Firstly, I absolutely think that Virginia Governor Northam should step down. Despite his so called record being favorable to Black Virginians. What ever that means. Soon after the Northam discovery, a women has accused Virginia Lt. Governor Justin Fairfax of sexual assault. Now we hear that Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring wore Blackface during his college days.
What do these three Virginia elected officials have in common? They are all Democrats.
The fourth in succession to the Governorship is Republican House of Delegates Speaker Kirk Cox.
source: The Brad Blog
Cox won his election, thanks only to a questionably "tied" Delegate election in 2017 that left the GOP in control of the House, after a Republican election judge changed his mind in order to create the tie, and a subsequent lot was drawn from a ceramic bowl to break it.
Far more notably, and far less reported, is that a decade of unconstitutionally gerrymandered House of Delegates districts drawn by the GOP to dilute the voting power of African-Americans gave Republicans as many as 8 more delegates in the House than they likely would have won with fair districts. One of those districts was "won" by Speaker Cox himself, according to a new district map ordered for use in this year's 2019 House elections by a panel of federal judges just weeks ago. Without the racial gerrymander, he likely wouldn't be in the House at all, much less in a position to become the next Governor, replacing a guy who admitted only that he put shoe polish on his face to dress as Michael Jackson in a dance contest 25 years ago.
Virginia has off year elections this year and all 100 house memebers are up for re-elecion.
It is obvious that republicans expect another Bluewave this election cycle and even more so with the new voting districts being draw that will not be favorable to the GOP. You can bet they do not want the entire Virginia state house dominated by Democrates, at least until the next Governor's leaves, since in Virgina, the Governor is term limited to a single term.
Are these political accusations a coincidence or a result of republican opposition research?
What do these three Virginia elected officials have in common? They are all Democrats.
The fourth in succession to the Governorship is Republican House of Delegates Speaker Kirk Cox.
source: The Brad Blog
Cox won his election, thanks only to a questionably "tied" Delegate election in 2017 that left the GOP in control of the House, after a Republican election judge changed his mind in order to create the tie, and a subsequent lot was drawn from a ceramic bowl to break it.
Far more notably, and far less reported, is that a decade of unconstitutionally gerrymandered House of Delegates districts drawn by the GOP to dilute the voting power of African-Americans gave Republicans as many as 8 more delegates in the House than they likely would have won with fair districts. One of those districts was "won" by Speaker Cox himself, according to a new district map ordered for use in this year's 2019 House elections by a panel of federal judges just weeks ago. Without the racial gerrymander, he likely wouldn't be in the House at all, much less in a position to become the next Governor, replacing a guy who admitted only that he put shoe polish on his face to dress as Michael Jackson in a dance contest 25 years ago.
Virginia has off year elections this year and all 100 house memebers are up for re-elecion.
It is obvious that republicans expect another Bluewave this election cycle and even more so with the new voting districts being draw that will not be favorable to the GOP. You can bet they do not want the entire Virginia state house dominated by Democrates, at least until the next Governor's leaves, since in Virgina, the Governor is term limited to a single term.
Are these political accusations a coincidence or a result of republican opposition research?




