FiveThirtyEight
Geoffrey Skelley Ryan Best

With the race now called for Youngkin, we can see how he outperformed the benchmarks we drew up in most of the largest cities and counties in Virginia, which explains why he won. Among the 10 localities that provided at least 2 percent of the statewide vote in 2020 (we won’t know their exact share in 2021 for a little while longer), Youngkin did better than the benchmark margin in eight of them. And the two where McAuliffe did better, Prince William County and Richmond city, were barely more Democratic than the benchmark figure.

Youngkin has overperformed across Virginia tonight

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.

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


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