Youngkin won the nomination — decided at a party convention, rather than in a primary — partly by appealing to Trump supporters. “President Trump represents so much of why I’m running,” Youngkin said in a May radio interview (a line that McAuliffe’s campaign has played repeatedly in ads).
Youngkin has also played to conservative voters’ skepticism about Covid vaccines and masks — views that most Virginians do not share. He opposes vaccine mandates for medical workers and teachers, as well as mask mandates in schools. “Like Donald Trump, Glenn Youngkin refuses to take coronavirus seriously,” the narrator in a McAuliffe ad says.
Youngkin recognizes he is vulnerable on these issues. He rarely talks publicly about Trump anymore, and he emphasizes that he himself has been vaccinated and encourages others to do so, even if he sees it as a personal decision. He has even released a misleading, logically tortured ad claiming that McAuliffe is anti-vaccine.
The big picture
When you look at both campaigns together, you see where each of the two parties think they are strongest today: crime and divisive cultural debates for Republicans, Trump and Covid for Democrats.
McAuliffe’s biggest advantage remains the state’s Democratic tilt. His current lead may be small, but it is still a lead. In most recent Virginia elections, polls have if anything slightly underestimated Democrats’ performance, my colleague Nate Cohn notes. On the other hand, the race still has a few weeks remaining, and Virginia’s governor race often favors the candidate who is not a member of the president’s party.
Related: John Yarmuth of Kentucky will not seek re-election — a sign that House Democrats fear losing their majority.
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