Decision 2017: Virginia chooses next governor, delegates, local races

Republican Ed Gillespie, left, and Democrat Ralph Northam, right, rally supporters at get out the vote events before the Nov. 7 election. (The Associated Press)
Republican Ed Gillespie, left, and Democrat Ralph Northam, right, rally supporters at get out the vote events before the Nov. 7 election. (The Associated Press)
A cold rain didn't deter campaign workers at Emerick Elementary School in Purcellville. (WTOP/Neal Augenstein)
A cold rain didn’t deter campaign workers at Emerick Elementary School in Purcellville. (WTOP/Neal Augenstein)
Moments after the election chief at Hamilton Baptist Church said turnout could be high if the rain held off, it began to rain. (WTOP/Neal Augenstein)
Moments after the election chief at Hamilton Baptist Church said voter turnout could be high if the rain held off, it began to rain. (WTOP/Neal Augenstein)
By 8 a.m., 22.4 percent of people voted at the Mason District in Fairfax County. (WTOP/Hillary Howard)
By 8 a.m., 22.4 percent had voted in the Mason District in Fairfax County. (WTOP/Hillary Howard)
(WTOP/Neal Augenstein)
Heritage High School in Leesburg has seen a steady stream of mid-morning voters. (WTOP/Neal Augenstein)
Just over an hour into Election Day, election chief at Lunsford Middle School says says turn out is moderate for a non-presidential election. (WTOP/Neal Augenstein)
Just over an hour into Election Day, turn out is moderate for a non-presidential election, says the election chief at Lunsford Middle School in Loudoun County. ( WTOP/Neal Augenstein)
The tone of the race, which began congenially, has turned bitter in the last few weeks. “This has been probably one of the ugliest races that we’ve seen in Virginia,” said Tom Davis, a former Republican member of Congress from Virginia. (WTOP/Neal Augenstein)
First voters line up in Nokesville, Virginia. (WTOP/Nick Iannelli)
First voters line up in Nokesville, Virginia. (WTOP/Nick Iannelli)
The report looked at 17 Virginia jurisdictions including Fairfax, Loudoun, Prince William and Fauquier counties. (WTOP/Neal Augenstein)
Polls opened at 6 a.m. in Virginia. (WTOP/Neal Augenstein)
Virginia’s race for governor has drawn national attention as the first major test of voter sentiment one year into Donald Trump’s presidency. (WTOP/Nick Iannelli)
(1/10)
Republican Ed Gillespie, left, and Democrat Ralph Northam, right, rally supporters at get out the vote events before the Nov. 7 election. (The Associated Press)
A cold rain didn't deter campaign workers at Emerick Elementary School in Purcellville. (WTOP/Neal Augenstein)
Moments after the election chief at Hamilton Baptist Church said turnout could be high if the rain held off, it began to rain. (WTOP/Neal Augenstein)
By 8 a.m., 22.4 percent of people voted at the Mason District in Fairfax County. (WTOP/Hillary Howard)
(WTOP/Neal Augenstein)
Just over an hour into Election Day, election chief at Lunsford Middle School says says turn out is moderate for a non-presidential election. (WTOP/Neal Augenstein)
First voters line up in Nokesville, Virginia. (WTOP/Nick Iannelli)
The report looked at 17 Virginia jurisdictions including Fairfax, Loudoun, Prince William and Fauquier counties. (WTOP/Neal Augenstein)

WASHINGTON — Elections officials in the WTOP listening area reported strong turnout despite rainy weather as voters headed to the polls to choose the next governor, as well as decide competitive races for delegate and statewide contests for attorney general and lieutenant governor and some local races and bond issues.

Polls closed at 7 p.m. in Virginia and 8 p.m. in Maryland, where voters in some cities, including Annapolis, decided contests for mayor and city council.


Results

Virginia House of Delegates Results

Virginia Governor Results

Virginia Lieutenant Governor and Attorney General Results

Virginia Local Race Results

Maryland City Election Results

Stick with WTOP for live election results both on air and online.


