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Tag: stephen farnsworth

  • Labor Days past: When politics leapt from summer doldrums to its fall stretch run

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    Bob McDonnell, then a candidate for governor, greets the crowd as he and Democratic challenger Creigh Deeds, participate in the annual Buena Vista Labor Day parade, September 7, 2009. Buena Vista’s Labor Day Festival dates to the mid-1960s, when the city bought the Glen Maury farm, planning to convert it to a community park. To celebrate the work done by the many volunteers who cleared the land, built picnic shelters, and hiking trails, a Labor Day parade was organized to march from downtown Buena Vista to new Glen Maury Park. It attracted thousands of people from the region; its success ensured the event would become a Buena Vistan tradition. Local politicians invited governors and Senators (both state and national) to participate, and the festival began to serve as the kickoff for Virginia’s fall political campaigns. (Photo by Jahi Chikwendiu/TWP/Getty Images)

    I’m glad I did it for all those years. But I’m also glad I won’t be doing the reporting gauntlet of Labor Day political parades, picnics and speeches on Monday, starting well before dawn and lasting into the night.

    The political landscape has changed radically since then. These kickoff events for the sprint to Election Day were once command appearances for statewide office seekers. Now, they’re optional at best, depending on a campaign’s needs and the best venues for achieving them.

    Festivities such as Wakefield’s Shad Planking each April, Acres of Democrats in Wytheville the Sunday before Labor Day, and the Labor Day morning parade in lovely Buena Vista, nestled along the western slope of the Blue Ridge, and an afternoon one in Covington, a manufacturing city near the West By-God border, have lost prominence. Even the Virginia Bar Association’s summer debate, held since 1985, was cancelled this year after gubernatorial candidates trampled tradition and declined invitations.

    The atrophy of Virginia’s political press corps, which once felt a slavish obligation to cover the annual end-of-summer pageantry, bears much of the blame.

    It’s been a dozen years since I last went through the daylong drill on the first Monday of each September. It was a chore we political correspondents greeted with a mix of resignation and adventure, particularly for writers based in Richmond.

    Those days began at 5 a.m. Many of us traveled together, in a car that The Associated Press allowed me to rent for the trip. Park at my house by 5 a.m., riders were told, or miss out (though we left no scribe behind).

    We would arrive in Buena Vista in time for the party breakfasts, greeted by tens of thousands of campaign yard signs bristling like a dog’s hackles from every spare swatch of soil along the parade route, backdrop for press cameras.

    We tracked candidates for governor, lieutenant governor and attorney general every other odd-numbered year. On most even-numbered years, we would follow U.S. Senate candidates. Skillful candidates spent their time on the curbs and sidewalks, shaking hands, back-slapping, kissing babies and posing for snapshots and Polaroids — forerunners of smart phones.

    Regardless of the year, candidates would sweat their long-sleeved dress shirts completely through in mere minutes. I pitied the occasional neophyte who attempted the sweltering 1 1⁄2-mile march in a new worsted wool suit, a tie and wingtips.

    Their reward for completing the parade? Sit in an open-air pavilion in a city park and wait in a queue to rouse crowds of mostly their supporters and volunteers while reporters scrounged for a morsel of news to lead their stories.

    When that was finished, wily Buena Vista parade veterans changed into fresh clothing and were whisked west on Interstate 64 for Covington’s parade, culminating in speeches under the midday sun on a high school football field. After that, some Democrats would climb into a waiting plane bound for Scott’s picnic.

    The more technically adept reporters attempted to write and transmit stories via hard-to-find telephone land lines before wireless data service was widespread. Traditionalists, such as the Richmond Times-Dispatch’s late, legendary Tyler Whitley, dispensed with the gadgetry and dictated notes and quotes by phone to the rewrite desk.

    Once the stories were filed, we sweaty, nomadic newshounds feasted on our companies’ dime at one of the nicer eateries in Lexington, a fashionable two-college community convenient to the day’s events. Then came the dog-tired drive back to Richmond in a car filled with chatter about the day — at least among those who remained awake.

    Today, candidates and the press have dialed it back.

    “So much has changed in Virginia politics over the last 25 years, and those changes all work against events like Buena Vista,” said Stephen Farnsworth, political science professor and director of the Center for Leadership and Media Studies at the University of Mary Washington.

