Obama rallies Virginia New Jersey before election day

0
6
Obama rallies Virginia New Jersey before election day


Virginia Democratic gubernatorial candidate Abigail Spanberger joins former President Barack Obama, during a campaign event on Nov. 1, 2025, in Norfolk, Virginia.

Steve Helber | AP Photo

Former President Barack Obama is encouraging voters to elect Democrats as governor in Virginia and New Jersey in elections this Tuesday that could signal the national mood 10 months into Donald Trump’s second presidency and a year ahead of midterm elections that could reshape it.

Obama’s Saturday appearances for Abigail Spanberger and Mikie Sherrill contrast with Trump spending the weekend at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida, leaving Republicans Winsome Earle-Sears in Virginia and Jack Ciattarelli in New Jersey to campaign for themselves.

At the same time, California advocates were making a final push ahead of a statewide referendum over whether to redraw the state’s congressional map in Democrats’ favor. The effort backed by Gov. Gavin Newsom is part of a national redistricting battle that began when Trump urged GOP-run states to help him keep a friendly House majority in 2026.

At an afternoon rally in Norfolk, Obama praised Spanberger, a former congresswoman and CIA case officer, as a hard worker who would improve Virginians’ financial circumstances and quality of life. Yet he focused much of his half-hour-plus on stage lambasting Trump for “lawlessness and recklessness” and “shambolic” economic policy, while urging voters to “set a glorious example for the nation” by rebuking Trump and nominees loyal to him.

“The stakes are now clear,” Obama said. “We don’t need to speculate about the dangers to our democracy. We don’t need to ask ourselves how much more coarse and mean our culture can become. Elections matter, and they matter to you.”

Obama was scheduled to appear Saturday evening in Newark with Sherrill.

Earle-Sears, currently Virginia’s lieutenant governor, and Ciattarelli, a former state lawmaker, had busy schedules of their own to counter Democrats’ large rallies. Ciattarelli’s sharpest closing arguments nodded to Sherrill’s ubiquitous inclusion of her experience as a Navy helicopter pilot and her frequent attacks on Trump.

“Her disdain for the president. And she can fly a helicopter. Is any of that going to fix New Jersey?” Ciattarelli said Saturday in suburban Westfield.

Trump isn’t on site, but he’s been in the conversation

Trump endorsed Ciattarelli and has said — without naming Earle-Sears — that he backs her Virginia bid. The president conducted a phone rally for Ciattarelli. He has not campaigned in person for either nominee.

On Friday evening in South Florida, Trump attended a shindig at his resort with the theme “A Little Party Never Killed Nobody.” On Saturday, he headed to Trump International Palm Beach in West Palm Beach, Fla., and is scheduled to attend a dinner for MAGA, Inc., a super PAC founded by allies. The president is due to return to Washington on Sunday.

That reflects Republicans’ tightrope: Trump remains intensely popular among the most conservative voters but has a more precarious standing with the rest of the electorate.

Earle-Sears was leading GOP turnout rallies Saturday in Republican-rich small towns, first in Abingdon in the southwest corner of Virginia, then in Purcellville, in the state’s northernmost reaches near the Pennsylvania border.

Ciattarelli was on a bus tour promising to “Fix New Jersey.” In Westfield, Ciattarelli shook voters’ hands and took selfies for about an hour and talked about proposals to lower energy costs and property taxes, among other ideas. His campaign has also concentrated on his family’s deep roots in the state and argued it’s time for a “Jersey guy” to lead the state. Sherrill was born in Virginia. Some of the supporters wore red baseball caps that said “Make New Jersey Great Again,” a nod to Trump’s national “MAGA” slogan.

Sherrill and Spanberger were both among the center-left Democrats who helped their party win a House majority in 2018 during Trump’s first presidency. Sherrill has been more pointed in her critiques of Trump this fall, while Spanberger has carefully crafted economic arguments to criticize Trump’s policies. She has been more circumspect about his moves to upend democratic norms.

“Virginia voters can and will send a message amid the recklessness and the heartlessness coming out of Washington,” she said ahead of Obama’s address. She criticized “the political turmoil coming out of Washington right now” and introduced Obama by recalling “a time not that long ago … when we had a president … who worked to bring us together instead of tearing us apart.”

Still, according to AdImpact data, Spanberger’s biggest advertising investments has gone to spots that try to tie Earle-Sears to Trump.

Economy, shutdown overshadow governor’s races

Democrats need strong Black turnout

California will have an immediate midterm impact


Elections,Politics,Breaking News: Politics,Barack Obama,Barack Obama,Donald Trump,Donald J. Trump,business news
#Obama #rallies #Virginia #Jersey #election #day

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here