FiveThirtyEight
Alex Samuels

To your point, Sarah, Youngkin has done a relatively good job of keeping Trump out of the state and really appealing to issues that are important to GOP voters — like critical race theory and cutting taxes.

Ryan Matsumoto

Micah, I do buy that COVID-19 can bring Trump and his pandemic policies front-and-center. In California’s recall election, Gov. Gavin Newsom focused heavily on COVID-19 policies like vaccine and mask mandates, and it appeared to work well for him. At the end of his presidency, Trump’s national approval rating on handling the pandemic was at just 39 percent, with 57 percent disapproving, per the polling average. In Virginia, McAuliffe has tried to hammer home the point about Youngkin opposing vaccine mandates, but other policy issues like education have definitely taken up a lot of space.

Micah Cohen

One hypothesis I have is that Trump became less of a looming figure in Virginia (and so less of a factor in vote choice) as COVID-19 slid down on voters’ list of priorities, as Mackenzie wrote earlier.

My thinking is that Youngkin is aligned and associated with Trump on several issues/dimensions, but the one that packs the biggest this-will-have-an-immediate-effect-on-me-and-mine wallop is COVID-19, vaccine mandates, etc. So, as the delta variant was surging across the country, the prospect of Youngkin/Trump’s more hands-off approach to combatting the pandemic didn’t play well in bluish Virginia. As case numbers have improved, though, that issue is less front-and-center in voters’ minds. And the Youngkin-Trump connection/alignment is maybe less explicit on other issues.

Again, that’s just a half-baked theory, though.


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