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12/07/2021

I just recently discovered the origins of the caduceus. Turns out that Hermès the patron of merchants, traders, thrives, liars and gamblers carries the caduceus. Nothing to do with “medicine”. The father of allopathic medicine Rockefeller, a free mason chose these symbols to represent his medicine....,pharmakeia...which we get pharmacy, pharmacist and pharmaceuticals from. Pharmakeia is defined as 1. the use of medicine, drugs and spells. 2 poisoning. 3 sorcery. I pointed out on fakebook that it was very interesting that the father of allopathic medicine chose this symbol along with the bowl of Hygeia and the rod of Asclepius. So many serpents. These symbols terrified me as a child. Now I know why they should terrify everyone. These symbols have only represented our current “medical” model for a little over a hundred years. In that time we’ve become the sickest developed country in the world. 80% of Europe was homeopathic before forced allopathy via the jab. Hermès the father of hermaphroditus. Hermaphroditus was merged with his wife and this the creation of two sexes in one. Its whereword hermaphrodite is derived. . All Freemasons worship the Baphomet.....an androgynous beast that holds the caduceus in its lap to represent the male phallus. These symbols have nothing to do with medicine but the occult and it's symbology. Doesn’t matter if you believe it. They do.
They want a sexless society the current movements towards no longer identifying as male, female,mother , father, only back it up. It’s very interesting the sudden surge in men’s clinics. The petrol based medicine that Rockefeller replaced with poison was first known to cause cancer so he rested the American cancer society to cover it up and no one thinks they've been doing the same with our endocrine systems and our hormones. All medical facilities under the allopathic model are represented by the caduceus.....the occult
There are no coincidences. Just a bunch of rich psychopaths that have ruled the world and destroyed it who knows how many times over. Boredom and a life of vapid, shallow, narcissism and the need to control everyone and everything is what you get when your mind is as decayed as your soul. Unfortunately they don’t have one of those either. Fakebook told me that they would post my my discovery on null. What would be so bad about sharing this 🤔

11/03/2021


PUBLISHED: 19:03 EDT, 2 November 2021 | UPDATED: 08:34 EDT, 3 November 2021
Welcome home, Joe! Stoney-faced Biden REFUSES to comment on Republican Glenn Youngkin's stunning victory over McAuliffe in Virginia's governor race - ending GOP's 12-year losing streak in statewide races and leaving Democrats in serious trouble.

* Glenn Youngkin pulled off a stunning upset to beat Democrat Terry McAuliffe, with a 2.1 lead for the Republican with 99 percent of the vote counted. Youngkin, 54, is the state's first red Governor since 2009
* Another stunner is pending in NJ where GOP candidate Jack Ciattarelli has narrow lead over Gov. Phil Murphy
* Votes are widely viewed as a referendum on Joe Biden's presidency, and defeat will jangle Democrat nerves
* Biden won by 10 points in Virginia and by 16 points in New Jersey in the presidential election just a year ago
* Biden looked shattered as he arrived at Andrews Air Force Base after the COP climate summit in Scotland

A shattered Joe Biden arrived back at the White House in the early hours of Wednesday morning following his COP26 climate change trip to Europe to find a party in disarray after a thundering win for the Republicans in Virginia and dismal performances for top Democrats across the country.

Glenn Youngkin pulled off a stunning upset to beat Democrat Terry McAuliffe, with a 2.1 lead for the Republican with 99 percent of the vote counted. Youngkin, 54, is the state's first red Governor since 2009.

Another shocker could be on the cards in New Jersey where GOP candidate Jack Ciattarelli has taken a narrow lead over Democrat Governor Phil Murphy with 88 percent of votes counted. Both candidates held off declaring victory overnight as they wait for 'every vote' to be tallied.

WATCH:

The ballots are widely viewed as a referendum on Biden's presidency, and Democrats are already in a panic and have started pointing figures with just 12 months until the 2020 midterms,

Biden won by 10 points in Virginia and by 16 points in New Jersey in the presidential election just a year ago.

The President looked tired and worn down as he arrived at Andrews Air Force Base, in a dark grey overcoat, before he was seen walking up the White House lawn.

It was a different atmosphere over in the Youngkin camp where raucous celebrations took place as the former investment banker was joined on stage by his wife Suzanne and their children.

