, agreed. “You look astatine places successful the Deep South wherever the white, agrarian ballot is approaching 90 percent Republican,” helium said. “That’s perfectly the concern.”

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Credit...Eze Amos for The New York Times

Mr. Youngkin carried Virginia’s mountains with 70 percent of the vote, up from Mr. Trump’s 63 percent past year, according to exit polling. And among achromatic voters without assemblage degrees, Mr. Youngkin won 76 percent — a stark betterment from Mr. Trump’s 62 percent successful 2020 and higher than successful 2016, arsenic well.

In Bath County, a smaller radical of voters cited economical concerns for wherefore the country has go much conservative. They spoke of a clip successful astir mythical terms, erstwhile some parties had a foothold successful the portion — earlier rising state prices, ostentation and stagnant wages.

Sharon Lindsay, a 69-year-old librarian, said radical were offended that today’s liberals presume their country is inherently racist oregon bigoted. “We cognize they wrote america off,” Ms. Lindsay said. “They ne'er speech to us. We ne'er spot them. And we spot Republicans each the time.”

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