2009 Virginia gubernatorial election

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2009 Virginia gubernatorial election
Flag of Virginia.svg
  2005 November 3, 2009 2013  
Turnout40.4% Decrease2.svg 4.6 [1]
  Bob McDonnell (4379673749) (cropped) (cropped).jpg Creigh Deeds in Arlington, Virginia (cropped).jpg
Nominee Bob McDonnell Creigh Deeds
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote1,163,651818,950
Percentage58.61%41.25%

2009 Virginia gubernatorial election results map by county.svg
2009 Virginia Gubernatorial election by congressional district new.svg
2009 VA GOV.svg
McDonnell:     40–50%     50–60%     60–70%     70–80%     80–90%     >90%
Deeds:     50–60%     60–70%     70–80%     80–90%     >90%

Governor before election

Tim Kaine
Democratic

Elected Governor

Bob McDonnell
Republican

The 2009 Virginia gubernatorial election took place in Virginia on November 3, 2009. The incumbent Governor, Democrat Tim Kaine, was not eligible to run due to term limits established by the Virginia Constitution, though others in the state's executive branch were not restricted. (Virginia is the only state that prohibits a Governor from serving consecutive terms.) Republican Bob McDonnell was elected as Governor as part of a Republican sweep. Republican Bill Bolling was reelected as lieutenant governor, and Republican Ken Cuccinelli was elected as attorney general. The winners were inaugurated on January 16, 2010, and served until January 11, 2014.

Contents

State Senator Creigh Deeds was selected as the Democratic nominee, having defeated former Democratic National Committee Chairman Terry McAuliffe and former state Delegate Brian Moran in the Democratic primary election. [2] [3] This was the first contested Democratic primary in two decades. [4] McDonnell, a former state Attorney General, was selected at his party's nominating convention. [5] The two major candidates competed in the 2005 Virginia Attorney General election, and were in a rematch, but in the Governor's race. McDonnell defeated Deeds in the general election by a margin of 59%–41%, much larger than the previous Attorney General election. This would be the last time until 2021 that a Republican would win any statewide election in Virginia. This is also the last time any of the following counties have voted Republican in a statewide race: Albemarle, Fairfax, Prince William, Henrico, Sussex, Brunswick, and the independent city of Suffolk.

Democratic primary

Candidates

Campaign

McAuliffe campaigning Terry McAuliffe (3592126379).jpg
McAuliffe campaigning

The Democratic primary campaign for governor unofficially began on December 13, 2007 when State Senator Creigh Deeds, who ran for Attorney General of Virginia in 2005, announced that he would run for the Democratic nomination. State Delegate Brian Moran, brother of Congressman Jim Moran, joined Deeds on January 4, 2008, when he established a political action committee. For the following year (before McAuliffe indicated his intentions to run), Deeds and Moran squared off picking up endorsements, and raising money. On January 3, 2009, McLean resident Terry McAuliffe, former chairman of the Democratic National Committee and chairman of Hillary Clinton's 2008 presidential campaign announced that he was also running. [2] The Democratic primary, which took place on June 9, 2009, was the first contested in over twenty years. [4]

Sign outside Alexandria City Hall, indicating the nearest polling place Primary voting sign (Alexandria).jpg
Sign outside Alexandria City Hall, indicating the nearest polling place

Moran received many endorsements from members of the State Democratic Party as well as the mayors of the Hampton Roads area.[ citation needed ] Deeds picked up support from Northern and Western Virginia, such as the endorsement from U.S. Congressman Rick Boucher. The area of strength for Deeds was concentrated in Western and Southern Virginia, and the area of strength for Moran consisted mostly of Eastern Virginia with both reaching out to Northern Virginian voters.[ citation needed ]

The race was close from the beginning, with McAuliffe considered to be a semi "front-runner" due to his lead in the polls and big campaign war chest. However, in the last few weeks of the race, Deeds began to surge up in the polls. By election night, June 9, Deeds swept to victory. Creigh Deeds spent $14.49 for each vote on the Democratic primary election. Terry McAuliffe spent $68.25 for each vote on the Democratic primary election. [6]

Endorsements

List of Terry McAuliffe endorsements
List of Creigh Deeds endorsements
List of Brian Moran endorsements

Fundraising

Fundraising totals through June 30, 2009, from the Virginia Public Access Project.