    “For the dwindling Richmond press corps, it’s a very expensive proposition to make the trek. For the candidates, it’s not clear there’s a lot of value in going if there’s no coverage,” said Farnsworth who, before his 32 years as a professor, reported for the Kansas City Star.

    He also noted the demise of competitiveness in GOP-red southwestern Virginia the past two decades further diminishes their value. Republicans aren’t compelled to gild the lily. Democrats have trouble finding a reason to even bother, especially if their message has at most local reach.

    “There aren’t many persuadable voters out there,” Farnsworth said, noting that the last Democratic gubernatorial nominee to meaningfully compete in Virginia’s mountainous southwest was Mark Warner in 2001.

    It meant something then to residents of an area closer to capitals of several other states than they are to Richmond’s Capitol Square, where they feel forgotten. Warner won 23 localities in the region over Republican Mark Earley, 13 by double-digit percentage point margins — including Buena Vista and Covington.

    For that campaign, Warner went whole hog, contesting the GOP in hills and hollers it considered its own. The multimillionaire businessman had already spent years seeding start-ups across rural Virginia. In 2021, he sponsored a car in a NASCAR event in Virginia. He commissioned a bluegrass band to record a campaign song to the tune of “Dooley” with lyrics retooled by adviser David “Mudcat” Saunders, hired to give the Alexandria city slicker some good-ol’-boy cred.

    A grassroots group calling itself Sportsmen for Warner sprung up to calm anxious gun-rights voters and helped Warner persuade the NRA not to endorse Earley. And when Saunders took Warner on his first turkey hunt, the candidate asked him for guidance. “Don’t shoot Mudcat,” Saunders drawled in response.

    Twenty years after that campaign, Democratic former Gov. Terry McAuliffe, seeking a second term, won just two southwestern localities — the cities of Roanoke and Lexington — in his upset loss to Republican Glenn Youngkin.

    The only other Democrat to make a dedicated outreach in Virginia’s southwest was author Jim Webb, a Democrat who had written about Appalachian people of Scots-Irish heritage in his nonfiction book “Born Fighting.” He carried 10 localities in the region in narrowly unseating Republican U.S. Sen. George Allen.

    U.S. Rep. Bobby Scott’s Labor Day Cookout in Newport News, held annually since 1977 except for the pandemic years of 2020 and 2021, has held its own. Because of Scott’s tenure and his standing in Congress, senior Democrats find a way to attend. Last year, Doug Emhoff, husband of Vice President (and Democratic presidential nominee) Kamala Harris was the headliner, yet media coverage of it was sparing.

    “Events that are still big are not the bipartisan ones but partisan ones,” Farnsworth said. “When a top partisan figure encourages you to show up, you’re wise to make an appearance. But even those events, where there are a lot of political officeholders present at one place at one time, still don’t draw that many reporters.”

    I suppose not.

    Today’s press corps is stretched painfully thin. It is composed of technically adroit multitaskers who work at least as hard and probably smarter than we did. But something has to fall by the wayside, and those Labor Day totems drew the short straw.

    Our dispatches from Labor Day venues weren’t breaking news, but Virginians will learn a little less about the candidates, especially in unscripted moments when they interact with everyday people whose votes they seek.  

    Today’s correspondents don’t endure those steamy, 18-hour Labor Days spent reporting, writing and traveling. Nor will they have those memories to share decades from now, either.

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  • A new Virginia governor candidate answers one question, but raises another – WTOP News

    A new Virginia governor candidate answers one question, but raises another – WTOP News

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    Virginia Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears announced Thursday that she would be seeking the Republican nomination for Virginia governor next year.

    Sign up for WTOP’s Election Desk weekly newsletter to stay up-to-date through Election Day 2024 with the latest developments in this historic presidential election cycle.

    When Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin rose to power by winning the 2021 race for governor, Republicans had not won a statewide race in Virginia since 2009.

    His victory was a huge success for the party, with voters also choosing Republican Winsome Earle-Sears for lieutenant governor and Republican Jason Miyares for attorney general.

    Soon, however, they might be fighting with each other, after Earle-Sears announced Thursday that she would be seeking the Republican nomination for Virginia governor next year.

    “I could have never believed growing up that I could be asking Virginians for their faith and confidence in me to serve them as governor of our great Commonwealth,” Earle-Sears said in the announcement.

