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2017 Virginia House of Delegates election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2017 Virginia House of Delegates election

← 2015
November 7, 2017
2019 →

All 100 seats in theVirginia House of Delegates
51 seats needed for a majority
Turnout47.6%Increase 18.5[1]
 Majority partyMinority party
 
LeaderBill Howell
(retired)
David Toscano
PartyRepublicanDemocratic
Leader sinceJanuary 8, 2003November 19, 2011
Leader's seat28th57th
Seats before6634
Seats won5149
Seat changeDecrease 15Increase 15
Popular vote1,076,0811,304,241
Percentage43.8%53.1%
SwingDecrease 15.8%Increase 17.4%

Results:
     Democratic hold     Democratic gain
     Republican hold

Speaker before election

Bill Howell
Republican

ElectedSpeaker

Kirk Cox
Republican

Elections in Virginia
U.S. President
Presidential primaries
U.S. Senate
U.S. House
Governor
Lieutenant Governor
Attorney General
Senate
House of Delegates
State elections
Commonwealth's Attorney

The2017 Virginia House of Delegates election was held on Tuesday, November 7. All 100 seats in theVirginia House of Delegates were contested. TheRepublican Party held a 66–34 majority in the House of Delegates before the election but lost 15 seats to theDemocratic Party, resulting in the Republicans holding a 50–49 advantage.

The election was notable for having a perfectly tied vote in the94th district, which left control of the legislature undecided. The winner of the race was determined by a random drawing on January 4, 2018, which resulted in the Republicans holding a 51–49 majority.

Background

[edit]

The election took place during the first term of PresidentDonald Trump, a Republican who won the2016 presidential election. Democrats fielded a larger number of candidates than usual in hopes ofdefying Trump.[2] While there were 17 Republican delegates in districts that had voted Clinton, there were no Democrats from districts that had backed Trump. For this reason, Democrats focused more on picking up seats than on defending seats.[3] Early on, it was expected that Republicans would hold the majority,[4] but Democrats became more optimistic following the unexpectedly close result inKansas's 4th congressional district special election.[5][6][7] Likewise, after Jacqueline Smith won the election forPrince William County Clerk of Circuit Court, Republicans expressed concern that Democratic momentum and Republican internal bickering could cause them to lose five to ten seats in the House of Delegates.[8] Democratic state senatorJeremy McPike argued that Smith's victory boded well for Democratic turnout in the state election.[9]

The filing deadline for Republicans and Democrats to participate in the June 13 primary was March 30.[10] There were seven open House seats, as RepublicansDave Albo,Mark Dudenhefer,Peter Farrell,Bill Howell,Jimmie Massie, andRick Morris, and DemocratDaun Hester all declined to run again.[11] A total of 55 House of Delegates races were contested.[12] 77 Democrats lined up to challenge 49 Republican incumbents.[13] 35 races were uncontested in the general election, with 13 having only a Republican candidate and 22 having only a Democrat.

In the 2017 election, Democrats reported 153,442 donations of $100 or less, whereas Republicans reported 7,332 such donations.[14]

Delegates not running for re-election

[edit]
DelegateSeatFirst electedPartyDate announcedRef.
Dave Albo42nd district1993RepublicanApril 5, 2017[15]
Mark Dudenhefer2nd district2015RepublicanJanuary 6, 2017[16]
Peter Farrell56th district2013RepublicanMarch 10, 2017[17]
Daun Hester89th district2012DemocraticDecember 30, 2016[18]
William J. Howell28th district1987RepublicanFebruary 20, 2017[19]
Jimmie Massie72nd district2007RepublicanMarch 18, 2017[20]
Rick Morris64th district2011RepublicanMarch 1, 2017[21]

Results

[edit]

By November 8, theAssociated Press called the elections in 96 districts, giving the Democrats a 49–47 advantage but not yet the majority of seats.[22] Upon certification of the election results on November 27, the Republicans held a 51–49 majority.[23] A recount in the94th district resulted in the Democrats gaining one more seat, causing a 50–50 split.[24] But a three-judge panel declined to certify the result and counted another vote that tied the election, which led to the panel declaring that there was no winner.[25] So the balance of the House of Delegates was at 50–49 in the Republicans' favor until the race was resolved through drawing lots, as per state law.[25] On January 4, 2018, the drawing was held and Republican David Yancey was declared the winner. His opponent,Shelly Simonds, conceded on January 10.[26]