CandidateRaisedSpentCash on Hand
Creigh Deeds$6,207,528$3,486,179$2,721,350
Terry McAuliffe$8,250,507$8,250,205$304
Bob McDonnell$73,981$3,360$920,623
Brian Moran$4,057,882$4,034,070$23,816

Polling

SourceDates AdministeredTerry McAuliffeBrian MoranCreigh Deeds
Survey USA June 830%21%42%
Public Policy Polling June 6–726%24%40%
Suffolk University Archived June 11, 2009, at the Wayback Machine June 420%20%27%
Daily Kos/Research 2000 June 1–326%27%30%
Survey USA May 31 – June 235%26%29%
Public Policy Polling May 28–3124%22%27%
Public Policy Polling May 19–21, 200929%20%20%
Daily Kos/Research 2000 May 18–20, 200936%22%13%
Survey USA May 17–19, 200937%22%26%
Public Policy Polling May 1–3, 200930%20%14%
Survey USA April 25–27, 200938%22%22%
Research 2000 April 6–8, 200919%24%16%
Public Policy Polling March 27–29, 200918%22%15%
Public Policy Polling February 28 – March 1, 200921%19%14%
Public Policy Polling January 30 – February 1, 200918%18%11%

Results

Democratic primary results by county:
.mw-parser-output .legend{page-break-inside:avoid;break-inside:avoid-column}.mw-parser-output .legend-color{display:inline-block;min-width:1.25em;height:1.25em;line-height:1.25;margin:1px 0;text-align:center;border:1px solid black;background-color:transparent;color:black}.mw-parser-output .legend-text{}
Deeds
Deeds--30-40%
Deeds--40-50%
Deeds--50-60%
Deeds--60-70%
Deeds--70-80%
Deeds--80-90%
Deeds--90-100%
McAuliffe
McAuliffe--30-40%
McAuliffe--40-50%
McAuliffe--50-60%
Moran
Moran--30-40%
Moran--40-50%
Moran--50-60% Virginia Gubernatorial Democratic primary, 2009.svg
Democratic primary results by county:
  Deeds
  •   Deeds—30–40%
  •   Deeds—40–50%
  •   Deeds—50–60%
  •   Deeds—60–70%
  •   Deeds—70–80%
  •   Deeds—80–90%
  •   Deeds—90–100%
  McAuliffe
  •   McAuliffe—30–40%
  •   McAuliffe—40–50%
  •   McAuliffe—50–60%
  Moran
  •   Moran—30–40%
  •   Moran—40–50%
  •   Moran—50–60%
Democratic Primary results [30]
PartyCandidateVotes%
Democratic Creigh Deeds 158,845 49.77
Democratic Terry McAuliffe84,38726.44
Democratic Brian Moran75,93623.79
Total votes319,168 100.00

Republican convention

Attorney General Bob McDonnell first announced his intention to run at American Legion's Boys State of Virginia 2007. This was the sixth consecutive Virginian gubernatorial election in which an Attorney General ran.

McDonnell was the only Republican candidate to file with the election board before the November 2008 deadline. As a result, there was no Republican Party primary. McDonnell accepted the Republican nomination at a state convention on May 30, 2009, in Richmond. [31] Other potential candidates for the Republican nomination, lieutenant governor Bill Bolling and former Senator George Allen, both declined to run. [32]

Chairman of the Republican National Committee Michael Steele had said that the election for governor of Virginia is one of the most important elections for the Republican Party. [33]

General election

Deeds and McDonnell both ran for Attorney General of Virginia in 2005. McDonnell won by just over 300 votes, in the same election in which Tim Kaine was elected Governor with 52% of the vote.

The main themes of the election were the economy, transportation, and jobs.

The first debate was in Hot Springs, Virginia on July 25. [34]

Vice President Joe Biden campaigned for Deeds in Henrico County, Virginia, a suburb of Richmond, Virginia on July 16. [35] Also attending were Richmond Mayor Dwight Clinton Jones, state Senator A. Donald McEachin (D-Henrico), and Virginia first lady Anne Holton. [36]

President Obama and Governor Kaine campaigning with Deeds on August 6 President Barack Obama speaks at a campaign rally for gubernatorial candidate Creigh Deeds, left, in Tyson's Corner Va., on Aug. 6, 2009. Current Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine is at right in background..jpg
President Obama and Governor Kaine campaigning with Deeds on August 6

On August 6, President Barack Obama and Governor Tim Kaine campaigned for Deeds in McLean, Virginia. [37]

