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"How I Won" : Tim Kaine Explains How He Became Governor of Virginia
RealClearPolitics.com ^ | 02/10/2006 | Tim Kaine

Posted on 02/10/2006 9:55:51 AM PST by SirLinksalot

February 10, 2006

How I Won

By Tim Kaine

I am honored to be serving as the 70th governor of the Commonwealth of Virginia. How I got to the governor's mansion is a story that may be of interest to other Democrats, especially given the daunting challenges my campaign faced.

For starters, I ran in a state that President Bush had won by 8 percentage points in 2004. In addition, I began with a 21-point name identification deficit and lagged behind in every poll -- sometimes by double digits -- until September 2005, only two months before the election. Finally, I was targeted by an unprecedented series of negative attack ads and was financially out-raised and outspent through most of the contest.

Yet I won the popular vote by a margin of 6 points and more than 113,000 voters. I attribute my victory to three factors: the exceptional popularity of Gov. Mark Warner, my predecessor and partner over the past four years; my campaign's understanding of Virginia's changing demographics; and my ability to speak directly to voters and offer them a positive vision for our future.

As a candidate in 2001, Warner had offered voters a compelling story. He was a successful businessman who wanted to use his boardroom expertise to fix a government so badly mismanaged that the Republican governor and the Republican state legislature couldn't even reach agreement on a state budget. After four years at the helm, Warner was given great credit for enacting record spending cuts, thus preserving Virginia's sterling credit rating. He also enacted historic bipartisan budget reform and earned the ranking of Best-Managed State from Governing magazine. Warner's approval rating grew to a record 80 percent.

Voters in 2005 understood that Virginia was much better off than it had been four years earlier. At the same time, voters were anxious about the direction the country was going under Republican management. The voters also knew that I, as lieutenant governor, had worked closely with Governor Warner, while my opponent, Jerry Kilgore, the state attorney general, had fought against him on practically everything.

Just as Warner had done in 2001, I had to accomplish three things to win in a red state. First, I had to find and energize Democratic voters. Second, I had to share my story with the voters. Third, I had to reach out to independent and Republican voters in a strategic way. And that's exactly what we did.

The generally positive feelings Democrats had heading into the election made them easier to energize. This was a significant contrast to Republican voters, whose enthusiasm was dampened by dissatisfaction with the Bush administration, various Washington scandals, and criticism over the response to Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. In Virginia, Kilgore was failing to excite his Republican base. That lack of enthusiasm was highlighted last summer, when, in the GOP primary, nearly 20 percent of Republican voters supported Kilgore's little-known and underfinanced challenger.

To find and turn out Democrats, we identified and targeted a group we labeled as "federal Democrats" -- people who vote in presidential election years but typically stay home during statewide elections. A quick examination of the last few election cycles illustrates just how significant that block of voters is.

In 2001, Mark Warner won the governor's race by a margin of 4.5 percentage points. Three years later, John Kerry lost Virginia by 8 points. But Kerry received almost half a million more votes than Warner. We spared little, in terms of time and attention, to reach these voters, knowing they would vote for us if we got them to show up at the polls.

I also thought it was important to tell my personal story and share my values and motivation with voters. After all, a candidate who fails to clearly define himself will be defined by his opponent's attacks.

I wanted to explain to people how my faith and my heart for public service, formed while serving as a missionary in Central America, inspire me to seek public office. As a law student at Harvard 25 years ago, I found myself with a lot of options but little direction. I decided to take off a year and work with Catholic missionaries in Honduras. I was the principal of a small vocational school, teaching carpentry, religion, and academics to children who had no other educational options. Second only to becoming a father, that experience was the most formative of my life. It has influenced everything I have done since -- from my career as a civil rights attorney to my service in local and state offices.

Just as it is in my life, my religious faith was a vital part of that story. I spoke about it often. But it wasn't clear until late in the race how much of an impact my faith would play in the contest, when Kilgore ran aggressive death penalty attack ads. Using the family members of crime victims, Kilgore insisted that my personal faith-based opposition to capital punishment would prevent me from carrying out executions. The ads were shocking and emotional. They led some pundits to immediately claim they would sink my campaign.

We quickly pointed out several untruths in the ads. A backlash began to form in both the press and the public to the nasty tone of Kilgore's campaign. I was also able to respond through my own ads, telling voters that I took the oath of office as seriously as my wedding vows.

We understood from the beginning of the campaign that our path to victory would be different from that of Governor Warner's 2001 campaign. Our strategy had to reflect that reality.

Warner had run against a suburban Republican from the Hampton Roads/Norfolk area, thus making the rural parts of the state the battleground. Warner focused a lot of his campaign on rural areas, especially in southwestern Virginia. He promised that a combination of new technology, better educational opportunities, and more attention from the state government would create a brighter economic future. That focus paid off when he performed remarkably well in the rural areas.

