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New residents beginning to make
their mark
by Heather
B. Hayes
for Virginia Business
Novermber 2006
In the six years since George
Allen was elected to the U.S. Senate, more than 500,000
new residents have moved into Virginia. That 7 percent
increase in the state’s
population — many of them Hispanic and Asian immigrants — could
be a deciding factor in whether Allen hangs on to his
Senate seat, say political analysts.
Allen’s campaign problems — including the "macaca" gaffe,
questions about his sensitivity to minorities and his
support for President Bush on the war in Iraq — enabled
Democrat Jim Webb to overcome a 16-percentage-point deficit
and make the race competitive by early October. "This
certainly has not been the kind of introduction Allen
would have liked to have made with these newcomers," says
Robert Holsworth, political analyst and dean of the College
of Humanities and Sciences at Virginia Commonwealth University.
These new Virginians were not
around when Allen built his political reputation as
a popular governor in the mid-1990s. "The polls show that there is a solid
base of support for Allen among people who have known
him for a long time," says Holsworth. "His
anxiety and concern is about how all his problems and
the various issues are going to harm him with the new
Virginians — and justifiably so."
Larry Sabato, director of the
Center for Politics at the University of Virginia,
agrees that Allen has lost significant support in Northern
Virginia and Hampton Roads in large part because of
the influx of new residents. But the senator continues
to have a strong base of longtime supporters, says
Sabato. Even with the senator’s
campaign problems, "it’s entirely possible
that in the rural areas, Allen will get even more support," speculates
Sabato.
Virginia’s changing population
is making its politics less predictable. Suburban areas
that once favored Republican candidates are now voting
for Democrats. Holsworth notes that Gov. Timothy M.
Kaine, a Democrat and former Richmond mayor, got more
votes in many fast-growing suburban areas during his
2005 election than did former Democratic Gov. Mark
R. Warner in 2001. Warner won Fairfax County by 26,000
votes; Kaine won by 60,000. Warner lost Prince William
County, Loudoun County, Virginia Beach and Chesapeake;
Kaine won all four.
Sabato predicts that Allen will
win his Senate race but adds that his "disastrous campaign" has
destroyed his chances for becoming a Republican presidential
nominee in 2008. (Warner ended his own presidential campaign
in early October, saying he wanted to spend more time
with his family.) The closeness of the Senate race, coupled
with Kaine’s win last year, proves that Virginia
is no longer a bona fide red state, Sabato says. "It
is gradually turning purple, a mix of red and blue. If
Democrats put up solid, serious candidates, they’re
going to be competitive."
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