Deeds is from Bath County, Virginia, a rural area of fewer than 5,000 people, where John McCain received over 55% of the vote. McDonnell is from Virginia Beach, which McCain won with 49.9%. [38]

Fundraising

CandidateGeneral Elec. RaisedTotal Raised
R Creigh Deeds (Democrat)$10,057,402$16,264,930
Robert F McDonnell (Republican)$21,466,436$21,466,436

Predictions

SourceRankingAs of
Rothenberg Political Report [39] Lean R (flip)October 26, 2009

Polling

SourceDates AdministeredCreigh Deeds (D)Bob McDonnell (R)
SurveyUSA October 30 – November 1, 200940%58%
Public Policy Polling November 1, 200942%56%
Mason-Dixon/Richmond Times-Dispatch October 28–29, 200941%53%
Research 2000 October 26–28, 200944%54%
Center for Community Research October 21–27, 200936%53%
Rasmussen Reports October 27, 200941%54%
SurveyUSA October 25–26, 200941%58%
Public Policy Polling October 23–26, 200940%55%
The Washington Post October 22–25, 200944%55%
Virginia Commonwealth University October 21–25, 200936%54%
SurveyUSA October 17–19, 200940%59%
Public Policy Polling October 16–19, 200940%52%
Clarus Research October 18–19, 200941%49%
CNU-Pilot-WVEC [ permanent dead link ]October 19, 200931%45%
Rasmussen Reports October 12, 200943%50%
Mason-Dixon October 6–8, 200940%48%
The Washington Post October 4–7, 200944%53%
Survey USA October 2–4, 200943%54%
Rasmussen Reports September 29, 200942%51%
Survey USA September 26–28, 200941%55%
Public Policy Polling September 25–28, 200943%48%
Insider Advantage September 23, 200944%48%
The Washington Post September 20, 200947%51%
Research 2000 September 14–16, 200943%50%
Rasmussen Reports September 16, 200946%48%
Clarus Research Group September 16, 200937%42%
Survey USA September 3, 200942%54%
Rasmussen Reports September 1, 200942%51%
Public Policy Polling August 28–31, 200942%49%
Washington Post August 16, 200940%47%
Rasmussen Reports August 10, 200938%47%
Research 2000 August 3–5, 200943%51%
Public Policy Polling July 31 – August 3, 200937%51%
Survey USA July 27–28, 200940%55%
Rasmussen Reports July 14, 200941%44%
Public Policy Polling June 30 – July 2, 200943%49%
Research 2000 June 15–17, 200944%45%
ALR June 10–14, 200942%38%
Rasmussen Reports June 10, 200947%41%
Survey USA June 5 – 7, 200943%47%
Survey USA May 31 – June 2, 200943%44%
Research 2000 May 18–20, 200932%45%
Survey USA May 17–19, 200940%46%
Survey USA April 27, 200939%44%
Rasmussen Reports April 15, 200930%45%
Research 2000 April 6–8, 200931%38%
Rasmussen Reports February 4, 200930%39%
Rasmussen Reports December 4, 200839%39%
Public Policy Polling June 14–16, 200827%32%
Hypothetical polling
with McAuliffe
SourceDates AdministeredTerry McAuliffe (D)Bob McDonnell (R)
Survey USA May 31 – June 2, 200940%47%
Research 2000 May 18–20, 200934%44%
Survey USA May 19, 200940%46%
Survey USA April 27, 200939%46%
Rasmussen Reports April 15, 200933%45%
Research 2000 April 8, 200933%40%
Rasmussen Reports February 4, 200935%42%
Rasmussen Reports December 4, 200836%41%
with Moran
SourceDates AdministeredBrian Moran (D)Bob McDonnell (R)
Survey USA May 31 – June 2, 200937%48%
Research 2000 May 18–20, 200935%42%
Survey USA May 19, 200937%47%
Survey USA April 27, 200934%46%
Rasmussen Reports April 15, 200934%44%
Research 2000 April 8, 200936%37%
Rasmussen Reports February 4, 200936%39%
Rasmussen Reports December 4, 200841%37%
Public Policy Polling June 14–16, 200827%33%

Results

Virginia gubernatorial election, 2009 [40] [41]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Republican Bob McDonnell 1,163,651 58.61% +12.62%
Democratic Creigh Deeds 818,95041.25%-10.47%
Write-in 2,5020.12%
Majority344,70117.36%+11.63%
Turnout 1,985,10342%
Republican gain from Democratic Swing

