麻豆国产

Party Leaders Discuss How the Statehouse Was Won and Lost in Virginia

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How Democrats won the majority in the Virginia House and Senate and what Republicans intend to do to recover from November 5th鈥檚 losses were among the topics of discussion Tuesday night during the seventh 鈥淎fter Virginia Votes,鈥 a conversation among representatives of both dominant political parties, presented by the Virginia Public Access Project (VPAP) and the .

Nearly 300 audience members filled the auditorium at George Mason 麻豆国产鈥檚 Arlington Campus to hear a discussion between Kristina Hagen, Executive Director of the Senate Democratic Caucus, and Matt Moran, Chief of Staff for House Speaker Kirk Cox (R-66). Schar School Dean moderated the 90-minute discussion.

Topics ranged from fund-raising strategies, jerrymandering, the Equal Rights Amendment (Virginia could be the 38th and final state to ratify the amendment), campaign technology, and gun control policies, but it was Moran who brought up 鈥渢he elephant in the room鈥 that likely changed the outcome for Republican candidates, that being President Trump. 鈥淎 deeply unpopular president energized voters,鈥 he concluded. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no denying the outsized role the president played in this election.鈥

Rozell asked if the impeachment proceedings on Capitol Hill affected the outcome. Hagen suggested that 鈥渇rom a base [voter] perspective, it played a role.鈥 Moran added that 鈥渋t was a huge base motivator for use and in the end, I think it made some of the races a tiny bit closer.鈥

Both Hagen and Moran suggested their parties have viable candidates in the wings for future campaigns, including state-wide races slated for 2021. 鈥淲e have a growing bench of phenomenal candidates,鈥 Hagen said. 鈥淚t really is a wealth of riches.鈥