Exit polls

An early CBS News exit poll found that 37 percent of Virginia voters considered health care the most important issue, topping the list, followed by gun policy at 17 percent, immigration and taxes at 14 percent each and abortion at 9 percent.

Meanwhile, 30 percent of Virginia voters in the CBS exit poll said the state’s economy was getting better, while 20 percent said it was getting worse and 48 percent said it was staying the same.

Gov. Terry McAuliffe wasn’t on the ballot, but 53 percent of voters approved of the job he’s doing.

Republican gubernatorial candidate Ed Gillespie made the removal of Confederate statues an issue in the campaign, and 36 percent of voters in the CBS exit poll said they should be removed, while 60 percent said they should be left in place. The numbers broke down along racial lines — black voters wanted the statues removed by a margin of 57 to 38 percent; white voters wanted them to stay by 27 to 70 percent.

Voter turnout

Although a non-presidential election doesn’t typically draw as many voters, this year saw a record number of absentee ballots cast in an off-year election, and election officials contacted by WTOP said turnout numbers Tuesday were high.

The Fairfax City Board of Elections said turnout was at 56 percent. At about 5 p.m., Fairfax County reported that 39.1 percent of registered voters had already cast ballots. They estimated absentee turnout at 7.7 percent, which would add up to 46.8 percent — the same percentage of voters who turned out for the entire 2013 election.

At 3 p.m., voting in Arlington had reached 40 percent; in Alexandria, the rate at noon was 36 percent, far ahead of 2013’s 28 percent at the same time. (At 4 p.m., it was 47 percent.)

Tuesday’s weather could be a factor in the election — it rained most of the day in most of the WTOP listening area.

Storm Team 4 meteorologist Lauryn Ricketts said that the heaviest rain left most of Virginia by 2 p.m., but showers and cold drizzle prevailed for the rest of the day of Virginia voting.

Turnout is one of the most important factors in any election, said longtime political reporter Bruce DePuyt.

“We live in such polarized times that for most people the issue isn’t ‘How will I vote?’ but ‘Will I vote?’ And so we know in broad terms how Northern Virginia and the urban areas are going to vote; we know how the rest of Virginia is going to vote. But what’s the intensity level? Who makes that decision to craft time in their day to cast a ballot?”

DePuyt said harsh weather “makes life more difficult for people who live in Northern Virginia, people with longer commutes on more congested roads — it can make it difficult to find the time to get to the polls before they close with all the other things that people have to balance in their lives.”

The races

In addition to deciding among Republican Ed Gillespie, Democrat Ralph Northam and Libertarian Cliff Hyra for Virginia governor, voters were deciding whether to re-elect Attorney General Mark Herring. Herring, a Democrat, faces challenger John Adams, a Republican and lawyer from Central Virginia.

The lieutenant governor’s race pitted Democrat Justin Fairfax, a former federal prosecutor, against Republican Jill Vogel, a state senator from Fauquier County.

False information given to voters

An image of a text received by Olivia Prieto, of Arlington County, giving her a false polling place. Click to expand. (WTOP/Carlos Prieto)

Tuesday afternoon, election officials in Fairfax County said that some voters in Northern Virginia have received calls and text messages falsely telling them that their polling places have changed.

Steve Hunt, chairman of the Fairfax County Board of Elections, added that he had heard of such texts “second- and third-hand,” but couldn’t confirm any reports. He said that “We have not changed any precincts for this particular election.”

The president of the Prince William County NAACP, the Rev. Cozy Bailey, told WTOP that up to 40 members of his organization had also received robocalls telling them, falsely, that their polling places had changed.

And in Arlington County, WTOP’s own Carlos Prieto reports that his wife, Olivia, got a similar text:

House of Delegates seats in play

Tom Davis, a former Republican member of Congress from Virginia, who also chaired the House Republican campaign committee, expects Democrats will pick up a few Republican delegate seats on Tuesday. But if Republicans lose six or more delegate seats statewide, that could spell trouble for his party’s election hopes in 2018.