Results by county and independent city

County [42] McDonnellVotesDeedsVotesOthersVotes
Accomack 62.4%5,40037.6%3,2490.0%2
Albemarle 50.5%15,76749.4%15,4330.1%35
Alexandria 37.0%13,05062.8%22,1080.2%71
Alleghany 38.7%2,01761.2%3,1900.1%3
Amelia 71.1%2,87828.9%1,1680.0%2
Amherst 67.9%5,97632.1%2,8270.0%4
Appomattox 74.3%3,39725.6%1,1720.0%1
Arlington 34.3%19,32565.5%36,9490.2%141
Augusta 77.4%15,66122.5%4,5580.1%16
Bath 36.5%66663.5%1,1590.1%1
Bedford County 77.1%16,88122.9%5,0090.1%14
Bedford 64.8%1,01635.2%5530.0%0
Bland 75.9%1,39424.1%4420.1%1
Botetourt 71.3%7,72628.6%3,0970.2%19
Bristol 72.4%2,76027.5%1,0470.1%3
Brunswick 50.5%2,10749.4%2,0620.1%4
Buchanan 63.2%3,26136.7%1,8950.0%2
Buckingham 63.4%2,31336.6%1,3350.0%0
Buena Vista 60.9%82439.1%5280.0%0
Campbell 76.9%11,61122.9%3,4570.2%26
Caroline 56.5%3,70943.5%2,8550.1%4
Carroll 73.0%5,22927.0%1,9320.1%5
Charles City 41.4%89058.5%1,2590.1%2
Charlotte 66.6%2,34733.2%1,1710.1%5
Charlottesville 26.2%2,63673.6%7,4060.1%14
Chesapeake 60.3%32,51839.6%21,3760.1%43
Chesterfield 66.3%59,55833.6%30,1610.2%156
Clarke 63.3%2,74436.6%1,5860.1%4
Colonial Heights 83.1%4,33316.8%8770.0%2
Covington 34.1%50765.8%9790.1%2
Craig 67.8%1,09132.2%5180.1%1
Culpeper 70.3%7,25329.6%3,0570.1%14
Cumberland 64.1%1,72835.9%9670.0%1
Danville 55.0%6,00144.9%4,9060.1%11
Dickenson 60.5%2,17639.5%1,4200.1%3
Dinwiddie 62.6%4,46137.3%2,6610.1%4
Emporia 52.4%69047.6%6270.1%1
Essex 60.8%1,63139.2%1,0510.0%0
Fairfax County 50.7%138,65549.1%134,1890.2%438
Fairfax 53.0%3,28546.9%2,9090.1%7
Falls Church 34.9%1,46364.9%2,7180.1%6
Fauquier 68.8%12,30931.1%5,5660.1%23
Floyd 65.8%2,95134.1%1,5290.2%7
Fluvanna 63.4%4,85036.5%2,7910.1%10
Franklin County 68.8%10,28331.1%4,6560.1%12
Franklin 45.4%1,01354.5%1,2160.0%1
Frederick 74.8%13,27425.1%4,4560.1%25
Fredericksburg 48.9%2,23150.8%2,3180.2%10
Galax 62.4%81837.4%4900.2%3
Giles 63.3%2,91636.6%1,6830.1%4
Gloucester 72.1%8,12627.8%3,1300.1%16
Goochland 70.8%5,83729.1%2,4010.1%10
Grayson 70.3%3,02629.7%1,2790.0%0
Greene 72.5%3,51427.4%1,3260.1%5
Greensville 47.4%1,28352.6%1,4260.0%0
Halifax 61.5%5,45338.3%3,3900.2%19
Hampton 42.0%13,55957.9%18,6960.1%47
Hanover 76.2%26,40123.6%8,1800.1%46
Harrisonburg 57.7%3,81642.2%2,7900.2%11
Henrico 56.2%49,46243.7%38,4200.1%114
Henry 63.0%8,16037.0%4,7910.0%1
Highland 55.1%61944.9%5050.0%0
Hopewell 62.4%2,92637.4%1,7530.2%11
Isle of Wight 65.8%7,68434.1%3,9810.1%8
James City 65.6%15,19334.3%7,9450.1%25
King and Queen 58.9%1,17541.0%8190.1%2
