The Disappointment in Kentucky
Yes, one poll had Republican David Cameron up by a point, but Republicans probably talked themselves into believing they had better chances of winning the Kentucky governor's race than they actually did.
Andy Beshear is a popular governor — never mind his overall approval rating of 60 percent; just note that 41 percent of Kentuckians who voted for Trump approve of the job Beshear's doing — who entered this race with the advantages of incumbency. His father, Steve Beshear, was a member of the state House, state attorney general, lieutenant governor, governor for two terms, and a U.S. Senate candidate. The name "Beshear" has appeared on a ballot in Kentucky 15 times in the past 44 years. Voters in this state are used to voting for guys named Beshear.
Down-ticket, Republican Russell Coleman won the state-attorney-general race handily, and Republicans won the secretary-of-state, state-treasurer, agriculture-commissioner, and auditor-of-public-accounts races by 14 percentage points or more. Kentucky is a state that likes having Republicans run everything but the governor's mansion, where the electorate really likes members of the Beshear family.
The Disappointment in Virginia
There are a bunch of people who were already disinclined to like Virginia governor Glenn Youngkin who are now going to argue that the disappointing results for Republicans last night are a sign that Youngkin is a "damp Dorito." And no doubt, Youngkin pulled out all the stops campaigning for his party's state-legislative candidates. No, Youngkin's name wasn't on the ballot, but it is reasonable to conclude that even the densest Virginia voter understood that Republican state legislators were more likely to help enact Youngkin's agenda than Democratic state legislators.
But as noted above, Virginia is shifting from narrow GOP control of the state House and narrow Democratic control of the state Senate, to narrow Democratic control of both chambers. Control of the state legislature is probably going to come down to a couple thousand votes in a handful of districts. It's a frustrating result for the GOP, but not a sweeping rebuke.
There are some people saying that last night's results are "a sharp setback for Youngkin as he seeks to raise his national profile as a potential last-minute presidential contender." But what were the odds that Youngkin was going to jump in, after missing the presidential-primary filing deadline for a bunch of states, and overtake Nikki Haley, Ron DeSantis, and Trump? As I wrote in September, "Youngkin 2024" is a terrific idea that will never work.
There's a frustratingly compelling argument that Virginia is a blue state, not a purple one. Donald Trump lost the Commonwealth of Virginia by 212,000 votes in 2016 and 451,000 votes in 2020. The results of 2021 — Youngkin winning the governor's race, Winsome Sears winning the lieutenant-governor race, and Jason Miyares winning the state-attorney-general race — were the only GOP statewide wins since 2009. In that span, Republicans endured close losses (Ed Gillespie) and blowouts (Corey Stewart).
Let us also point out the strong possibility that Terry McAuliffe was a uniquely bad gubernatorial candidate for the Democrats back in 2021 — a rich old white guy representing a party increasingly obsessed with wealth disparities and race. Yes, McAuliffe was a former governor, but he was and is well known as a prolific fundraiser for the Clintons, and he infamously blurted out, "I don't think parents should be telling schools what they should teach." Maybe Virginia is the kind of state where Republicans need the combination of a particularly strong candidate on their side and a particularly weak candidate on the Democrats' side to overcome the electorate's traditional impulses.
The Disappointment in Ohio (Noticing a Pattern Here?)
The Editors assess the damage to the pro-life cause with clear eyes:
Tuesday, Ohioans voted 57 to 43 percent in favor of adding a sweeping right to abortion to their state constitution. This result was not unexpected given the results of Ohio's August referendum on raising the threshold for enacting constitutional amendments (a fight that became a proxy battle over abortion), but the loss nevertheless stings for advocates of the right to life. The pro-life side is now zero-for-seven in abortion referenda since the Dobbs decision in June 2022, and Ohio marks the first time a red state has added a pro-abortion amendment to its constitution.
Pro-lifers can complain that the wording of the referendum was misleading, but their mission in our political world is to inform people about the real consequences of abortion. And the pro-life movement is going to have to accept that in a lot of states, laws that bar some abortions but not others may be the best possible outcome. As the Editors note:
In the long term, the pro-life movement needs to change many more hearts and minds of Americans to win a long-lasting victory across the country. Such change will likely involve seeking incremental gains and prudent legislative compromises. It is telling that a large percentage of abortion stories in the mainstream media focus on the very small percentage of hard cases involving rape, incest, or fatal fetal-health conditions. It is also essential that pro-life officials everywhere counter the lies of the abortion-industrial complex that hospitals may need to delay treatment of conditions that threaten the life of the mother due to pro-life laws. No law requires waiting until such a threat becomes imminent to act.
One last thought: Considering the state of the GOP primary, it is safe to say that this is still Trump's party. If the Trumpified Republican Party chases away sweet churchgoing little old ladies, minivan-driving white-collar suburbanites, and soccer moms, etc. in exchange for blue-collar voters who are more likely to only vote in presidential-election years . . . then it is going to suffer through a lot of really lousy off-year, midterm, and special elections.
ADDENDUM: The third Republican presidential-primary debate is tonight, and both NR and that other Washington publication I write for will have live blogs. You can catch my writing in both places.
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