The third and final assessment on the race appeared Monday: Count on Democrats to ignore the lessons of a You gain win.” washingtonpost.com/opinions/2021/… The decisive moment in Glenn Youngkin saw the State Superintendent announced no accelerated moth classes prior to Grade 11. 2
Youngkin denounced dumbing down Virginia, and quickly immersed himself in the collateral damage of mask mandate for primary grades, of shut-downs and quarantines. One clear policy for the Commonwealth. What a relief. He can prep that state for competition for business. 3
I also think @GlennYoungkin will be calm, even gentle, in pursuing genuine moderation where it works and will harness his charm. VA could be the best p,ace to work and live if taxes can drop and school’s keep opportunity alive for all kids. 4
Virginia is a great state. We’ve lived here twice, from 1980 to 1989. We cam back in 2016. So much has changed, but the public schools have retreated from excellence. If @GlennYoungkin succeeds in revitalizing merit in school, recruiting great teachers he’ll inspire more than VA.
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From @jmartNYT in @nytimes: “Should Mr. McAuliffe lose or barely win, moderates will demand immediate passage of infrastructure bill. Liberals will argue that the Democratic Party, and democracy itself, are in such a parlous state that they must push through new voting laws.” 1
Martin is usually over the target when reporting on Beltway doings, and what he anticipates among Ds is likely if @GlennYoungkin momentum continues through Tuesday night. But that means Democrats will miss the key signal emerging from the VA races: Public education broken. 2
All across VA —from its deep blue Beltway suburbs to the smallest town in southwest of the state— public education has failed voters for 18 months. McAuliffe doesn’t appear to know that, or even care. It’s been number one issue for @GlennYoungkin since he got into primary. 3
“[I]t is Biden’s 43 percent approval rating in the state that is having more influence on the race…” — @danbalz. The post-mortems on this will focus on the ways that the education bureaucracies have turned parents towards @GlennYoungkin 1 washingtonpost.com/politics/sunda…
In Virginia there have been stories of CRT and —worse— an attempt to cover up rape at one high school. These controversies follow a year lost to Covid and a difficult reopening, as well as the “equity” driven changes at Thomas Jefferson H.S. washingtonpost.com/opinions/2020/… 2
McAuliffe stepped on rake after rake while Glenn Youngkin has kept up a sunny, optimistic vision for the Commonwealth, but the former governor’s biggest mistake was displaying contempt for parents in calling CRT a racist dog-whistle, which brands concerned parents as racists. 3
Good morning from @989TheAnswer in Columbus where I’m broadcasting today. Great weekend in Buckeye land when Ohio State crushed IU, Browns and Bengals won and Steelers didn’t play. Going over last night’s #OHSen debate (quick write-up below). Plus, dispatch.com/story/news/pol…
I’ll cover @GlennYoungkin surging in Virginia with Salena Zito, @JakeSherman and @HotlineJosh. I moderated last night’s debate along w/ @aarbaer of @CCVPolicy. Ohio Republicans have six good candidates to choose from, all of whom did what they set out to do in a first debate. 2
First task in what will be a very expensive and long battle to get the GOP nod in likely #OHSen contest w/ @RepTimRyan in November of 2022 is to establish an identity. They all did that b/c “Hugh’s Rules” for debates allow candidates 75 seconds for replies to short questions. 3
At 29:30 in our intv, Chris Wallace says of @SecBlinken “The greatest weakness [of Team Bidem] is definitely at State. I’m very unimpressed by Anthony Blinken…it’s a matter of presence, of gravitas…Pompeo, Clinton, Powell [had it]…Blinken is a great staff man…” 1
Wallace also reviews @JoeBiden role in Obama years —“There’s wasn’t a lot of respect for Joe Biden inside the inner counsels of the Obama White House”— and of fmr President Trump “I’m living rent free in his brain.” Wallace also opens up on the Prudential Debate Commission. 2
“Commission considers [Candy Crowley] intervention the low moment in their whole history,” and of his 2020 debate: “It was a mess there’s no question about it. Occasionally I wake up in the middle of the night and think ‘What could I have done better on September 29, 2020” and 3
I am seeing many stories about Taliban atrocities. I am not reporting on them or commenting on them on air until they are confirmed by a news outlet widely regarded as credible. It would be a service if one of the “bigs” would silo and keep current these stories. 1
Per advice of former NSA Ambassador @robertcobrien (who had prior to White House service been former President Trump’s Special Envoy on Hostage Affairs), I am also not discussing details of hostage or abandoned Americans or allies, even groups of them. It can be dangerous. 2
So while prudence has to control the reporting on the hostages/abandoned in Afghanistan, updates on minimum number of those held there would be useful to everyone. The same is true for refugees in transit. The U.S. will be welcoming of the refugees (though vetting necessary) 3
@BillHagertyTN and @Liz_Cheney. It isn’t hard for media to do in-depth reporting of the collapse and defeat w/ deeply knowledgeable GOP electeds, members of Trump Administration. If news outlets aren’t carrying their voices, then they aren’t news outlets, but partisan platforms 2
Members of the Administration are welcome on my program as are Congressional Democrats. They never accept invitations. They never ask to appear. They don’t want serious questions from a courteous, respectful but informed journalist from center-right. Or from lefty partisans. 3