King George 70.2%3,83929.7%1,6240.1%7
King William 71.5%3,41128.4%1,3540.1%3
Lancaster 64.6%3,05135.2%1,6610.3%12
Lee 74.3%3,75525.7%1,3000.0%1
Lexington 39.3%59260.5%9110.1%2
Loudoun 61.0%39,99638.8%25,4300.1%95
Louisa 65.3%5,71334.6%3,0230.1%7
Lunenburg 62.5%2,04037.5%1,2220.0%1
Lynchburg 61.8%12,50338.1%7,7130.1%26
Madison 69.5%2,89230.5%1,2680.1%3
Manassas 61.9%4,26638.0%2,6180.1%5
Manassas Park 60.2%1,00639.8%6660.0%0
Martinsville 48.2%1,56551.7%1,6780.2%5
Mathews 69.9%2,49030.0%1,0670.1%4
Mecklenburg 67.7%4,87232.3%2,3270.0%1
Middlesex 69.5%2,65230.4%1,1610.1%2
Montgomery 54.5%11,37845.3%9,4550.2%35
Nelson 53.7%2,68346.2%2,3110.1%5
New Kent 74.4%4,52625.5%1,5490.1%6
Newport News 49.9%18,40150.0%18,4150.1%41
Norfolk 39.8%15,91360.1%24,0250.1%50
Northampton 51.0%1,97648.9%1,8920.1%4
Northumberland 65.4%3,16734.4%1,6650.2%10
Norton 60.6%56839.3%3690.1%1
Nottoway 58.3%2,41541.6%1,7230.1%6
Orange 67.3%6,24832.7%3,0330.1%6
Page 70.1%5,24529.7%2,2230.1%9
Patrick 70.0%3,38329.9%1,4420.1%5
Petersburg 19.0%1,22181.0%5,2140.0%3
Pittsylvania 71.5%11,73928.5%4,6890.0%0
Poquoson 80.2%3,73719.8%9220.1%3
Portsmouth 40.2%8,82459.8%13,1240.1%15
Powhatan 79.8%7,28720.0%1,8280.1%11
Prince Edward 55.0%2,75244.9%2,2500.1%4
Prince George 68.9%5,84631.0%2,6340.1%7
Prince William 58.7%43,99341.2%30,8470.1%100
Pulaski 65.1%5,68934.8%3,0440.0%3
Radford 54.6%1,55445.3%1,2910.1%3
Rappahannock 57.7%1,66442.2%1,2170.1%3
Richmond County 68.3%1,52531.7%7080.0%1
Richmond 30.5%13,78569.2%31,2410.2%101
Roanoke County 68.0%20,61731.8%9,6430.1%45
Roanoke 48.0%9,92951.9%10,7310.1%21
Rockbridge 58.1%3,96441.9%2,8590.0%3
Rockingham 78.1%16,51921.8%4,5990.1%22
Russell 62.4%4,81237.6%2,8950.0%2
Salem 66.5%4,70633.4%2,3650.2%11
Scott 78.8%4,37021.1%1,1720.1%3
Shenandoah 74.9%9,12925.0%3,0490.1%18
Smyth 73.5%5,42426.4%1,9460.1%7
Southampton 59.8%2,99240.2%2,0110.0%2
Spotsylvania 68.4%17,83131.5%8,2200.1%36
Stafford 67.4%19,16432.4%9,2260.2%46
Staunton 58.5%3,71541.4%2,6270.1%4
Suffolk 55.7%11,09544.2%8,7980.1%14
Surry 46.2%1,10553.6%1,2830.2%5
Sussex 52.4%1,52847.6%1,3860.0%0
Tazewell 73.4%7,58826.6%2,7490.1%7
Virginia Beach 63.7%63,96436.2%36,3030.1%96
Warren 68.6%5,60431.3%2,5590.1%8
Washington 74.9%10,34825.1%3,4690.0%5
Waynesboro 68.9%3,44731.0%1,5490.1%6
Westmoreland 58.6%2,42241.4%1,7110.0%2
Williamsburg 45.3%1,57954.6%1,9050.1%5
Winchester 60.7%3,21539.2%2,0760.2%8
Wise 70.3%5,53829.6%2,3270.1%9
Wythe 72.6%5,65027.2%2,1190.1%10
York 69.6%13,42030.3%5,8390.1%23