Democrats are challenging incumbent Republicans in 13 districts in Northern Virginia. Statewide, 60 delegate districts are fielding challengers from both major political parties — roughly double the number of competitive races just two years ago.

In the closely watched 13th District race, one of the most conservative members of the General Assembly, Bob Marshall, has faced an aggressive challenge from Danica Roem, a Prince William County journalist. If Roem wins, she’d become the first openly transgender official elected in Virginia.

Three other northern Virginia districts have open seats up for grabs and two districts feature first-term incumbents facing Republican challengers.

‘Put it to better things’

The governor’s race was the main reason many early-morning voters voted in a non-presidential election this year, and a recent spate of negative ads from both candidates affected voters differently.

The tone of the race, which began congenially, turned bitter in recent weeks as both candidates flooded the airwaves and mailboxes with attack ads. But Davis said he didn’t expect it will make much difference in the end.

“The race is a real turnoff for voters — you’re choosing between a Nazi and an MS-13 member if you listen to the ads. I think it’s insulting to most Virginians,” Davis said. “Voters tend to tune that out.”

“This has been probably one of the ugliest races that we’ve seen in Virginia,” he said.

“Didn’t really watch any of it,” one voter at Liberty Elementary School in South Riding, Virginia, said of the negative advertising to WTOP. “I already know who I’m going to vote for and the rest of it is immaterial.”

Kathy Mintz, a voter in Nokesville who said the economy is the front-and-center issue for her, didn’t care for the attack ads.

“It’s horrible. Absolutely horrible. They could take that money that they spend on all of the negative ads and put it to better things, you know helping homeless people, helping the environment. It’s just ridiculous what they spend on this, the negative ads. I want to know what you stand for, I want to know what you think you’re going to do for the state of Virginia and whatnot,” Mintz told WTOP.

What’s at stake

Virginia’s race for governor, featuring two establishment, moderate candidates, drew national attention, as it is seen as the first major test of voter sentiment one year into Donald Trump’s presidency and could foreshadow next year’s congressional races.

“Actually, this is the first time I’ve ever voted in a non-presidential election and it’s mainly because I dislike our current president so much that I would vote to oppose his administration as often as possible,” one voter in Chantilly said.

Other voters were inspired by the president in a different way.

“Now that we’ve got an administration in (the White House) that wants to do something and get things straightened out, we do have a chance,” Howard Counts, a voter in Nokesville, told WTOP.

Davis said, “This is an important victory for either party because it gives them bragging rights going into midterms trying to show a trend for their party.”

A win by Gillespie would threaten Democrats’ hopes of winning control of the U.S. House next year. A Northam victory would allow Democrats to claim that their party has the momentum going into the midterm elections, he said.

But in Virginia, redistricting is at stake as the next governor will oversee the drawing of new General Assembly and congressional district lines. Whoever controls the legislature will be able to draw districts to their advantage, Davis said.

Top of the ticket

In two polls released Monday, Northam, the current lieutenant governor, led Gillespie, the former Republican National Committee chair turned lobbyist, by at least 6 points, more than the margin of error.

Northam also led among independents and women, two critical voting blocs Gillespie would need to pull out a win, according to polling results from Quinnipiac and the Wason Center for Public Policy at Christopher Newport University.

Libertarian Cliff Hyra, a lawyer, has consistently ranked a distant third in polls ahead of Election Day.

Transportation, the economy and the fate of Confederate statues and monuments have been central issues this election season. Trump has also overshadowed the race: Northam has used Trump’s policies to try to fire up liberal voters and independents and Gillespie has embraced some of Trump’s policies and campaign tactics in an effort to woo the president’s supporters.

With reports from WTOP’s Neal Augenstein, Kristi King and Nick Iannelli.

Rick Massimo

Rick Massimo came to WTOP, and to Washington, in 2013 after having lived in Providence, R.I., since he was a child. He's the author of "A Walking Tour of the Georgetown Set" and "I Got a Song: A History of the Newport Folk Festival."

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