US NewsIn Virginia, the Future Is Female (and on the Ballot)What's going on: Virginia’s governor’s race was always going to be historic. With Democrat Abigail Spanberger and Republican Winsome Earle-Sears both running unopposed, the state’s next leader will be a woman. Spanberger, a centrist congresswoman and former CIA officer, has the full backing of a united Democratic party. She’s campaigning on cheaper living costs, stronger reproductive rights, and protection for the state’s 340,000 federal workers. On the GOP side, Lt. Gov. Earle-Sears is running to extend Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s legacy, emphasizing private sector growth and parental rights. But some in her party say she’s struggling to gain traction, and Youngkin (who has embraced Trump) has yet to invest major resources in her campaign. What it means: Virginia has long been a political weather vane — and this fall, it points straight at the Oval Office. Traditionally, the party out of the White House wins Virginia’s governor’s race, but this year’s dynamics may break the mold. In the purple-ish state, the contest is shaping up to be a referendum on Trump’s cuts to the federal workforce. Meanwhile, both candidates are downplaying gender, but the moment feels historic in a country with only 51 women governors to date and where figures like Hillary Clinton and Kamala Harris stopped just shy of the top job. Whoever wins in November won’t just make history. They’ll take office in a state that still has rules for how and when to call its top official “His Excellency.” Might be time for a rewrite. Related: NYC Mayoral Candidate Arrested After Court Clash With ICE (AP) |