'Alrighty Virginia we won this thing,' Youngkin shouted to the crowd.

'Our kids can't wait,' Youngkin said. 'On day one we're going to work ... We work in real people time, not government time.'

Congratulations poured in from the GOP top brass including Nikki Haley who tweeted: 'Congratulations to @GlennYoungkin! He is a rockstar and I have full confidence that he will make Virginia proud!'

Former Vice President Mike Pence said: 'Congratulations to Governor @GlennYoungkin on a HUGE victory! Glenn will serve the people of Old Dominion well with common sense Conservative policies that will benefit parents, families, and hard-working Virginians! The Conservative Comeback is HERE!'

Despite the national significance of his race Youngkin kept it local in his victory speech, avoiding mention of former President Trump or veering away from attacks on Democrats.

'The spirit of Virginia is coming together like never before, of Virginia taking our commonwealth back,' he told the adoring fans.

President Joe Biden walks on the South Lawn as he arrives at the White House early Wednesda

President Joe Biden arrives at Andrews Air Force Base, Md., early Wednesday, right, and walked up the South Lawn after the devastating Democratic defeat in Virginia

Glenn Youngkin kisses his wife Suzanne as he celebrates victory on stage with his children in Chantilly, Virginia

It was a different atmosphere over in the Youngkin campaign camp where celebrations look set to continue through the night after his shock win

Youngkin shoots an autographed basketball into the crowd with his family at an election-night rally

A glum-looking Biden arrived back at the White House in the early hours of Wednesday morning following his COP26 climate change trip to Europe to find a party in disarray and a thundering win for the Republicans

President Joe Biden salutes a Marine Corps honor guard as he arrives at the White House early Wednesday

Watch video: President Biden appears to fall asleep during COP26 summit in UK

Youngkin and his wife embrace on stage after the stunning victory - becoming the first Republican Governor of Virginia since 2009

Virginia Gov.-elect Glenn Youngkin greets supporters at an election night party in Chantilly early on Wednesday

Republican Glenn Youngkin pulled off a stunning upset in Virginia to beat out Democrat Terry McAuliffe, the Associated Press projected around 1am on Wednesday morning. 'Alrighty Virginia we won this thing,' Youngkin shouted in his victory speech

Youngkin (2-L) thanks his family after giving his victory speech at the Westfields Marriott Hotel in Chantilly, Virginia, USA, 03 November POOL

Virginia has now elected its first Republican governor since 2009. 'Alrighty Virginia we won this thing,' Youngkin shouted in his victory speech

He opened his victory address much as he did his campaign remarks, by focusing on education. 'Our kids can't wait,' Youngkin said. 'On day one we're going to work. We're going to restore excellence in our schools. We will invest largest education budget in history of commonwealth.'

Virginia parents are hailing Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin's victory over Democrat Terry McAuliffe Tuesday night, saying his election was a win for education and parental rights.

Education became a key issue in the gubernatorial race in Virginia as Youngkin and McAuliffe clashed over hot button issues such as critical race theory and the recent sexual assault of a female student in the bathrooms by a boy wearing a skirt.

But it appears that voters chose to elect a public servant instead of a political servant,' Virginia mother Elizabeth Perrin told Fox News.

She supports Youngkins' pledge to ban CRT and support parental say in education.

'What we have seen is the importance of family values and parental rights in our education system.'

'Youngkin wants the best for our children, and I think he's going to thank Loudoun for all the work they did to make that the issue,' Patti Menders, a mother and president of the Loudoun County Republican Women's Club echoed.

Education has been a key issue throughout Virginia's race for governor, especially in battleground Loudoun County, which has been the state's epicenter of anger regarding school curriculum and policies.

Youngkin, while on the campaign trail, promised Virginia parents: 'We're going to take the power of our children's education.'

As the results rolled in and he was declared victor, Virginians celebrated what they believed to be 'a win for parents all over the Commonwealth.'

'Parental rights in education were on the ballot this election,' Laura Zorc, director of education reform at Building Education for Students Together, argued.

'Parents (Republican, Independent, and Democrat) across the country have been saying, 'We don't want your politics in our schools.' Tonight, parents delivered on their promises to vote these elites out of office.'

The parents allege that Youngkin's election means their voices were heard and 'that our children matter.'

'It has been great to see how the importance of our children's education and the parents matter movement has brought so many people together,' said Brandon Michon, a father of three who was spoken out at numerous Loudoun County School Board meetings.

