Friday, October 4, 2024

Rematch set in hotly contested Hampton Roads, Peninsula congressional race

The stage is set for a fierce rematch for what was one of the most hotly contested congressional seats in the country two years ago.

Former congressman Scott Taylor won the Republican primary for 2nd District Tuesday, positioning him to face U.S. Rep. Elaine Luria again this fall.

The 2nd district includes Accomack and Northampton counties, portions of York County, and the cities of Virginia Beach and Williamsburg and parts of the cities of Norfolk and Hampton.

Luria defeated Taylor by about two percentage points in 2018, helping Democrats take control of the U.S. House and flipping a district that President Donald Trump won in 2016.

Taylor, a former Navy Seal who was endorsed by President Donald Trump, won handily against two other GOP opponents.

At a victory party he predicted an onslaught of negative advertising against him while previewing his lines of attack on Luria, who he said misleads voters about being moderate and is ineffective in Congress while representing a district that is heavily reliant on federal spending.

“She has no juice, she has no leadership,” Taylor said.

U.S. Rep Elaine Luria (D-2nd)
U.S. Rep Elaine Luria (D-2nd)

Luria, also a Navy veteran, made clear that she plans to highlight the cloud still lingering over Taylor’s last campaign. A handful of Taylor’s staff members were accused of forging signatures to place an independent “spoiler” candidate on the ballot to siphon votes away from Luria. Two former Taylor staffers have been charged. Taylor has maintained that he was unaware of any wrongdoing.

“The last thing Virginians need is a failed congressman who focuses on Twitter fights while trying to sweep his election fraud scandal under the rug,” Luria campaign manager Veronica Ingham said in a statement.

Taylor was going to run for the U.S. Senate this year but changed his mind to challenge Luria again.

Also Tuesday, Republicans picked Daniel Gade to be their nominee and face off against U.S. Sen. Mark Warner, who is seeking his third term as senator. And Democrats in the western part of the state selected physician Cameron Webb to run in a Trump-friendly district that Democrats hope is more competitive after social conservatives ousted the incumbent after he officiated a gay wedding.

Scott Taylor speaks during his campaign rally at Regent University in 2018. (WYDaily file)
Scott Taylor speaks during his campaign rally at Regent University in 2018. (WYDaily file)

The Senate race is expected to be much less competitive. Warner barely won six years ago against former Republican National Committee Chairman Ed Gillespie, but no experienced Republicans wanted to take Warner on this time around.

Once a key swing state where Senate elections were decided by small margins, Virginia has swung solidly blue in the Trump era as voters in the state’s growing suburbs reject the president’s agenda. Republicans haven’t won a statewide election in more than a decade.

Gade is a retired Army officer who was seriously injured in Iraq in 2005, losing a leg after his Humvee was hit by a roadside bomb. He advised President George W. Bush on military and disability issues and was Trump’s appointee to serve on the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, but withdrew his nomination after a lengthy delay in the Senate over his confirmation. Gade previously taught at West Point and now teaches at American University.

If elected, Gade pledged not to be a “rubber stamp” for the president but said Trump is “good on the policies that I care about,” including religious liberty.

In Virginia’s 5th Congressional District, which stretches from northern Virginia to the North Carolina border, Democrats on Tuesday picked Webb in a four-person race. Webb is a physician in Charlottesville who also holds a law degree.

U.S. Rep. Denver Riggleman lost a convention to Bob Good earlier this month despite having the backing of Trump and evangelical leader Jerry Falwell Jr., the president of Liberty University. Riggleman angered many Republicans in his district last summer when he officiated the wedding of two male campaign aides.

Good has pledged to restore “Judeo-Christian” values to Congress. He’s also a hardliner on immigration and wants English to be the official language of the U.S.

Turnout around the state was light Tuesday and the primaries were delayed two weeks because of the coronavirus outbreak. Voting precincts increased cleaning and physical markers to ensure social distancing. There was a surge in voting by mail, and the state allowed any registered voter to vote absentee due to the virus.

At the Hungary Creek Middle School in Glen Allen, outside Richmond, just a handful of voters turned up to vote early.

Shirley Painter, 78, a retired secretary, said she and her husband are concerned about the coronavirus, but wanted to come out and vote in person as they always do.

“I think we worry about it, but they say as long as we wear masks and wash our hands a lot we’ll be OK,” she said.

Also on Tuesday, two incumbent Democrats — U.S. Reps A. Donald McEachin and Gerry Connolly — easily won their primaries.

Qasim Rashid won the Democratic primary in the 1st Congressional District and will face incumbent U.S. Rep. Rob Wittman. Republican John Collick Jr. won the GOP primary in the 3rd Congressional District and will face incumbent U.S. Rep. Bobby Scott. Neither race is expected to be competitive.

Associated Press reporter Matthew Barakat in McLean, Virginia, contributed to this report.

WYDaily contributed to this report.

John Mangalonzo
John Mangalonzohttp://wydaily.com
John Mangalonzo (john@localdailymedia.com) is the managing editor of Local Voice Media’s Virginia papers – WYDaily (Williamsburg), Southside Daily (Virginia Beach) and HNNDaily (Hampton-Newport News). Before coming to Local Voice, John was the senior content editor of The Bellingham Herald, a McClatchy newspaper in Washington state. Previously, he served as city editor/content strategist for USA Today Network newsrooms in St. George and Cedar City, Utah. John started his professional journalism career shortly after graduating from Lyceum of The Philippines University in 1990. As a rookie reporter for a national newspaper in Manila that year, John was assigned to cover four of the most dangerous cities in Metro Manila. Later that year, John was transferred to cover the Philippine National Police and Armed Forces of the Philippines. He spent the latter part of 1990 to early 1992 embedded with troopers in the southern Philippines as they fought with communist rebels and Muslim extremists. His U.S. journalism career includes reporting and editing stints for newspapers and other media outlets in New York City, California, Texas, Iowa, Utah, Colorado and Washington state.

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