My opponent, by contrast, was a southwest Virginia native, with strong family and professional ties throughout the region. We knew that he would run well there. So we focused our strategy on winning extra support from the suburbs, where two-thirds of Virginia's population lives.

I had already decided on a policy platform that held a natural appeal for suburban voters. It included tax relief for homeowners, a statewide pre-K initiative, a balanced approach to growth, and new transportation solutions.

Our campaign strategy focused on eight "battleground" localities. These were suburban counties in Northern Virginia, Richmond, Hampton Roads, and Central Virginia that routinely go Republican. Our goal was not to win these suburbs, but to cut in half the GOP's usual margin of victory.

But we dramatically exceeded our expectations in the "battleground" localities. Rather than just cutting our margin of defeat, we actually won six of the eight counties we targeted. We also out-performed our goals in the other two. And therein lies the secret of our statewide victory.

Even as we methodically laid out our strategy, told my personal story, and offered an optimistic message of building on our success on key issues, Kilgore only relied more heavily on negative television and radio attack ads.

When Kilgore's death penalty attack ads failed to generate any movement in the polls, he tried to label me as a tax-raiser, a liberal, and a flip-flopper. When those failed to gain any traction, he tried to focus the race on the issue of illegal immigration, which was a growing concern in Northern Virginia. His attacks attracted national media attention, because illegal immigration is a hot topic in other parts of the country.

I responded by saying that I was opposed to illegal immigration, but that it was wrong to ask our local police officers to do the job of the federal government. I also reminded people that if Kilgore really wanted to do something about immigration, all he had to do was pick up a phone and call Bush and his Republican friends in Washington. He could tell them to do their jobs by enforcing the immigration laws.

When you consider the margins by which I won the regions he targeted with that attack ad, an argument can be made that it ultimately backfired.

While motivating our Democratic base, we strategically and successfully reached out to independent and Republican voters. We fought hard and avoided being the other side's punching bag. At the same time, we held the high ground by offering a positive message for the future. And most important, our agenda focused on the real-life issues -- homeowner's tax relief, pre-K, transportation -- that mattered to the suburban voters we targeted.

Winning support in fast-growing suburbs was the key to winning this election. In 2004, Bush won 97 of the nation's 100 fastest-growing counties. To counter that trend, I aimed to connect with those voters by running a campaign focused on "quality of life" issues. Overcrowded schools, highway congestion, sprawl, housing prices, and property taxes are problems that didn't go away when the 1990s ended. They are big concerns in the places where I campaigned and won.

When I told suburban voters that I wanted to help them "grow right and get there faster," it resonated with suburban voters, regardless of what political affiliation they held. This addressed their top two concerns: How to preserve the lifestyle they sought by moving to the suburbs, and how to contend with the biggest drags on their quality of life there -- transportation and traffic.

That's why, as governor-elect, my first act was to hold town hall meetings in key locations, around the state, to discuss transportation solutions.

I now have the opportunity to put my platform into place. It won't be easy. Republicans control both chambers of the Virginia Legislature. But I welcome the challenge.

Tim Kaine is governor of Virginia.


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Virginia
KEYWORDS: jerrykilgore; kaine; vageneralassembly; virginia; virigina
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1 posted on 02/10/2006 9:55:54 AM PST by SirLinksalot
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To: SirLinksalot

But what does his eyebrow think about it?


2 posted on 02/10/2006 9:56:27 AM PST by dfwgator
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To: SirLinksalot

"I lied".


3 posted on 02/10/2006 10:05:46 AM PST by KC_Conspirator
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To: SirLinksalot

He didn't mention the large number of illegal aliens in Northern Virginia who, thanks to the motor-voter law and lax verification, voted illegally but numerously under the direction of LULAC and La Raza.


4 posted on 02/10/2006 10:10:06 AM PST by oldbill
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He won because the Republican loser ran a terrible campaign. It was the Republican's race to lose, and he lost it.


5 posted on 02/10/2006 10:14:24 AM PST by vollmond (Careful with that axe, Eugene!)
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To: SirLinksalot

I can summarize why he won in one sentence: The Republican candidate ran an incredibly bad campaign.


6 posted on 02/10/2006 10:14:38 AM PST by RKBA Democrat (Lord Jesus Christ, son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner.)
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To: SirLinksalot
1) He followed a popular governor of his own party.
2) He ran against an incompetent fool.
3) He shut up and let the VA GOP successfully fratricide it's lead candidate. (Thank you Russ Potts)
4) He stayed out of the down ticket races where his party ran the feminist and the feeb.
7 posted on 02/10/2006 10:19:43 AM PST by .cnI redruM (a right is something that exists simultaneously among people and imposes no obligation on another.)
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To: SirLinksalot

Politics abso-!@*&'ing-lutly suck!!!!!!!