'This is Virginia's opportunity to raise the bar, and we will be doing it with Glenn Youngkin as governor.'

Youngkin then turned to his plans for tax cuts, and supporting law enforcement and reestablishing 'trust' between police officers and communities.

'We will reduce our cost of living ... We're going to eliminate the grocery tax, suspend the most recent hike in the gas tax ... We are going to save Virginia families $1500 year one. We are going to keep our communities safe.'

Youngkin said his campaign had attracted people of 'all races, all political ideologies and it turned into a movement.'

Virginia also elected its first black woman to statewide office in the state's history, Winsome Sears, to the office of lieutenant governor as a Republican.

'Its a historic night yes,' Sears said of her win. 'But I didn’t run to make history, I just wanted to leave it better than I found it.'

McAuliffe has not yet admitted defeat in the race.

Hours earlier, McAuliffe had refused to concede the race when he took the stage at 10:20pm, saying: 'We're going to continue to count the votes because every single Virginian deserves to have their vote counted.'

Republican National Committee chairwoman Ronna McDaniel put out a statement declaring Youngkin victorious and congratulating him on the win.

'The red wave is here! Congratulations to Republicans Glenn Youngkin, Winsome Sears, and Jason Miyares on their incredible campaigns and hard fought victories.'

'A Republican wave is coming in 2022, and Virginia is just the start,' she said.

Jason Miyares, a Republican, is projected to win his race for attorney general, in a GOP sweep in the Old Dominion, where Republicans also flipped the House of Delegates in their favor.

Republicans have not won a statewide race in Virginia in 12 years, and President Joe Biden carried the state by 10 percentage points.

Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey, chair of the Republican Governors' Association, also congratulated Youngkin. 'The RGA is thrilled to congratulate Governor-elect Glenn Youngkin on winning a hard-fought race that many wrote off as unwinnable for Republicans.'

If the margin of the final count is within 1%, a candidate can request a recount. If the margin is 0.5% or less, the state will pay for it.

Former President Trump released a statement declaring Youngkin the winner as votes rolled in:

't is looking like Terry McAuliffe's campaign against a certain person named “Trump” has very much helped Glenn Youngkin. All McAuliffe did was talk Trump, Trump, Trump and he lost! What does that tell you, Fake News? I guess people running for office as Democrats won’t be doing that too much longer. I didn’t even have to go rally for Youngkin, because McAuliffe did it for me.

Thank you to the MAGA voters for turning out big!'

A Republican win is sure to cause a panic among the Democrats and could sway voters across the country in what is a bellwether election for an administration mired by mounting problems, including inflation and supply chain issues.

Even Kamala Harris noted the consequences the Virginia race could spell for Democrats. Four days ago, while campaigning in Virginia for McAuliffe, she said: 'What happens in Virginia will in large part determine what happens in 2022, 2024, and on.'

Youngkin kisses his wife Suzanne as they finish speaking onstage stage at an election-night rally at the Westfields Marriott Washington Dulles


McAuliffe has not yet admitted defeat in the race. Hours earlier, McAuliffe had refused to concede the race when he took the stage at 10:20pm, saying: 'We're going to continue to count the votes because every single Virginian deserves to have their vote counted'

Youngkin supporters cheer in delight as he is declared Governor-elect of Virginia

Supporters of Republican nominee for Governor of Virginia Glenn Youngkin react as Fox News declares Youngkin has won his race against Democratic Governor Terry McAuliffe

Virginia Gov.-elect Glenn Youngkin greets supporters at an election night party in Chantilly, Va., early Wednesday

McAuliffe departs after speaking during his election night event at the Hilton McLean Tysons Corner on November 02

Gun-toting former Marine Winsome Sears defeats Democrat Hala Ayala is to become Virginia's first female black lieutenant governor
Gun-toting former Marine Winsome Sears has defeated Democrat Hala Ayala to become Virginia's first female black lieutenant governor.

Unofficial results showed Sears, 57, with 1,591,434 votes, or 51.4 percent, with Democratic candidate Hala Ayala, 48, at 1,501,533 or 48.5 percent, CNN reported.

The job of the state's lieutenant governor is frequently tipped as a launching pad to the governor's mansion. Half of the past 10 lieutenant governors went on to become governor.

