FiveThirtyEight
Nathaniel Rakich

Geoffrey Skelley

Using our benchmark vote margins in each Virginia locality, Youngkin is outperforming where he needs to win. Although some localities have only reported some of their vote, and many places have not reported their Democratic-leaning absentee ballots, the general trajectory of the race is clearly more favorable for Youngkin at this point.

Early returns are favorable for Youngkin — with caveats

Benchmarks for the 2021 governor’s race, based on each city’s or county’s two-party vote margin relative to Joe Biden’s statewide two-party vote margin in the 2020 presidential election

Vote margin calculated based on the two-party vote, which uses just the Democratic and Republican vote totals. Together, the share of the statewide vote and the benchmark margins produce a 50-50 tie, so performance relative to these benchmarks could signal which party is performing better on election night.

Many localities may have not absentee ballots included in 2021 results.

Sources: Dave Leip’s Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections, ABC News

One place that’s nearly fully reported is Henrico County, a suburban county bordering the city of Richmond. Youngkin was unlikely to actually carry Henrico, but what he needed to do was cut Democratic margins there. And that’s what he’s done: With 95 percent of the expected vote in, McAuliffe only leads by 18 points there, whereas Biden carried the county by 29 points. That puts Youngkin about 1 point ahead of the benchmark we set out for the county. And with other localities tending to run to the right of our benchmarks, that’s put Youngkin in an advantageous position as we await the rest of the vote tallies.

Micah Cohen

Yeah, that’s an important point, Alex and Sarah. What role did CRT play in Virginia? And what role did school closures play? And what role did other education/COVID-19 issues play? Maybe we need to get more specific when we discuss all this.


Exit mobile version