Counties and Independent Cities that flipped from Republican to Democratic

Counties and Independent Cities that flipped from Democratic to Republican

See also

Notes

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    Former Attorney General of Virginia Bob McDonnell was the Republican nominee for the 2009 gubernatorial race in the U.S. Commonwealth of Virginia. At the Virginia State Convention on May 30, 2009, he officially received the party's nomination, as Republican Lieutenant Governor Bill Bolling decided against opposing him. His opponent in the general election was State Senator Creigh Deeds, a Democrat from Bath County. Although the race was close in September, McDonnell began take a commanding leads in the poll heading into election day, when he defeated his opponent by a margin of 18 points. He was inaugurated on January 16, 2010, at the Virginia State Capitol.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">2013 Virginia gubernatorial election</span> Election for the governorship of the U.S. state of Virginia

    The 2013 Virginia gubernatorial election took place on November 5, 2013, to elect the governor of Virginia. The incumbent governor, Republican Bob McDonnell, was not eligible to run for re-election due to term limits established by the Virginia Constitution. Virginia is the only state that prohibits its governor from serving immediate successive terms.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">2013 Virginia lieutenant gubernatorial election</span>

    The 2013 Virginia lieutenant gubernatorial election took place on November 5, 2013, to elect the Lieutenant Governor of Virginia. The incumbent Lieutenant Governor, Republican Bill Bolling, had originally planned to run for Governor of Virginia in the 2013 gubernatorial election, but withdrew upon the entry of Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">2017 Virginia gubernatorial election</span> Election for the governorship of the U.S. state of Virginia

    The 2017 Virginia gubernatorial election was held on November 7, 2017. Incumbent Democratic Governor Terry McAuliffe was unable to run for re-election, as the Constitution of Virginia prohibits the officeholder from serving consecutive terms; he later ran unsuccessfully for a second term in 2021.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">Levar Stoney</span> American politician (born 1981)

    Levar Marcus Stoney is an American politician who has served as the 80th mayor of Richmond, Virginia since 2017. A member of the Democratic Party, he previously served as the Secretary of the Commonwealth of Virginia from 2014 through 2016, being the youngest member of Governor Terry McAuliffe's administration.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">2017 Virginia lieutenant gubernatorial election</span>

    The 2017 Virginia lieutenant gubernatorial election was held on November 7, 2017. After the party primary elections were held, the major party nominees were Jill Vogel (Republican) and Justin Fairfax (Democrat). The incumbent Lieutenant Governor, Democrat Ralph Northam, declined to run for re-election in order to run for Governor. In the general election on November 7, 2017, Democratic nominee Justin Fairfax defeated Republican state Senator Jill Vogel to become the 41st Lieutenant Governor of Virginia. This is the last time that a Democrat won the lieutenant governorship in Virginia.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">2021 Virginia gubernatorial election</span> Election for the governorship of the U.S. state of Virginia

    The 2021 Virginia gubernatorial election was held on November 2, 2021, to elect the next governor of Virginia. The election was concurrent with other elections for Virginia state offices. Incumbent Democratic Governor Ralph Northam was ineligible to run for re-election, as the Constitution of Virginia prohibits governors from serving consecutive terms. Businessman Glenn Youngkin won the Republican nomination at the party's May 8 convention, which was held in 37 polling locations across the state, and was officially declared the nominee on May 10. The Democratic Party held its primary election on June 8, which former Governor Terry McAuliffe easily won.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">2021 Virginia Attorney General election</span> Election for Commonwealths Attorney General

    The 2021 Virginia attorney general election was held on November 2, 2021, to elect the next attorney general of Virginia. Democratic Attorney General Mark Herring attempted to win a third term. Herring initially planned to run for governor, but decided to run for re-election. Herring faced Republican nominee Jason Miyares in the general election. Herring conceded defeat at 5:02 PM EST the following day, November 3. Miyares became the first Cuban-American and Hispanic to be elected to statewide office in Virginia. Miyares was later sworn in on January 15, 2022.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">2025 Virginia gubernatorial election</span> Election for Governor of Virginia

    The 2025 Virginia gubernatorial election will be held on November 4, 2025. Incumbent Republican Governor Glenn Youngkin will be ineligible to run for re-election, as the Constitution of Virginia prohibits the state's governors from serving consecutive terms.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">2023 Virginia's 4th congressional district special election</span> Election following death of Donald McEachin

    The 2023 Virginia's 4th congressional district special election was a special election to the U.S. House of Representatives that was held to fill Virginia's 4th congressional district for the remainder of the 118th United States Congress. The seat became vacant after incumbent Democrat Donald McEachin died on November 28, 2022, of colorectal cancer. State Senator Jennifer McClellan was declared the victor shortly after the polls closed, winning in a landslide against her Republican opponent.

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