There were several notable candidates who won elections. Democratic candidateChris Hurst, whose girlfriend wasmurdered on live television in 2015, defeated Republican incumbent andNational Rifle Association-supported[27]Joseph Yost in the12th district.[28] In the13th district, Democratic candidateDanica Roem defeated Republican incumbentBob Marshall to become the first openly transgender candidate to be elected and serve in a state legislative body in the United States.[29] In the21st and42nd districts, respectively, Democratic candidatesKelly Fowler andKathy Tran became the first Asian American women elected to the House of Delegates after defeating Republican incumbentRon Villanueva and candidate Lolita Mancheno-Smoak.[30] Democratic candidatesElizabeth Guzmán andHala Ayala defeated Republican incumbentsScott Lingamfelter andRichard Anderson in the31st and51st districts, respectively, to also become the first two Hispanic women elected to the House of Delegates.[31][32] In the50th district,Lee Carter, the Democratic candidate and a self-describeddemocratic socialist, defeated Republican incumbent and House Majority WhipJackson Miller.[33] Democratic candidateDawn M. Adams became the first openly lesbian candidate to be elected to the House of Delegates after defeating Republican incumbentG. Manoli Loupassi in the68th district.[34][35]

In the 2017 election, 25 women were elected to the House of Delegates, breaking the previous record of 19 that was set in 2013.[36]

Close races

[edit]

Seats where the margin of victory was under 10%:

  1. HD District 94 Tie
  2. HD District 40, 0.4%
  3. HD District 28, 0.4%
  4. HD District 27, 0.5%
  5. HD District 68 0.9% (gain)
  6. HD District 85 1.6% (gain)
  7. HD District 73, 3.1% (gain)
  8. HD District 62, 3.5%
  9. HD District 84, 3.6%
  10. HD District 10, 3.9% (gain)
  11. HD District 100 4.4%
  12. HD District 21, 5.2% (gain)
  13. HD District 72, 5.6% (gain)
  14. HD District 51, 6.2% (gain)
  15. HD District 13, 7.8% (gain)
  16. HD District 50, 8.8% (gain)
  17. HD District 12, 8.9% (gain)
  18. HD District 26, 9.2%
  19. HD District 33, 9.7%
  20. HD District 31, 9.8% (gain)

Overall

[edit]
icon
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  Republican (51)
  Democratic (49)
PartyLeaderDelegatesVotes
Of total±Of total±
Republican PartyWilliam J. Howell5151.00%
51 / 100
Decrease151,076,08143.81%
Decrease15.79
Democratic PartyDavid Toscano4949.00%
49 / 100
Increase151,304,24153.10%
Increase17.35
Other parties
Write-inN/A00.00%
0 / 100
Steady36,6401.49%
IndependentN/A00.00%
0 / 100
Steady26,6031.08%
Green PartyN/A00.00%
0 / 100
Steady6,4090.26%
Increase0.08
Libertarian PartyN/A00%
0 / 100
Steady6,2950.25%
Decrease0.13

