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The Red Is Fading in a Virginia Bellwether

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Posted on Nov 3, 2008

By Marie Cocco

    LEESBURG, Va.—There is one last farmer who still lives on Jeff Kayden’s dirt road. When the two neighbors speak of politics, the farmer tells Kayden, a real estate developer and construction entrepreneur, about the days when Loudoun County was quiet and rural—and traditionally, decidedly, proudly Republican.

    That was more than a decade ago, before people like Kayden moved out in droves from the older, “inner” suburbs of Washington, D.C., communities that lie within an easy commute of the government agencies and the law firms, lobbying outfits and other enterprises that feed off them. Many were priced out of the housing market in the inner ring. Others were lured by jobs in the technology and telecommunications industries, which boomed in this area west of Washington Dulles International Airport in the 1990s. Kayden, who is 57, ventured out to Loudoun County about a dozen years ago. “I wanted a new home in the country,” he says.

    The peaks of the Blue Ridge Mountains poke up over the horizon as drivers speed along the highways that lead past the airport and through the subdivisions that have sprouted in fields that a few years ago were planted with vegetables. The newness of the place can startle. No shopping center has an aging storefront. The landscape that surrounds the homes in the developments of tract mansions and townhouses is dotted with trees that aren’t yet near their full height.

    People like Kathryn Snead, a nuclear specialist with the Environmental Protection Agency, live in these homes. Even though the round-trip commute to her job is three hours, Snead endures it, she told me, because she couldn’t afford a home closer to downtown Washington.

    Snead waited about 25 minutes to cast her early ballot for president last Friday, along with hundreds of her fellow county residents who formed a line that wound up one side of a corridor in the Loudoun County voter registration office and down the other. They were, collectively, the face of change in Virginia that could tip the state into the Democratic column for the first time since the LBJ landslide of 1964.

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    The change took root here long before Barack Obama’s campaign for “change” targeted the area with advertising, hundreds of campaign field workers and rallies that have attracted thousands and sparked unmistakable energy. Though he went on to become a popular governor and now is poised for a blowout win in his race for U.S. Senate, Democrat Mark Warner lost Loudoun County in his 2001 gubernatorial campaign. But by 2005, when Democrat Tim Kaine ran, a victory in what was by then a transformed county helped lift him into the governor’s mansion. The following year, Jim Webb nudged out Republican Sen. George Allen in Loudoun County by less than a single percentage point, enough in a race that was skintight statewide.

    Obama was to end his campaign Monday night with a rally in neighboring Prince William County—his 11th stop in Virginia during the general election campaign. 

    Registration in Loudoun County increased about 10 percent between January and the Oct. 6 deadline, according to Registrar Judith Brown. By the end of early balloting on Saturday, 21,222 voters—of about 179,000 registered voters in the county—had cast their ballots.

    No voter is ever entirely emblematic of the citizenry in any state. But in Loudoun, Kayden may well come close. The politician who seems most responsible for driving him into the early voting line is George W. Bush, whom Kayden calls “the worst president by far in history.” His company developed both commercial and residential property, he told me, but it hasn’t built a house in three years. “You can buy them now for less than it costs to build them,” he says.

    Another motivator appears to be Sarah Palin, though not in the way Republican nominee John McCain had hoped. Palin is the reason Marc Willson, an energy consultant, is abandoning his lifelong habit of voting for Republican presidential candidates. He believes McCain is better prepared to lead the military than is Obama, and intended to vote for the Republicans in congressional races. But, Willson said, “I can’t have Sarah Palin one 72-year-old heartbeat away from the presidency.”

    As Loudoun County goes, so Virginia is likely to go. In this unlikeliest of presidential contests, the people of Loudoun County—middle class and traditionally middle of the road in their political tastes—are unlikely protagonists in a historic drama.
   
    Marie Cocco’s e-mail address is mariecocco(at)washpost.com.
   
    © 2008, Washington Post Writers Group


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By Frank, November 4, 2008 at 4:33 pm Link to this comment

I just voted for Obama an hour ago in Loudoun County, Virginia, with no wait whatsoever.  I had a choice of paper ballot or electronic. Since I don’t trust those machines fully and there were 2 people waiting for it, I went the paper ballot route with no wait. The paper ballot gets scanned upon leaving the polling station.  Whole thing from in the door to out took less than 9 minutes.  I actually brought a water bottle in anticipation of waiting for hours. So much for that.

