| Democratic voters on Tuesday night celebrated apparent victories in Kentucky and Virginia, triggering a bout of hopeful predictions ahead of next year’s presidential contest. Democrat Andy Beshear, Kentucky’s attorney general, narrowly defeated Republican Gov. Matt Bevin, while Virginia’s House and Senate are both under Democratic control for the first time in 26 years under Democratic Gov. Ralph Northam, who is midway through his term. A day after President Trump swooped into Lexington, Ky., to campaign for Bevin and warned his supporters that a loss of Kentucky’s state house “sends a really bad message, and they will build it up,” analysts debated whether the results put the president on notice about vulnerabilities in his reelection bid. The president, the Republican National Committee and Trump’s campaign manager focused their attention on the GOP winners in Kentucky on Tuesday, rather than on Bevin’s apparent defeat. “Our big Kentucky Rally on Monday night had a massive impact on all of the races. The increase in Governors race was at least 15 points, and maybe 20!” Trump tweeted. Brad Parscale issued a statement saying, “The president just about dragged Gov. Matt Bevin across the finish line.” Beshear, the son of former Kentucky Gov. Steve Beshear, reacted as some news organizations called the race in his favor shortly after 9 p.m. "I haven't had a chance to speak with Gov. Bevin, but my expectation is he will honor the election that was held tonight," he said. Bevin told reporters he would not immediately concede the narrow race while ballots were tallied. Political analysts cautioned that Bevin’s apparent loss may not be a referendum on Trump or Republican governance, but they pointed to evidence on Tuesday that suburban GOP voters in Kentucky and Virginia were willing to split from their party, providing Democrats room to expand. Campaigns are poring over evidence that conservatives in rural areas did not appear to turn out in large numbers because of the impeachment backdrop nationally, while Democratic voters were energized on Election Day. According to a Morning Consult poll completed in September, Trump’s support in the Bluegrass State was 56 percent, having won the state by 30 points in 2016. The Hill: Democrat Beshear declares upset victory over GOP governor in Kentucky. The Washington Post: Kentucky outcome embarrasses Trump and worries many Republicans ahead of 2020. The Associated Press: Kentucky governor’s race too close to call by early this morning. Dems flip Virginia legislature. The New York Times: Live Kentucky election updates by counties, precincts. The Associated Press: Analysis: Trump’s GOP has no answer for suburban slide. The Lexington Herald Leader: Unofficial results from The Associated Press showed Beshear leading Bevin by 4,658 votes with 100 percent of precincts reporting by 10 p.m. Tuesday. More than 1.4 million votes were cast in Kentucky. With Bevin’s apparent defeat in mind, Democrats are looking ahead to next November’s contest against Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.). Multiple presidential candidates made note of McConnell’s looming contest against Amy McGrath (D) next year, including former Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julián Castro, who warned, “You’re next.” While Bevin may have lost by a slim margin, the rest of the GOP ticket in the state emerged victorious, including Daniel Cameron, the incoming Kentucky attorney general and a former top aide to McConnell. As Scott Jennings, a GOP strategist noted, the “GOP brand was fine elsewhere” in the state (The Hill). The Cook Political Report’s nonpartisan analyst Jennifer Duffy tweeted that Bevin’s loss was about Bevin: “KY just elected the first Republican attorney general since 1948 and the first African-American attorney general in the state’s history. This is one piece of evidence that if Bevin loses, it’s about Bevin and not some sign that there are bigger factors at work.” In Virginia, Tuesday’s election outcome affirmed evidence that the state has become a deeper shade of blue. Democrats picked up control of the House of Delegates for the first time since 1999 and captured control of the Senate by a 21-19 advantage, giving the party a unified government. The Hill: Democrats win control of Virginia legislature. The Hill: Virginia Democratic candidate Shelly Simonds (D) flipped House District 94, defeating Del. David Yancey (R). The Wall Street Journal: Election 2019: Officials see no evidence of disruption to voting infrastructure. “I’m here to officially declare today, Nov. 5, 2019, that Virginia is officially blue,” Northam told a crowd of supporters in Richmond. The sweep also comes days after former Vice President Joe Biden headlined a get-out-the-vote event on behalf of the state party and endorsed more than 20 candidates late last week ahead of Tuesday. In Mississippi, Republicans kept hold of the governor’s mansion as Lt. Gov. Tate Reeves defeated Democrat Jim Hood on Tuesday night. Reeves was the favorite heading into election day in the conservative state, having campaigned alongside the president on Friday. Trump’s campaign said the president’s rally with Reeves “undoubtedly” helped him “nail down his victory.”  © Getty Images And more of 2020 politics: Senate Democrats are distancing themselves from Sen. Elizabeth Warren's (D-Mass.) “Medicare for All” plan. Multiple Senate Democratic colleagues told The Hill they would not commit to voting for her plan, and many called for smaller, less drastic steps, underscoring complications for Warren within her own party (The Hill) … Sen. Bernie Sanders’s (I-Vt.) campaign is accusing the media of ignoring his “surge” in the polls after he suffered a heart attack in early October. Buoyed by a strong couple of weeks since his return, including multiple rallies that drew thousands of supporters, Sanders and his comeback are still viewed skeptically within the party (The Hill) … Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez sees the Latino vote as key to winning the 2020 presidential election — and not just in states with large Hispanic populations, telling The Hill in an exclusive interview on Tuesday that investing in Latino voters is “an electoral imperative and frankly, for me as the first Latino DNC chair, it’s a moral imperative” (The Hill). |
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