For the second time in
four years, Republicans and conservatives may find their remedy for the
depression of a presidential election downer in the energetic resilience of the
Republican Party of Virginia. Although Virginia
Republicans suffered another extremely painful setback in 2012 when Obama again
carried the tradition-rich state that gave us Washington, Jefferson, and
Madison, they are again ready to roar back in the gubernatorial and other state
office elections that always occur in Virginia (and New Jersey) in the year
following a presidential election.
I was a delegate at the Virginia GOP Convention that was just held in Richmond on May 18, just as I was four years ago. This year's convention provided encouraging signs that the 2013 Virginia elections may produce the same kind of boost for Republican fortunes that occurred in 2009.
The 2009 convention followed on the heels of Obama's
first election, during the period when the liberal and international media were
all but canonizing this political charlatan and when Republican and
conservative spirits were suffering from a post-election hangover. But the spunk and fighting spirit displayed
by Virginia Republicans at that convention ignited the comeback that soon
produced the GOP's devastating defeat of the Obama Democrats in the 2010
congressional elections.
The 2009 convention not only provided a rousing sendoff
for the stunningly successful gubernatorial campaign of Bob McDonnell – who
beat his Democrat opponent by a landslide 17 percentage points – but provided a
spectacular liftoff for the meteoric political career of current GOP
gubernatorial nominee Ken Cuccinelli, who was then seeking the GOP nomination
for State Attorney General. Cuccinelli's
impressive organizational ability, and the zeal and determination of his
followers, was colorfully displayed by the bright yellow array of Gadsen Flags
-- with the "Don't Tread on Me" slogan that was to become the clarion
cry of the Tea Party – that dominated the convention floor. Spurred on by the enthusiasm, unity, and esprit de corps of the convention,
McDonnell, Cuccinelli, and Lieutenant Governor candidate Bill Bolling went on to sweep to victory in a statewide
Republican landslide. Coupled with Chris
Christie's gubernatorial victory in New Jersey, the success of the Virginia GOP
in the 2009 elections provided the national GOP with the spirit, optimism, and
momentum that carried through to the spectacular congressional victories of
2010.
Star of the 2009 Virginia GOP Convention
Just as in 2009 with Bob McDonnell, this year's Virginia
Republicans were solidly united and enthusiastic in support of Cuccinelli's
nomination as their candidate for Governor.
So overwhelming was party and conservative support for Cuccinelli that
two-term Lieutenant Governor Bolling withdrew from the race, complaining that
the party should have held an open primary instead of a convention to select
the nominee. In fact, a primary would
not only have required Cuccinelli to waste substantial resources in achieving a
near certain victory over Bolling, but the primary would also have produced a
counterproductive divisive element within the party.
Notwithstanding Cuccinelli's uncontested nomination, the
spirited battles for the Attorney General and Lieutenant Governor nominations
provided the convention with considerable suspense and surprise.
Mark Obenshain, an articulate and experienced state
senator and attorney, edged out his comparably accomplished opponent, Rob Bell,
in a hard-fought battle for the AG nomination.
Obenshain is not only a principled and thoughtful conservative
legislator and attorney, but proved himself a polished and effective
speaker. Moreover, he holds a
distinguished family pedigree in Virginia Republican politics. His father was the late Richard Obenshain,
who was a leading figure in the initial emergence of conservative influence in
Virginia politics, but who was tragically killed in an airplane crash while
running for the U.S. Senate in 1978. To
the great cost of Virginia and national conservatives, his place was taken by
serial GOP apostate John Warner, whose perfidies included a critical vote that
helped Ted Kennedy and Joe Biden to maliciously subvert the Supreme Court
nomination of Robert Bork.