By House of Delegates district

[edit]
DistrictIncumbentThis race
NumberRepresentativePartyFirst
elected
Winner[37]Candidates[38]
1Terry KilgoreRepublican1993Terry Kilgore (R)Terry Kilgore (R) 76.0%
Alicia Kallen (D) 23.8%
2Mark DudenheferRepublican2015
(2012–2014)
Jennifer Carroll Foy (D)
Democratic gain.
Jennifer Carroll Foy (D) 63.0%
Mike Makee (R) 36.8%
3Will MorefieldRepublican2009Will Morefield (R)Will Morefield (R) 78.1%
Bill Bunch (D) 21.6%
4Todd PillionRepublican2014Todd Pillion (R)Todd Pillion (R) unopposed
5Israel O'QuinnRepublican2011Israel O'Quinn (R)Israel O'Quinn (R) unopposed
6Jeff CampbellRepublican2013Jeff Campbell (R)Jeff Campbell (R) 81.3%
Kenneth Browning (I) 17.9%
7Nick RushRepublican2011Nick Rush (R)Nick Rush (R) 66.3%
Flourette Ketner (D) 33.5%
8Greg HabeebRepublican2011Greg Habeeb (R)Greg Habeeb (R) 63.9%
Steve McBride (D) 35.9%
9Charles PoindexterRepublican2007Charles Poindexter (R)Charles Poindexter (R) 70.3%
Stephanie Cook (D) 29.6%
10Randy MinchewRepublican2011Wendy Gooditis (D)
Democratic gain.
Wendy Gooditis (D) 51.9%
Randy Minchew (R) 48.0%
11Sam RasoulDemocratic2014Sam Rasoul (D)Sam Rasoul (D) unopposed
12Joseph R. YostRepublican2011Chris Hurst (D)
Democratic gain.
Chris Hurst (D) 54.4%
Joseph R. Yost (R) 45.5%
13Bob MarshallRepublican1991Danica Roem (D)
Democratic gain.
Danica Roem (D) 53.7%
Bob Marshall (R) 45.9%
14Danny MarshallRepublican2001Danny Marshall (R)Danny Marshall (R) unopposed
15Todd GilbertRepublican2005Todd Gilbert (R)Todd Gilbert (R) unopposed
16Les AdamsRepublican2013Les Adams (R)Les Adams (R) unopposed
17Chris HeadRepublican2011Chris Head (R)Chris Head (R) 60.6%
Djuna Osborne (D) 39.3%
18Michael WebertRepublican2011Michael Webert (R)Michael Webert (R) 60.4%
Tristan Shields (D) 34.3%
Will King (G) 5.2%
19Terry AustinRepublican2013Terry Austin (R)Terry Austin (R) unopposed
20Richard BellRepublican2009Richard Bell (R)Richard Bell (R) 54.5%
Michele Edwards (D) 42.6%
Will Hammer (L) 2.8%
21Ron VillanuevaRepublican2009Kelly Fowler (D)
Democratic gain.
Kelly Fowler (D) 52.5%
Ron Villanueva (R) 47.3%
22Kathy ByronRepublican1997Kathy Byron (R)Kathy Byron (R) unopposed
23Scott GarrettRepublican2009Scott Garrett (R)Scott Garrett (R) 65.7%
Natalie Short (D) 34.2%
24Benjamin L. ClineRepublican2002Benjamin L. Cline (R)Benjamin L. Cline (R) 71.9%
John C. Winfrey (I) 27.7%
25Steve LandesRepublican1995Steve Landes (R)Steve Landes (R) 58.0%
Angela Lynn (D) 41.9%
26Tony WiltRepublican2010Tony Wilt (R)Tony Wilt (R) 54.5%
Brent Finnegan (D) 45.3%
27Roxann RobinsonRepublican2010Roxann Robinson (R)Roxann Robinson (R) 50.2%
Larry V. Barnett (D) 49.7%
28Bill HowellRepublican1987Bob Thomas (R)
Republican hold.
Bob Thomas (R) 50.1%
Joshua G. Cole (D) 49.7%
29Chris CollinsRepublican2015Chris Collins (R)Chris Collins (R) 64.2%
Casey Turben (D) 35.6%
30Nicholas FreitasRepublican2015Nicholas Freitas (R)Nicholas Freitas (R) 62.1%
Ben Hixon (D) 37.8%
31Scott LingamfelterRepublican2001Elizabeth Guzman (D)
Democratic gain.
Elizabeth Guzman (D) 54.0%
Scott Lingamfelter (R) 44.2%
Nathan Larson (I) 1.7%
32Tag GreasonRepublican2009David Reid (D)
Democratic gain.
David Reid (D)[39] 58.5%
Tag Greason (R) 41.4%
33Dave LaRockRepublican2013Dave LaRock (R)Dave LaRock (R) 54.8%
Tia Walbridge (D) 45.1%
34Kathleen MurphyDemocratic2015Kathleen Murphy (D)Kathleen Murphy (D) 60.9%
Cheryl A. Buford (R) 39.0%
35Mark KeamDemocratic2009Mark Keam (D)Mark Keam (D) unopposed
36Ken PlumDemocratic1981
(1978–1980)
Ken Plum (D)Ken Plum (D) unopposed
37David BulovaDemocratic2005David Bulova (D)David Bulova (D) unopposed
38Kaye KoryDemocratic2009Kaye Kory (D)Kaye Kory (D) 73.5%
Paul Haring (R) 26.3%
39Vivian WattsDemocratic1995Vivian Watts (D)Vivian Watts (D) unopposed
40Tim HugoRepublican2002Tim Hugo (R)[40]Tim Hugo (R) 50.1%
Donte Tanner (D) 49.7%
41Eileen Filler-CornDemocratic2010Eileen Filler-Corn (D)Eileen Filler-Corn (D) unopposed
42Dave AlboRepublican1993Kathy Tran (D)
Democratic gain.
Kathy Tran (D) 61.0%
Lolita Mancheno-Smoak (R) 38.9%
43Mark SicklesDemocratic2003Mark Sickles (D)Mark Sickles (D) unopposed
44Paul KrizekDemocratic2015Paul Krizek (D)Paul Krizek (D) unopposed
45Mark LevineDemocratic2015Mark Levine (D)Mark Levine (D) unopposed
46Charniele HerringDemocratic2009Charniele Herring (D)Charniele Herring (D) unopposed
47Patrick HopeDemocratic2009Patrick Hope (D)Patrick Hope (D) unopposed
48Rip SullivanDemocratic2014Rip Sullivan (D)Rip Sullivan (D) unopposed
49Alfonso LopezDemocratic2011Alfonso Lopez (D)Alfonso Lopez (D) 81.3%
Adam Roosevelt (R) 18.5%
50Jackson MillerRepublican2006Lee Carter (D)
Democratic gain.
Lee Carter (D) 54.3%
Jackson Miller (R) 45.5%
51Rich AndersonRepublican2009Hala Ayala (D)
