Tuesday, May 7, 2024

Voters hand Democrats control of Senate


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HENRICO COUNTY, Va. — Virginia voters denied Republicans full control of the state’s government, blocking the GOP’s efforts to restrict abortion in the state. 

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Just over three hours after polls closed, Decision Desk HQ projected that Democrats would retain control of the state Senate —  and the ability to block Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s agenda. Partisan control of the House of Delegates remains too close to call. 

The outcome of Virginia’s legislative elections, alongside the abortion referendum in Ohio, will send a powerful message to the nation about how much voters are prioritizing reproductive freedom at the ballot box heading into 2024. Democrats’ strategy to center abortion rights in an election where abortion wasn’t directly on the ballot proved powerful enough to defend the party’s control of the Senate. It’s not yet clear if it will yield a broader rebuke of the GOP. 

Such was the case even after Republicans led by Youngkin openly embraced a 15-week abortion ban with some exceptions, yielding important questions about voter support or acceptance for such a policy amid concerns over high-priority issues like the economy and education.

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With control of the Senate, Virginia Democrats will remain a “brick wall” against state Republicans’ conservative agenda, including more state government control over public school curriculums and restrictions on trans youth participation in sports. 

All 140 seats in the Virginia legislature were up for grabs this election cycle, but control of the chambers came down to a handful of seats in the House and Senate. 

In the Richmond suburbs, voters unseated Republican Sen. Siobhan Dunnavant, a practicing OB-GYN who spent much of her campaign defending her strong support for abortion restrictions at 15 weeks of pregnancy. Dunnavant, who had served in the legislature since 2016, backed exceptions for rape, incest and to protect the pregnant patient’s life, and parted with most of her colleagues in also backing an exception for severe fetal anomalies. 

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“Not a ban, but legislation that reflects compassionate common sense,” Dunnavant said to describe her position. 

At a polling place in Dunnavant’s district, Heidi R., 56, said she came out to vote on Election Day “almost strictly to keep Dunnavant from being elected to another term.”

The Henrico County resident, who spoke on condition that her full name not be used, said she and Dunnavant both attended a local Catholic parish and that based on their interactions, she doesn’t believe Dunnavant would stick to a 15-week abortion ban if given the opportunity to go further. She has also taken issue with Dunnavant’s statements around “late-term abortions.”

“She is an OB — she knows that elective late-term abortions don’t really happen,” Heidi said. “I’m Catholic, too. I would never get an abortion. When I was pregnant, I didn’t even get the tests for [fetal anomalies]. But it’s not for me to make that decision for you.” 

Voter Carolyn Bisler, 77, said she supported Dunnavant and other Republicans on the ballot, primarily based on concerns over public safety. She said she doesn’t mind some state-level restrictions as long as the procedure is available in certain cases. 

“Fifteen weeks — I think you should be able to make up your mind in that length of time,” Bisler said. “That still gives women their right to choose.” 

In the Northern Virginia suburbs, a Senate district anchored in Loudoun County, a national epicenter for the education culture wars, Democrat Russet Perry was projected to defeat Republican Juan Pablo Segura. Segura’s campaign confirmed the candidate supports Youngkin’s 15-week proposal, but said such a policy does not amount to a “ban.”

Virginians also voted to elevate Danica Roem from the state House to the Senate, making her the first openly trans person elected to the state’s upper chamber. Roem fended off Republican Bill Woolf in a multimillion-dollar, highly competitive race. 

Roem said her opponent targeted her with mailers, radio and TV ads, focusing on trans girls’ participation in youth sports and describing Roem’s support for gender-affirming school policies as “reckless ‘boys in girls’ spaces’ policies.”  


Democrats’ win in the Senate means the party will continue to block GOP efforts to dictate how schools will accommodate trans students — an issue Youngkin directly campaigned on — and will protect Virginia’s nondiscrimination protections for LGBTQ+ people, its ban on conversion therapy and its inclusive hate crime laws. 

A handful of races remained too early to call, meaning Democrats’ majority could grow further. 

Control of the House also remained too early to call.

This story was originally published by The 19th

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