Politics & Government
Biden to Virginia Voters: 'Governor's Race is Between the Mainstream and the Extreme'
Vice President Joe Biden joined local state officials at a rally for Democratic gubernatorial candidate Terry McAuliffe on Monday in Annandale.

Virginia democratic gubernatorial candidate Terry McAuliffe made one final push to rally support for his campaign with the help of Vice President Joe Biden and local state officials in Annandale Monday.
Both McAuliffe and Biden addressed a crowd of about 100 people at the home of a campaign volunteer and made remarks that starkly contrasted their Democratic candidates for statewide racesĀ against the conservative views of Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli and the GOP ticket.Ā
āThis choice is between someone who will govern as well as [former Virginia governor andĀ U.S. Sen.] Tim Kaine and someone who wants to govern in what they hope to be a new version of [Texas Sen.] Ted Cruz,ā said Biden.
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Biden'sĀ appearance on the eve of Election Day in Virginia comes just a day after President Barack Obama campaigned for McAuliffe in Arlington.
Sen. Mark Warner and Mark Herring, Democratic candidate for Virginia Attorney General also made appearances at Monday's event, along with local officials Congressman Gerry Connolly, Mason District Supervisor Penny Gross,, Del. Kaye Kory (D-39th), Sen. Dave Marsden (D-37th), Marcus Simon, whoās running for the vacant 53rd District seat in the House of Delegates, Stacey Kincaid, Democratic candidate for Fairfax County Sheriff and Ed Deitsch (D), whoās running in the 42nd District of the House of Representatives against Republican incumbent Dave Albo.Ā
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During their remarks, McAuliffe and Biden described the governor's race as betweenĀ the "mainstream" and the "extreme," aligning Cuccinelli and the GOP ticket with the tea party and its values.
Biden characterized McAuliffe as a āpractical businessmanā and a responsible, hard-working man with middle class roots who will help lead Virginia forward. Cuccinelli, Biden said, is a candidate whose views, particularly onĀ women's issues,Ā are āliterally from another era.ā
āI think the motto of the tea party should be āback to the futureā⦠because everything theyāre talking about is about undoing what the vast majority of Americans think is progress,ā said Biden.
āThese guys are the antithesis of change and progress,ā Biden said of the GOP candidates. āItās hard to fathom this state being led by a man who rejects all that this new thinking stands for."Ā
A new poll released Monday showed McAuliffe ahead of Cuccinelli by 6 points with McAuliffe at 46 percent to Cuccinelliās 40 percent, according to the Washington Post. Libertarian candidate Robert Sarvis was at 8 percent.
McAuliffe's narrow lead ties into the rhetoric of both Biden and McAuliffe's comments on Monday about voter turnout. The outcome of the race matters not only to Virginians, Biden said, but the entire country.Ā
āThis race has captured the attention of the entire nation, not just because itās an off-year race in a bellwether state that has become the face of progress in this country. But because itās the first major race between the forces and faces of the new Republican tea party ā a tea party whose social recidivism is only outgunned only by its hostility to science and technology, innovation and scholarship,ā said Biden.Ā
āThink about whether or not, with the attitude of Cuccinelli and his ticket, if they were to win, what that will say to America and what that will do to attracting the continuation of this great tradition in this state,ā Biden continued. āItās up to all of you in this backyard and in backyards across the whole state. This electionās going to be decided by votes, by people showing up.ā
Although McAuliffe briefly spoke about the importance of āfocusing on the issues that matter to Virginiansāsuch as traffic, great schools and economic opportunity,ā the key message he pushed to canvassersĀ on Monday was to encourage as manyĀ mainstream voters as possibleĀ to show up at the polls on Tuesday.
āThose on the ideological extreme are motivated to voteāthe question in this race is simple: will the mainstream bipartisan majority in Virginia be drowned out by the tea party? If mainstream Virginians from both parties donāt turn out to vote, youāre letting the tea party decide Virginiaās future,ā said McAuliffe. āI need your help now more than ever."
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