Democratic gain.
Hala Ayala (D) 53.0%
Rich Anderson (R) 46.8%
52Luke TorianDemocratic2009Luke Torian (D)Luke Torian (D) unopposed
53Marcus SimonDemocratic2013Marcus Simon (D)Marcus Simon (D) 74.3%
Mike Casey (I) 24.6%
54Bobby OrrockRepublican1989Bobby Orrock (R)Bobby Orrock (R) 57.9%
Al Durante (D) 41.9%
55Buddy FowlerRepublican2013Buddy Fowler (R)Buddy Fowler (R) 59.9%
Morgan Goodman (D) 39.9%
56Peter FarrellRepublican2011John McGuire III (R)
Republican hold.
John McGuire III (R) 59.5%
Melissa M. Dart (D) 40.4%
57David ToscanoDemocratic2005David Toscano (D)David Toscano (D) unopposed
58Rob BellRepublican2001Rob Bell (R)Rob Bell (R) 61.2%
Kellen Squire (D) 38.7%
59Matt FarissRepublican2011Matt Fariss (R)Matt Fariss (R) 61.2%
Tracy Carver (D) 34.1%
David Ball (I) 3.4%
Marcus T. Sutphin (G) 1.2%
60James E. EdmundsRepublican2009James E. Edmunds (R)James E. Edmunds (R) 61.9%
Jamaal Johnston (D) 38.0%
61Tommy WrightRepublican2000Tommy Wright (R)Tommy Wright (R) unopposed
62Riley IngramRepublican1991Riley Ingram (R)Riley Ingram (R) 51.7%
Sheila Bynum-Coleman (D) 48.2%
63Lashrecse AirdDemocratic2015Lashrecse Aird (D)Lashrecse Aird (D) unopposed
64Rick MorrisRepublican2011Emily Brewer (R)
Republican hold.
Emily Brewer (R) 62.4%
Rebecca S. Colaw (D) 37.5%
65Lee WareRepublican1998Lee Ware (R)Lee Ware (R) 64.0%
Francis Stevens (D) 35.8%
66Kirk CoxRepublican1989Kirk Cox (R)Kirk Cox (R) 63.5%
Katie Ann Sponsler (D) 36.4%
67James LeMunyonRepublican2009Karrie Delaney (D)
Democratic gain.
Karrie Delaney (D) 57.9%
James LeMunyon (R) 42.0%
68Manoli LoupassiRepublican2007Dawn M. Adams (D)
Democratic gain.
Dawn M. Adams (D) 50.4%
Manoli Loupassi (R) 49.5%
69Betsy B. CarrDemocratic2009Betsy B. Carr (D)Betsy B. Carr (D) 86.6%
Jake Crocker (L) 8.5%
Montigue Magruder (G) 4.7%
70Delores McQuinnDemocratic2008Delores McQuinn (D)Delores McQuinn (D) unopposed
71Jeff BourneDemocratic2017Jeff Bourne (D)Jeff Bourne (D) unopposed
72Jimmie MassieRepublican2007Schuyler T. VanValkenburg (D)
Democratic gain.
Schuyler T. VanValkenburg (D) 52.7%
Eddie Whitlock (R) 47.1%
73John O'BannonRepublican2000Debra H. Rodman (D)
Democratic gain.
Debra H. Rodman (D) 51.5%
John O'Bannon (R) 48.4%
74Lamont BagbyDemocratic2015Lamont Bagby (D)Lamont Bagby (D) 76.0%
Preston Brown (I) 23.3%
75Roslyn TylerDemocratic2005Roslyn Tyler (D)Roslyn Tyler (D) unopposed
76Chris JonesRepublican1997Chris Jones (R)Chris Jones (R) unopposed
77Cliff Hayes, Jr.Democratic2016Cliff Hayes, Jr. (D)Cliff Hayes, Jr. (D) 82.6%
Jeff Staples (G) 16.9%
78Jay LeftwichRepublican2013Jay Leftwich (R)Jay Leftwich (R) unopposed
79Steve HeretickDemocratic2015Steve Heretick (D)Steve Heretick (D) unopposed
80Matthew JamesDemocratic2009Matthew James (D)Matthew James (D) unopposed
81Barry KnightRepublican2008Barry Knight (R)Barry Knight (R) 59.0%
Kimberly Anne Tucker (D) 40.9%
82Jason MiyaresRepublican2015Jason Miyares (R)Jason Miyares (R) 58.9%
Leigh Anne Bowling (D) 41.0%
83Chris StolleRepublican2009Chris Stolle (R)Chris Stolle (R) 56.6%
David Rose-Carmack (D) 43.3%
84Glenn DavisRepublican2013Glenn Davis (R)Glenn Davis (R) 51.7%
Veronica Coleman (D) 48.1%
85Rocky HolcombRepublican2017Cheryl Turpin (D)
Democratic gain.
Cheryl Turpin (D) 50.7%
Rocky Holcomb (R) 49.1%
86Jennifer BoyskoDemocratic2015Jennifer Boysko (D)Jennifer Boysko (D) 68.5%
Linda C. Schulz (R) 31.3%
87John BellDemocratic2015John Bell (D)John Bell (D) 61.7%
Subba R. Kolla (R) 38.0%
88Mark ColeRepublican2001Mark Cole (R)Mark Cole (R) 52.7%
Steve Aycock (D) 37.3%
Amanda Blalock (I) 8.9%
Gerald Anderson (G) 1.0%
89Daun HesterDemocratic2012Jay Jones (D)
Democratic hold.
Jay Jones (D) 84.5%
Terry Hurst (L) 15.0%
90Joe LindseyDemocratic2014Joe Lindsey (D)Joe Lindsey (D) unopposed
91Gordon HelselRepublican2011Gordon Helsel (R)Gordon Helsel (R) 56.2%
Michael Wade (D) 43.6%
92Jeion WardDemocratic2003Jeion Ward (D)Jeion Ward (D) unopposed
93Michael MullinDemocratic2016Michael Mullin (D)Michael Mullin (D) 60.0%
Heather Cordasco (R) 39.9%
94David YanceyRepublican2011David Yancey (R)
Republican hold after tiebreaker.[41]
David Yancey (R) 48.638%
Shelly Simonds (D) 48.638%
Michael Bartley (L) 2.8%
95Marcia PriceDemocratic2015Marcia Price (D)Marcia Price (D) unopposed
96Brenda PoggeRepublican2007Brenda Pogge (R)Brenda Pogge (R) 56.9%
Kelly DeLucia (D) 42.9%
97Chris PeaceRepublican2006[42]Chris Peace (R)Chris Peace (R) 72.2%
Cori Johnson (D) 27.6%
98Keith HodgesRepublican2011Keith Hodges (R)Keith Hodges (R) 65.1%
Sheila Crowley (D) 34.9%
99Margaret RansoneRepublican2011Margaret Ransone (R)Margaret Ransone (R) 62.2%
Francis N. Edwards (D) 37.7%
100Robert Bloxom Jr.Republican2014Robert Bloxom Jr. (R)Robert Bloxom Jr. (R) 52.1%
Willie Randall (D) 47.7%

