Ralph
Northam’s election as Virginia governor amid reportedly high turnout on
Tuesday is a stinging and welcome rebuke to President Trump and white
nationalism.
Mr.
Northam’s Republican rival, Ed Gillespie, an establishment operative,
chose to dog-whistle himself breathless in pursuit of the state’s
pro-Trump white voters, and the president attested to his
make-America-great-again credentials. By late Tuesday, though, Mr. Trump
was trying to sidle away from Mr. Gillespie, claiming that a candidate
who sacrificed his own reputation to adopt the president’s style and
positions in fact “did not embrace me or what I stand for.” Mr.
Gillespie did, and he lost.
Virginia and New Jersey, where Democrat Phil Murphy easily won the governor’s race, were the first statewide general elections since Donald Trump won
the presidency a year ago, and Virginia, the only southern state
Hillary Clinton won in 2016, was by far the more consequential of the
two. Late Tuesday Democrats were also registering gains in the Virginia
House of Delegates, suggesting strong disapproval of Mr. Trump at the
grass roots.
Having
been nearly vanquished in the primary by Corey Stewart, an
anti-immigrant conspiracy theorist who played on issues like preserving
Confederate monuments, Mr. Gillespie, at the advice of Republican leaders, took up race-baiting. His ads, featuring menacing tattooed men,
accused Mr. Northam of being “weak on MS-13,” the gang formed by
Central American immigrants in Los Angeles that now threatens Virginia
suburbs. They contained some of the darkest appeals in Tuesday’s
off-year contests — and that’s saying something, given the Republican candidate ads that aired in places like Nassau County, N.Y., and New Jersey.
Mr. Trump, who is traveling in Asia, waged one of his familiar Twitter smear campaigns
against Mr. Northam on Tuesday, calling the pediatric neurologist and
former Army doctor “weak on crime, weak on our GREAT VETS.”
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Democratic
A-listers from President Barack Obama on down labored to put Mr.
Northam over the bar. Mr. Northam was a lackluster campaigner in his own
right. Despite mountains of post-2016 evidence that Democrats need to
present voters with an inclusive and compelling economic message, he
didn’t hone his own until late in the race.
Then he lost support from the progressive wing of his party after he seemed to suggest he’d oppose sanctuary cities and, at the request of unions, omitted Justin Fairfax, his African-American running mate in the lieutenant governor’s race, from some campaign pamphlets.
Mr.
Gillespie’s choice to lay his principles on the altar of Trumpism made
Mr. Northam’s win doubly important, as a triumph over the politics of
racial division, and as a lesson for other Republicans tempted to adopt
Mr. Trump’s vile tactics as their own.
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