But it was a candidate that many delegates (myself
included) gave no chance of winning who not only won, but did so rather
decisively. E.W. Jackson is an
African-American preacher and one-time lawyer – not to mention Marine Corps
veteran -- who earned a J.D. at Harvard Law School before studying theology at
Harvard Divinity. He is a genuinely
charismatic orator with the ability to move a political crowd to raptures
reminiscent of a revival meeting. I have
seen him do it before, and he did it again at the convention, bringing the
delegates to their feet again and again with a passionate delivery of a
straightforward, uncompromising testimony to constitutional and conservative
fundamentals. Beyond that, his convention
campaign was well-organized as well as high-spirited and determined. He led the vote on every ballot of the
convention's rather elaborate elimination process, and pulled off a most
impressive victory, especially for a long-shot African-American candidate
seeking the votes of an overwhelmingly white-conservative convention.
Of course, the glaring contrast in the caliber and
qualifications of the parties' gubernatorial candidates strongly points to that
result in any event.
The Democrats' embrace of the boorish and sleazy
mountebank Terry McAuliffe as their candidate for governor reflects either a
desperate void of plausible candidates or the conviction that, if Obama can
carry Virginia for the Democrats, anyone can.
A more flawed candidate to take on Ken Cuccinelli would be difficult to
imagine.
Cuccinelli is a rock-solid embodiment of Virginia values
with the exact kind of experience and credentials that will make him a superbly
qualified Governor. He earned his B.S. in
Mechanical Engineering from University of Virginia and both a J.D. and M.A.
from George Mason University, giving him not only a superior education, but a
Virginia education. He has won three
elections to the Virginia Senate, where he established a strong reputation as a
sold conservative and as a champion of individual liberties, property rights, Second
Amendment rights, and the protection of traditional marriage. He then won state-wide election to Attorney
General with 58% of the vote, and went on to serve as one of the most
courageous, principled, and prominent state attorney generals in the
nation. On all relevant criteria – leadership,
experience, qualifications, accomplishment, principles, and policy – Cuccinelli
is a perfect fit for Governor of Virginia.
Conversely, if one were to imagine a perfectly unsuitable candidate for Virginia's
Governor, someone in the mold of Democratic candidate Terry McAuliffe would
come immediately to mind. His prominence
in public life derives almost entirely from his notoriety as a fundraiser and political
organizer for D.C.-oriented Democrats as well as his mastery of crony
capitalism. He is utterly devoid of
government experience, unless the bizarrely named position of Ambassador to the
Taejon Expo of South Korea could be counted as such. The results of his one venture into Virginia elective politics were utterly ignominious. He lost the Democratic primary to Creigh Deeds by 23 points, who then lost to Bob McDonnell by 17 points. Why he expects to do better this time around is anybody's guess.
The title McAuliffe chose for his own autobiography (co-authored
with another writer) aptly describes a career and character which were suitable
for his position as Chairman of the Democratic National Committee but which are
blatantly unsuitable for the post occupied by such giants as Thomas Jefferson,
Patrick Henry, and James Monroe: "
What a Party! My Life Among Democrats:
Presidents, Candidates, Donors, Activists, Alligators and Other Wild Animals." Among other things gleefully admitted in this egocentric reminiscence was his
outrageously churlish and boorish treatment of his own wife during her
pregnancies, including abandoning her in the delivery room in 2005 to attend a
party for a Washington Post
columnist; engaging in a shouting match with the anesthesiologist over
health-care reform when his wife again was
in labor in 1993, resulting in his ejection from the delivery room; and, while
driving his wife and newborn child home just after another infant's delivery, he left
his wife waiting in the car in tears while he made a "quick little
drop-by" at a Democratic fundraiser.
His excuse for the latter exercise in appalling loutishness
was that it meant "a million bucks for the Democratic Party."
If you were the most ruthless campaign attack operative,
you couldn't credibly make this stuff up about your opponent (there is much,
much more, but this post is already on the long side). But Terry McAuliffe's value system is so
warped, and he is so patently deprived of any normal sense of decorum and
decency, that he raffishly recounts these boorish episodes like some
nightclub comedian. It is doubtful that
Virginia's women voters will be amused.
The Virginia Republican Convention gave Ken Cuccinelli
and his conservative ticket an energetic boost as they commence their campaign
in this critical off-year election. And with
an opponent who seems custom-made to offend and alienate the Virginia electorate,
prospects for victory are indeed propitious.
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