Seats that changed hands

[edit]

Republican to Democratic (15)

Aftermath

[edit]

Reaction

[edit]

Frank Bruni, a columnist forThe New York Times, said the Republican Party should be "scared" as a result of the Virginia elections.[43]Slate writerMark Stern blamedgerrymandering as the reason why the Democrats did not win a majority in the House of Delegates.[44]Chicago Tribune editorial board memberClarence Page called the election an "unmistakable anti-Trump backlash."[45]

Misinformation

[edit]

On November 7, aTwitter account called "MAGA Mike King" was suspended after it tweeted more than a dozen times a graphic purportedly instructing Virginians on how to vote by text.[46] On the same day, Harry Wiggins, the chair of thePrince William County Democratic Committee, toldThe Intercept that voters in his county were receivingrobocalls falsely telling them their polling places had changed.[47]

Irregularities

[edit]

On November 13, theNAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund filed a lawsuit in the state court alleging that conflicting and misleading instructions from the Stafford County Electoral Board would ultimately prevent provisional ballots from being counted.[48] Their lawsuit was thrown out on November 14 by judge Victoria Willis because it was not clear that the two voters named as plaintiffs had been harmed.[49] On November 20, theVirginia State Board of Elections voted unanimously to delay certification of elections in the28th and88th districts after Elections Commissioner Edgardo Cortés announced that in April 2016, Fredericksburg registrar Juanita Pitchford erroneously assigned 83 voters from the 28th to the 88th.[50]

On November 22, federal judgeT. S. Ellis III rejected theVirginia Democratic Party's bid to halt the Virginia State Board of Elections from certifying the vote totals in the 28th district.[51] After certifying the final results on November 27, Virginia State Board of Elections Chairman James Alcorn acknowledged the possibility of other voters being erroneously assigned to the wrong district.[52] On December 7, the Democrats filed an amended complaint that asked the judge to order the state to decertify the election, block Republican candidate Robert Thomas from being seated as a delegate when the General Assembly convenes in January, and hold a new election for the seat.[53]

On January 2, 2018, it was reported that the Virginia Department of Elections, SpeakerBill Howell, and Fredericksburg's Electoral Board knew there were problems with voters assigned to the wrong House districts in the Fredericksburg area since at least early 2015.[54]

Recounts

[edit]

On November 29, Democratic candidatesShelly Simonds and Donte Tanner filed for recounts in the 94th and40th districts, respectively.[55] On November 30, Republican incumbent Manoli Loupassi, who lost to Democratic candidate Dawn Adams, filed for a recount in the 68th district.[56] On December 3, Democratic candidateJoshua Cole filed a request for a recount in the 28th district.[57] On December 14, Republican incumbentTim Hugo won the recount in the 40th district, defeating Donte Tanner by 99 votes.[58] On December 20, Adams' victory over Loupassi was confirmed by the recount.[59] On December 21, Republican candidate Robert Thomas defeated Joshua Cole in the recount of the 28th district election.[60]

