In the 2008 election Barack Obama won Virginia, the first time The Old Dominion had been won by a Democrat running for President since 1964. In 2012 the Obama Campaign will be making Virginia their Firewall - believing that they can once again win this state. Many of the Political Talking Heads talk of Virginia as a "Purple" State, the definition of a Swing State.
Polling shows that the state is close between Obama and a Republican candidate. But as any political wonk knows - through the power of sampling you can get a poll to show practically anything you want. Many of the polls showing President Obama in the lead have sample Democrats much more, sometimes as many as 10 percentage points more than Republicans.
Far and away more important than polling are actual election results. And since the Obama 2008 victory there have been three separate statewide elections, The Governor's 2009 election, the 2010 Congressional Elections and the 2011 State elections. In each of these elections the Republicans have won decisively in numbers approaching a landslide. No state has turned as decisively Republican as Virginia!
In the 2009 Gubernatorial Election Republican Bob McDonnell won election with over 58% of the vote. McDonnell won with the largest percentage of the vote of any candidate since 1961. McDonnell won despite President Obama having campaign appearances with Democrat Creigh Deeds putting Robocalls on Deeds behalf.
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Results by county and independent city |
And in the Statewide 2011 elections Republicans won decisive victories in both the House of Delegates and in the Senate. In the Senate - prior to the election, 22 seats were held by Democrats and 18 seats were held by Republicans. Redistricting caused the 13th district to be moved from Hampton Roads to Northern Virginia and the 22nd district to be moved from the Roanoke area to a district stretching from Lynchburg to Richmond. Republicans gained two seats, making the Senate tied with 20 Democrats and 20 Republicans.
And in the House - prior to the election, the House of Delegates consisted of 58 Republicans, 39 Democrats, 2 Independents, with one vacant seat previously held by a Republican (Glenn Oder of the 94th district, who resigned in August 2011). Redistricting eliminated three seats: Southwestern Virginia's 2nd district, the Martinsville-area 10th district, and the Norfolk-based 87th district. These three seats were moved to Northern Virginia. Republicans gained seven seats from the Democrats and one seat from a retiring independent, making the House's composition 67 Republicans, 32 Democrats, and 1 Independent.
Final Election Numbers:
2009
GOP: 1,163,651 votes
Democrat: 818,950 votes
Margin: 344,701
2010
GOP: 1,056,611
Democrat: 911,116
Margin: 116,495
2011
GOP Senate: 743,336 votes
Democrat Senate: 536,104 votes
Margin: 207,232
GOP House of Delegates: 762,576 votes
Democrat House of Delegates: 438,174 votes
Margin: 324,402
Avg (mean) GOP Margin of Victory (2009 - 2011) = 248,207
1 comment:
The media in VA is pretty solidly democrat with the CBS station in Roanoke being far right every chance it gets. I suspect the polls are run by the same type of people.
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