8 posted on 02/10/2006 10:26:35 AM PST by petro45acp (SUPPORT/BE YOUR LOCAL SHEEPDOG! ("On Sheep, Wolves, and Sheepdogs" by Dave Grossman))
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To: SirLinksalot

He ran a better campaign plain and simple.


9 posted on 02/10/2006 10:29:23 AM PST by OpusatFR
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To: SirLinksalot

U won because the other guy was an idiot...case closed


10 posted on 02/10/2006 11:03:24 AM PST by skaterboy (My candy cane is so yummy and delicious)
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To: SirLinksalot; Mudboy Slim; Corin Stormhands; jla; Flora McDonald; AdSimp; society-by-contract; ...

Richmond ping.

Tim Kaine will break his arm patting himself on the back.


11 posted on 02/10/2006 11:22:56 AM PST by iceskater ("Words are, of course, the most powerful drug used by mankind." - Kipling)
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To: SirLinksalot

It was the power of "the people's eyebrow".


12 posted on 02/10/2006 11:24:15 AM PST by newnhdad (All your government branches are belong to us!!)
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To: vollmond; RKBA Democrat
He won because the Republican loser ran a terrible campaign. It was the Republican's race to lose, and he lost it.

AMEN to that. The last two Republican candidates have been abyssmal. I hope Bolling is better in '09, but I'm not getting my hopes up.

13 posted on 02/10/2006 12:25:04 PM PST by P8riot (When they come for your guns, give them the bullets first.)
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To: SirLinksalot

It was his stirring speaking style.


14 posted on 02/10/2006 12:27:24 PM PST by CaptRon (Pedecaris alive or Raisuli dead)
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To: oldbill

"He didn't mention the large number of illegal aliens in Northern Virginia who, thanks to the motor-voter law and lax verification, voted illegally but numerously under the direction of LULAC and La Raza."

Evidence?


15 posted on 02/10/2006 12:30:11 PM PST by Gone GF
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To: iceskater
I attribute my victory to three factors: the exceptional popularity of Gov. Mark Warner, my predecessor and partner over the past four years; my campaign's understanding of Virginia's changing demographics; and my ability to speak directly to voters and offer them a positive vision for our future.

What a crock.

His opponent's horrific attack ads helped a lot, and Virginia often votes for a Governor from the party opposite of that which controls the legislature.

16 posted on 02/10/2006 12:33:17 PM PST by R. Scott (Humanity i love you because when you're hard up you pawn your Intelligence to buy a drink.)
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To: SirLinksalot
VA's RINOs hiked taxes and became big spenders. Tim Kaine took advantage of the GOP's loss of identity. Its hard to be credible when you've done the things you say you're against. If it could happen in the Dominion State, it can happen anywhere. And Kaine ran a campaign where he had ideas. That beats no ideas any time. If the national Democrats would only pay attention this might be their year. The Republicans shouldn't be complacent in thinking that if they become better Democrats, they'll be saved from a fall. Just ask Kaine.

(Denny Crane: "I Don't Want To Socialize With A Pinko Liberal Democrat Commie. Say What You Like About Republicans. We Stick To Our Convictions. Even When We Know We're Dead Wrong.")

17 posted on 02/10/2006 12:33:26 PM PST by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: SirLinksalot

I don't have to read Kaine's comments. He won because of the ineptitude of the VA Republican gubernatorial candidate.


18 posted on 02/10/2006 2:13:23 PM PST by Theodore R. (Cowardice is forever!)
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To: Gone GF

Stop by any DMV office and see how many document checks are made to applicants, even those who have to have an interpreter. Fake SS cards are available wholesale anywhere in the area. Ask the 9-11 guys who got documents in Northern Virginia.
Then come out election day and ask for proof (an actual requirement). Oh - you can't. The politically correct election judges will have you hustled out.


19 posted on 02/10/2006 2:48:55 PM PST by oldbill
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To: Gone GF
Kilgore didn't even advertise on Univision or Telemundo. Kaine did, and speaking in spanish himself. I mentioned before the election that Kilgore was making a dreadful mistake with that one failure alone. Like it or not, latinos are here, legal or not, and they are voting like crazy. You cannot ignore them and win an election. Kaine played up to them, spoke to them in their own language, and won. The evidence is there for anyone to see.

I am hooked on spanish language telenovelas, and I watch those channels all the time. Sometimes, there would be three Kaine ads per night!

20 posted on 02/10/2006 3:48:15 PM PST by vharlow (http://www.vventures.net)
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