On December 19, the recount in the 94th district determined that Simonds defeated Republican incumbentDavid Yancey by one vote, which ended the 18-year Republican majority in the House of Delegates and created an even 50–50 split.[24] It was the first time in almost thirty years that a recount changed an election result in Virginia.[24] However, a three-judge panel declined to certify the results, citing a questionable ballot that had previously not been counted, which they deemed should be counted in favor of the Republican instead.[25] Judge Bryant Sugg said, "The court declares there is no winner in this election."[25] In the event of a tie in a House of Delegates election, state law says the winner is chosen by lot.[25] On December 21, James Alcorn tweeted that a random drawing would occur on December 27.[61]

On December 26, the drawing was postponed after Simonds filed a legal motion challenging the validity of a ballot counted in Yancey's favor.[62] On December 28 onCNN'sNew Day, Simonds said, "I do have a problem with doing a game of chance now, because I do feel now I did win fair and square during the recount."[63] On December 29, Alcorn tweeted, "The State Board of Elections will convene on Thursday, January 4 at 11:00 am. Unless the court system intervenes, the Board will draw a winner for [the 94th district]."[64] In the legal case, Yancey filed paperwork arguing that Simonds had presented no grounds for a recount court to reconsider its decision.[65] On January 3, 2018, the recount panel rejected Simonds' motion, allowing the random draw to proceed as planned.[66] On January 4, the tie-breaking drawing was held and Yancey was the winner.[41] Simonds conceded on January 10.[26]

Speakership

[edit]