15 minutes after I got home, an Obama volunteer knocked on my door and asked if I had voted. It is the 4th Obama volunteer to come to my door in 3 weeks, along with several door hangers left also. Haven’t seen a single McCain person come around or a single McCain door hanger.  Obama people around here are very motivated and well mobilized, apparently.  Doesn’t bode well for the ‘maverick’ around these parts, I reckon.

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By Frank, November 4, 2008 at 4:30 pm Link to this comment

I just voted for Obama an hour ago in Loundoun County, Virginia, with no wait whatsoever.  I had a choice of paper ballot or electronic. Since I don’t trust those machines fully and there were 2 people waiting for it, I went the paper ballot route with no wait. The paper ballot gets scanned upon leaving the polling station.  Whole thing from in the door to out took less than 9 minutes.  I actually brought a water bottle in anticipation of waiting for hours. So much for that.

15 minutes after I got home, an Obama volunteer knocked on my door and asked if I had voted. It is the 4th Obama volunteer to come to my door in 3 weeks, along with several door hangers left also. Haven’t seen a single McCain person come around or a single McCain door hanger.  Obama people around here are very motivated and well mobilized, apparently.  Doesn’t bode well for the ‘maverick’ around these parts, I reckon.

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By NOVA Resident, November 4, 2008 at 11:39 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

I have lived in Fairfax County in northern Virginia my entire life. There is no question that over the past 15 years folks here have begun trending towards the democrats. The primary reason is not because we are liberal, but reject extremism in any form. The state republican party is an extremist extension of the the downstate religious icons (Falwell & Robertson). Their views do not play well in the urban and suburban centers. It is shocking that a county such as Loudoun could quickly become moderate, but I believe it is a reflection what we are seeing on the national level - a rejection of the fusion between religion/gun nuts/libertarians which now comprise the base of the Republican party. I am hopeful that the Democrats manage to govern effectively, relegating the Republicans to the “back of the bus” (a little humility is good for everyone”.

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By Cercatore, November 4, 2008 at 10:12 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

My wife and I moved from Manassas, VA (Prince William County) to Houston, TX in April of this year to take a new job.  We’re both ardent Obama supporters.  It’s just killing us that we’re missing out on the chance to be in VA this year where our vote would have made a difference to help turn Virginia from red to blue. 

Instead we’re stuck in the bastion of red that is Texas.  (Some neighborhood hooligan even stole the 2 Obama yard signs that we had put out.)  Oh well, we still voted for Obama, and we voted early last week.  We’re proud to have cast our vote for him even if this state goes the other way. 

We yearn for the day when the other 48 states go the way of Maine and Nebraska and apportion their delegates by district rather than the current winner-take-all system the majority of states use.

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By Inherit The Wind, November 4, 2008 at 5:23 am Link to this comment

We left Virginia to move to NJ for job opportunities over 15 years ago, but we loved living in the DC area, just on the line between suburban and the Old South.  We loved being able to drive 20 minutes and be in a traditional older town, away from the exploding developments of townhouses…like ours.

Change was coming to Virginia even back then.  We voted for Doug Wilder, the first African American ever elected a Governor.  We had one really good, moderate senator (for a Republican), John Warner, and one really lousy, conservative Democratic senator, Chuck Robb. Warner, who is retiring, was such a man of principle, that when the Falwell types put up Oliver North to run against Robb, Warner REFUSED to endorse North, saying the man was a convicted criminal and shouldn’t be in the Senate!  Of course, North’s conviction was overturned, but that was on what “conservatives” love to sneer at as a “technicality”.

Robb, OTOH, was one of the turn-coat Dems who voted to confirm Clarence Thomas.

But we also turned out a long-term GOP congressman and Reaganite Stan Something or Other, to replace him with Jim Moran, who still holds that seat and never lost his thick NYC accent.

It’s been clear for 25 years that Virginia was changing and that Northern Virginia was the engine behind that change. It was growing, it was attracting people from all over the country, it was clearly the powerhouse driving much of the Commonwealth’s economy.  Even the local branch of the state university system was going from a podunk school to a top-notch school to compete with U of Md, Georgetown, GW, Catholic U, Galludet, and Howard: Of course, that’s George Mason, whose Econ dept had one its profs win the Nobel Prize—Buchanan.

We still miss that area, and still have friends there.  And we are SO proud to see the change continue, as George Allen was tossed out, as Mark Warner is about to be voted in, and as the Commonwealth will finally vote Democratic in this historic election.

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