    WRIC was first to report that the Virginia Department of Elections accepted the necessary documents from Earle-Sears to run for governor on Wednesday.

    If she wins next year, Earle-Sears, currently the first Black woman to hold statewide office in Virginia, would make history as the first woman to lead Virginia and the first Black woman to serve as governor in the country.

    “This answers one of two questions that people in Virginia Republican circles wanted to know,” said Stephen Farnsworth, a political-science professor with the University of Mary Washington. “The other question is whether Miyares is going to seek the Republican nomination as well or consider other options.”

    Attorney General Miyares has long been considered a likely candidate for governor.

    Responding to the announcement by Earle-Sears, Miyares avoided speaking directly about her.

    “My focus right now is on November 2024 and electing as many Republicans in Virginia as we can,” Miyares said in a statement. “We all need to be focused on this November’s elections before even thinking about next year.”

    Youngkin cannot run in 2025, as Virginia governors are not allowed to serve consecutive terms.

    Farnsworth described both Miyares and Earle-Sears as being “conservatives by every stretch of the meaning of the word.” Their styles are different, though, he added.

    Farnsworth called Earle-Sears a “vigorous, visible, Republican conservative” who has a “Trump-like style.”

    “Miyares is a bit less front-and-center is his political efforts, and that may be less noticed among Republican activists in the age of Trump,” he said.

    The front-runner on the Democratic side is also a woman — Rep. Abigail Spanberger. She is the only Democratic candidate to announce a 2025 run for governor so far.

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Nick Iannelli

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  • Hogan makes abortion-rights stand in Senate race – WTOP News

    Hogan makes abortion-rights stand in Senate race – WTOP News

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    Former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan has proclaimed himself an abortion rights advocate in his race for Senate against Democrat Angela Alsobrooks.

    In his first campaign ad, a week after securing the Republican nomination for U.S. Senate in the Maryland primary, former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan has proclaimed himself an abortion-rights advocate.

    “Today, with Roe overturned, many have asked what I will do in the United States Senate. I’ll support legislation that makes Roe the law of land in every state, so every woman can make her own choice,” Hogan said in the 30-second ad.

    Since the Supreme Court overturned the federal right to abortion by overturning Roe vs. Wade in 2022, Democrats nationwide have successfully campaigned on the promise of restoring Roe through congressional legislation. Hogan’s embrace of abortion rights could reduce the effectiveness of the campaign issue for his Democratic challenger, Angela Alsobrooks.

    “Governor Hogan had to make an ad like this. In pro-choice Maryland, being a Republican in a time when Roe vs. Wade has been overturned is very difficult in a statewide election,” said Stephen Farnsworth, a political-science professor at the University of Mary Washington.

    Emphasizing his abortion-rights stand, Hogan ended his first campaign ad saying: “No one should come between a woman and her doctor.”

    “The problem for Hogan is this may not be enough. The reality of a Republican majority in Congress would scare a lot of pro-choice Democrats who might have supported Hogan in the past when he was running as governor of Maryland. In the very partisan national-political environment, though, Hogan has a much more challenging environment, particularly given what Republicans have said and done relating to the abortion question,” Farnsworth said.

    The former governor staking out this position immediately drew criticism from his opponent.

    “Larry Hogan has already shown us and told us he is not going to protect abortion rights. And the Republicans he’d be joining in the Senate have made their agenda to pass a national abortion ban crystal clear,” said Alsobrooks in a written statement.

    “What Hogan wants to do is eliminate abortion as a central issue in this campaign. But that’s going to be difficult given what Donald Trump has done as president, appointing three Supreme Court justices that were part of that decision to reverse Roe vs. Wade, and what Republicans all around the country are saying,” Farnsworth said.

    “In these highly partisan times, it’s very difficult for a candidate, even a popular one, to step away from the party mainstream in a presidential election year. Larry Hogan, no doubt about it, is saying what he needs to say to be competitive in Maryland. The question is: Will Maryland voters overlook what the Republican Party stands for outside of Maryland?” he added.

    Alsobrooks, joined by other Maryland Democratic women who support abortion rights, scheduled a Wednesday morning press conference at the American Visionary Art Museum in Baltimore to address the issue in the campaign.

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Dick Uliano

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