If the Republicans retained a majority in the House of Delegates,Kirk Cox was in line to becomespeaker.[67] On December 8,Kenneth R. Plum, a Democrat and the most senior member of the House of Delegates, voiced the possibility of him becoming speaker while minority leaderDavid Toscano is named the majority leader.[68] In an email disclosed byThe Washington Post on December 27, Toscano accused the Republicans of trying "to undermine [Democratic] unity by offering deals to various members in exchange [for] a vote for Speaker." Toscano also warned his fellow Democratic delegates against calling in sick when the legislature convenes or taking an ill-timed bathroom break during the floor session, fearing that in an evenly split chamber, the Republicans might seize any opportunity to call a vote and take control.[69] After the Republicans retained a majority in the House of Delegates, Cox was elected speaker by a vote of 98–0 on January 10, 2018. Cox didn't vote for himself, and one Democratic delegate didn't appear to be in the chamber.[70]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Registration/Turnout Statistics". Virginia Department of Elections. Archived fromthe original on October 18, 2018. RetrievedDecember 20, 2017.
  2. ^GRAHAM MOOMAW (March 11, 2017)."Amid Trump resistance, Virginia Democrats see surge of candidates for House of Delegates | Virginia".Richmond.com. RetrievedJune 23, 2017.
  3. ^Singer, Jeff (January 23, 2017)."Virginia's House is the most important legislature up this year, and Clinton won a majority of seats".Dailykos.com. RetrievedJune 23, 2017.
  4. ^"All 100 House of Delegates Seats Are Up This Year, and They're Getting More Attention Than Usual". WVTF. March 7, 2017. RetrievedJune 23, 2017.
  5. ^"What Could Happen If There Were a KS04-Style Swing Towards Dems in Virginia This Year? – Blue Virginia".Bluevirginia.us. April 12, 2017. RetrievedJune 23, 2017.
  6. ^Thomas Bowman (April 12, 2017)."Virginia Dems Should be Over the Moon about Kansas Vote | CCFund".Bluevirginia.us. RetrievedJune 23, 2017.
  7. ^"Editorial: What do Kansas results mean for Virginia? | Opinion".Roanoke.com. April 14, 2017. RetrievedJune 23, 2017.
  8. ^Brian Schoeneman (April 19, 2017)."Prince William Clerk of Court Race Loss is Warning for November". Bearing Drift. RetrievedJune 23, 2017.
  9. ^"Democrats emboldened by win; Jackie Smith 'ready to get to work' | Headlines".Insidenova.com. April 20, 2017. RetrievedJune 23, 2017.
  10. ^"Candidacy Requirements for the November 7, 2017 General Election"(PDF).Elections.virginia.gov. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on June 18, 2017. RetrievedJune 23, 2017.
  11. ^"Eight House of Delegates Members Won't Seek Re-Election; Seven Republicans and One Democrat". WVTF. March 16, 2017. RetrievedJune 23, 2017.
  12. ^"Field set for June primaries, November House lineup | News".Heraldcourier.com. April 1, 2017. RetrievedJune 23, 2017.
  13. ^"Del. Ken Plum: A Sense of Impending Changes in the Legislature". Reston Now. April 13, 2017. RetrievedJune 23, 2017.
  14. ^"The Impact of Small Donations in House Elections". Virginia Public Access Project. December 15, 2017. RetrievedDecember 25, 2017.
  15. ^Moomaw, Graham (April 5, 2017)."Del. Dave Albo, head of House courts, won't seek re-election". Richmond Times-Dispatch. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  16. ^"Exclusive: Mark Dudenhefer won't seek reelection to House of Delegates". Stafford: Stafford Local. January 6, 2017. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  17. ^Wilson, Patrick (March 10, 2017)."Del. Peter Farrell of Henrico won't seek re-election". Richmond Times-Dispatch. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  18. ^Hartley, Eric (December 30, 2016)."Del. Daun Hester to run for Norfolk treasurer".The Virginian-Pilot. Norfolk. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  19. ^Vozzella, Laura; Schneider, Gregory S. (February 20, 2017)."Va. House Speaker William Howell, a pragmatic Republican, will not run again".The Washington Post. Richmond. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  20. ^Moomaw, Graham (March 18, 2017)."Republican Del. Jimmie Massie won't seek re-election in western Henrico district". Richmond Times-Dispatch. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  21. ^Pascale, Jordan (March 1, 2017)."Del. Rick Morris, who faces felony abuse charges, won't seek re-election to dedicate more time to family".The Virginian-Pilot. Richmond. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  22. ^Barakat, Matthew (November 7, 2017)."Virginia House up for grabs after Democrats' historic gains".The Seattle Times. Fairfax: Associated Press. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  23. ^Moomaw, Graham (November 27, 2017)."State Board of Elections certifies disputed Fredericksburg-area results despite 147 people voting in the wrong House race". Richmond Times-Dispatch. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  24. ^abcPascale, Jordan (December 19, 2017)."Democrat Shelly Simonds wins Virginia House seat by 1 vote, ending GOP's 18-year majority".The Virginian-Pilot. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  25. ^abcdeMorrison, Jim; Nirappil, Fenit (December 20, 2017)."Court tosses out one-vote victory in recount that had briefly ended a Republican majority in Virginia".The Washington Post.Archived from the original on December 20, 2017. RetrievedDecember 20, 2017.
  26. ^abSchwartzman, Paul; Vozzella, Laura (January 10, 2018)."Democrat who lost random drawing for Va. House seat concedes to Republican".The Washington Post.ISSN 0190-8286.Archived from the original on January 10, 2018. RetrievedJanuary 11, 2018.
  27. ^"NRA-PVF | Grades | Virginia". NRA-PVF. Archived from the original on November 9, 2017.