Sears is a former Marine who immigrated to the United States from Jamaica as a child and vaulted to victory in a crowded primary on the enthusiasm generated by a campaign photo of her posing with a military rifle.

Sears, a gun-loving former Marine, will not only make history as the first woman to hold office, but also as the first woman of color

She had a brief stint in electoral politics 20 years ago as a one-term delegate in the General Assembly, representing parts of Hampton roads. Her return to politics after a two-decade absence began when she served as national chairperson for Black Americans to Re-Elect President Trump.

During the primary, Sears ridiculed mask mandates put in place by Democratic Gov. Ralph Northam, posting a video in which she pulled a mask off a cardboard cutout of Northam and stomped it into the sand, with the Virginia Beach boardwalk in the background.

Until now, Sears may have be the most unconventional candidate on the statewide ballot this year. She speaks in a stream-of-consciousness style and loves to tell the story of her first campaign for office, when someone superimposed her face onto a pornographic photo.

'I looked good!' she jokes to the audience.

But the story is emblematic, she says, of the obstacles she faced as a Black Republican who was taking on an establishment that expects Blacks to vote Democratic.

'The other side wants to use the problems of the past to define us and we shouldn't let them,' she told a crowd in rural Chesterfield County earlier this month. 'It is time for them to find another victim. ... Yes, we know that there are problems, but we can fix them.'

When she served in the legislature, she earned top ratings from anti-abortion and gun-rights organizations. She touted that record in her successful primary campaign, but has revised her website during the general election to remove those references.

McAuliffe, 64, previously served as Virginia's governor from 2014 to 2018. Due to the commonwealth's unusual election laws, governors can only serve one consecutive term. He would become the first governor of Virginia in nearly half a century to be elected to two non-consecutive terms.

During his term as governor, he issued a record 120 vetoes, mostly concerning social issues like abortion and LGBTQ rights, and touted his record fighting against the GOP legislature on the campaign trail.

McAuliffe nationalized the race by invoking former President Trump's name perhaps more than any other figure running for office.

Youngkin, 54, is a political newcomer and wealthy businessman who previously served as CEO of the Carlyle Group, a private equity firm. Though he won Trump's endorsement, Youngkin has distanced himself from the former president, who faired poorly in Virginia in 2020.

Trump held an 11th-hour tele-rally for the Virginia race, but Youngkin said he did not participate.

Youngkin's personal wealth launched him into the spotlight, as he provided $5.5 million to his own campaign. The Republican has sought to mobilize voters by tying the race to school choice and education issues, holding Parents Matter rallies where he hit out against teachings like critical race theory.

And in what could spell trouble for McAuliffe, over 80% of voters in an NBC exit poll said parents should have a say in what their children are taught in schools. Fifty-three percent said parents should have 'a lot' of say, 31% said 'some.'

McAuliffe said during a debate in late September, 'I don't think parents should be telling schools what they should teach.'

Voters began lining up at polling places across Virginia on a rainy Tuesday morning to cast their ballot for governor in a heated contest coming down to a nine tenths-of-a-point.

In one county, turnout was so high that elections officials had to print off ballots and dole them out as voters waited at the polls.

Albemarle election officials said a majority of the county's 30 precincts needed excess emergency ballots from the voter registration office, which began printing them off at lightning speed.

'We just got a turnout far in excess of what we expected,' registrar Jake Washburne said, according to the Daily Progress. He said the printer-paper ballots would have to be counted by hand.

Biden had signaled on Tuesday that he believed McAuliffe would be the next governor of Virginia in his nail-biting election with Republican Glenn Youngkin and insisted mounting problems and his poor performance in the polls will have nothing to do with the result.

'We're gonna win,' Biden said in a hushed tone while grinning and leaning into the microphone on stage at the United Nations Climate Change conference in Glasgow, Scotland, while polls showed the race at a dead heat before state voting booths closed at 7pm.

'I think we're gonna win in Virginia,' he continued. 'The race, it's very close. It's about who shows up, who turns out.'

The president was responding to a question on if he feels McAuliffe losing in the state Biden won by 10 points in 2020 would be a rebuke on his presidency and spell disaster for Democrats going into the 2022 midterms.

'Granted I did win by a large margin [in Virginia], but the point of the matter is I think that this is going to be – what we all knew from the beginning – it's going to be a tight race. And it is tight.'