  28. ^Morris, Chris (November 8, 2017)."Boyfriend of Reporter Killed On Air Wins Virginia House Seat". Fortune. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  29. ^Park, Madison (November 8, 2017)."Election night brings historic wins for minority and LGBT candidates". CNN. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  30. ^Moore, Jack (November 8, 2017)."Why women won big in Va. House of Delegates races". Washington: WTOP. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  31. ^Nuño, Stephen A. (November 8, 2017)."First Two Latinas Are Elected to Virginia House of Delegates, Making History".NBC News. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  32. ^"Unofficial results: Guzman beats incumbent Scott Lingamfelter in 31st District". Fauquier Times. November 7, 2017. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  33. ^Austermuhle, Martin (November 14, 2017)."Meet Lee Carter, The Democratic Socialist Heading To Virginia's House Of Delegates". WAMU. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  34. ^"Dawn Adams is first open lesbian in Virginia House".PBS NewsHour. Richmond: Associated Press. November 9, 2017. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  35. ^"Democrat unseats Loupassi by 325 votes". Richmond: WWBT. November 9, 2017. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  36. ^Bryan, Alix (November 8, 2017)."The historic firsts that happened as Virginia 'turned blue'". Richmond: WTVR. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  37. ^"2017 November House of Delegates".Virginia Department of Elections. November 7, 2017. RetrievedJuly 9, 2023.
  38. ^"List of Candidates, 2017 November General, Member House Of Delegates"(PDF). Virginia Department of Elections. September 21, 2017. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on October 4, 2017. RetrievedOctober 3, 2017.
  39. ^How the 'Resistance' Helped Democrats Dominate Virginia, by Gideon Lewis-Kraus, Nov. 13, 2017,The New York Times
  40. ^"Republican Tim Hugo survives recount to win in Northern Virginia House district". Richmond Times-Dispatch. December 14, 2017. RetrievedDecember 15, 2017.
  41. ^abMcCammon, Sarah (January 4, 2018)."Virginia Republican David Yancey Wins Tie-Breaking Drawing". NPR. RetrievedJanuary 4, 2018.
  42. ^"Special Election – State House District 097". Commonwealth of Virginia. January 24, 2006. Archived fromthe original on May 15, 2008.
  43. ^Bruni, Frank (November 7, 2017)."The G.O.P. Should Be Scared by Virginia".The New York Times. RetrievedDecember 22, 2017.
  44. ^Stern, Mark Joseph (November 8, 2017)."Blue Wave, Meet Red Wall".Slate. RetrievedDecember 22, 2017.
  45. ^Page, Clarence (November 10, 2017)."Don't underestimate the anti-Trump revenge vote".Chicago Tribune. RetrievedDecember 22, 2017.
  46. ^O'Sullivan, Donie (November 8, 2017)."Virginia voter suppression tweets went undetected by Twitter for hours". CNN. RetrievedDecember 22, 2017.
  47. ^Jilani, Zaid; Fang, Lee (November 7, 2017)."Virginia Voters Get Mysterious Robocalls That Their Polling Places Have Changed".The Intercept. RetrievedDecember 22, 2017.
  48. ^"LDF Files Emergency Lawsuit in Virginia State Court Seeking Relief for Voters on Election Day". NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund. November 13, 2017. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  49. ^Vozzella, Laura (November 14, 2017)."Judge throws out lawsuit in key Virginia House race".The Washington Post. Stafford. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  50. ^Vozzella, Laura (November 20, 2017)."Va. holds off certifying tight House race amid new claims of ballot mix-ups".The Washington Post. Richmond. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  51. ^Moomaw, Graham (November 22, 2017)."Federal judge rejects Va. Democrats' bid to bar state elections officials from certifying result in House District 28". Richmond Times-Dispatch. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  52. ^Smith, Max (November 28, 2017)."More bad ballots may have been cast in Va". Richmond: WTOP. RetrievedDecember 26, 2017.
  53. ^Vozzella, Laura (December 7, 2017)."Democrats ask federal judge for new election in tainted Va. House race".The Washington Post. Richmond. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  54. ^Smith, Max (January 2, 2018)."Exclusive: Va. knew of issues with voting in wrong House districts before 2017 election". Washington: WTOP. RetrievedJanuary 2, 2018.
  55. ^Nirappil, Fenit (November 29, 2017)."With control of Virginia House at stake, Democrats seek recounts in two races".The Washington Post. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  56. ^Moomaw, Graham; Cain, Andrew (December 1, 2017)."Loupassi, who previously conceded to Adams, files for recount in Richmond-area House race".The Roanoke Times. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  57. ^"3rd Democratic House candidate files for recount".WTOP. Stafford: Associated Press. December 3, 2017. Archived fromthe original on December 22, 2017. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  58. ^Olivo, Antonio (December 14, 2017)."Republican delegate prevails after recount in key Va. House race with 100-vote margin".The Washington Post. RetrievedDecember 19, 2017.
  59. ^Oliver, Ned (December 20, 2017)."Recount confirms Democrat Dawn Adams' victory over Loupassi in Richmond-area House of Delegates seat". Richmond Times-Dispatch. RetrievedJanuary 2, 2018.
  60. ^Smith, Max (December 21, 2017)."Thomas wins recount in disputed Stafford Co. House race". Stafford: WTOP. RetrievedDecember 25, 2017.
  61. ^Anapol, Avery (December 21, 2017)."Virginia election board to pick winner of tied race by random draw".The Hill. RetrievedDecember 21, 2017.
  62. ^Vozzella, Laura (December 26, 2017)."Name-drawing in tied Va. House race delayed after Democrat announces court challenge".The Washington Post. RetrievedDecember 26, 2017.
  63. ^Beavers, Olivia (December 28, 2017)."Democrat in Virginia: I feel like I won 'fair and square'".The Hill. RetrievedDecember 28, 2017.
  64. ^Clark, Dartunorro (December 29, 2017)."Random-winner drawing in tied Virginia House race back on as politicians trade barbs".NBC News. RetrievedDecember 30, 2017.
  65. ^Amin, Reema (December 29, 2017)."In tied 94th race, Yancey files rebuttal to Simonds reversal motions".Daily Press. Newport News. RetrievedDecember 31, 2017.
  66. ^"Judges reject Democrat's request to undo tie in Newport News House district, setting up Thursday tiebreaker".Richmond Times-Dispatch. RetrievedJanuary 3, 2018.
  67. ^Martz, Michael (November 8, 2017)."With recounts pending, leaders eye balance of power in House of Delegates".The Roanoke Times. RetrievedDecember 28, 2017.
  68. ^Moomaw, Graham (December 9, 2017)."Plum, Toscano face potential speakership showdown".The Daily Progress. Richmond: Richmond Times-Dispatch. RetrievedDecember 30, 2017.
  69. ^Vozzella, Laura; Morrison, Jim (December 27, 2017)."In a House divided, Democrats say Va. GOP is offering perks for speaker votes".The Washington Post. Richmond. RetrievedDecember 28, 2017.
  70. ^Moomaw, Graham (January 10, 2018)."Kirk Cox elected speaker of the House on 98-0 vote".Richmond Times-Dispatch. RetrievedJanuary 15, 2018.
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