Biden then insisted that his successes or failures as president cannot be attributed to the outcome of local and congressional elections, even though they are being seen as an indicator of how his administration is performing.

Although there is a gubernatorial race in New Jersey, two congressional races in Ohio and several mayoral contests, the nation has turned its attention to Virginia as a loss for Democrat Terry McAuliffe would be catastrophic for the Party as Joe Biden's approval dwindles ahead of the 2022 midterms.

Republican Glenn Youngkin responds to a question from media on Election Day at Rocky Run Middle School in Fairfax, Virginia on November 2

Democratic gubernatorial candidate Terry McAuliffe speaks to supporters during a Canvass Kickoff event on November 2 in Falls Church, Virginia

Republican Glenn Youngkin (left) and Democrat Terry McAuliffe (right) continued to campaign on Tuesday after a full day of cross-state rallies on Monday. The two are only .9 percentage points apart going into the election on Tuesday – with Youngkin in the lead

Winsome Sears is the first black woman elected to a statewide office in Virginia's history

Supporters of Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin gather for an election night party in Chantilly, Va.,Tuesday

Cruz is pictured above at an election night party for Youngkin at a hotel in Chantilly, Va.

Sen. Ted Cruz made a guest appearance at Youngkin's campaign headquarters watch party

Supporters of Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin gather for an election night party in Chantilly, Va.,Tuesday

Virginia's Albemarle County runs out of ballot papers in a THIRD of their 30 polling stations amid record turnout for the gubernatorial race - and poll worker scramble to copy centers to print off more forms

Poll workers in a Virginia county were forced to rush to a copy shop and photocopy ballot papers after polling stations ran out Tuesday amid a record turnout.

Officials in Albemarle County, which surrounds Charlottesville, were unprepared for the huge turnout with a third of its 30 polling stations reporting issues.

A panicked Peter Wurzer, chairman of the Albemarle County Electoral Board, said he drove so fast around his county to deliver additional ballot papers that he called the police to register his license plate, giving them advance warning not to stop him as he sped around the area.

'We're cooked when these ballots are gone,' he said over the scanner at around 5:40pm, according to The Daily Progress.

Wurzer was racing in his car from Free Union to Baker-Butler Elementary.

Jim Heilman, Secretary of the Electoral Board, said he did not remember a prior election where the county had to print emergency ballots.

The county's voter registrar's office said they had received more than 13,000 early voters - the highest ever total for a gubernatorial race.

Virginia on Tuesday saw an intensely-watched contest between Democrat Terry McAuliffe and Republican Glenn Youngkin - a battle that Youngkin appeared to be winning.

He becomes the first Republican to win statewide office in Virginia since 2009, in a major setback for Democrats.

And, with the nation's eyes on the close race, Virginians turned out in such high numbers that the polling stations in Albemarle County could not cope.

'We just got a turnout far in excess of what we expected,' said Jake Washburne, the registrar of Albemarle County.

He said the printer-paper ballots, rapidly fired off in copy shops, would have to be counted by hand.

Washburne said the county ordered ballots for 75 per cent of active voters in the county, but that apparently wasn't enough.

He said they sent out all ballots they had in reserve and there started to be issues at precincts such as Crozet and Red Hill.

'So we had to begin making emergency paper ballots that we'd get out to the precincts as rapidly as we could,' he said.

'And they will have to be hand counted when the polls close this evening.'

Albemarle County has 30 precincts, and Crozet, Red Hill and Baker-Butler reported issues.

NBC 29 reported that seven other county precincts also reported that they ran out of ballots: Jackk Jouett, Ivy, Country Green, Mountain View, Stone Robinson, Brownsville, and Mechums River, taking the total to ten.

Albemarle County was not alone.

State officials said other counties, including Appomattox, Chesterfield, Floyd, Powhatan and Madison, had issues and also had run out of ballots.

'I've not seen any evidence that whether or not I am doing well or poorly, whether or not I've got my agenda passed or not is going to have any real impact on winning or losing,' Biden said.

The career politician added that even if his Build Back Better agenda were passed in time for elections, that it wouldn't be able to be attributed to Democrats winning at a higher rate.

Biden added: 'The off-year is always unpredictable especially when we don't have a general election going at the same time.'

'Go vote, Virginia and New Jersey!' President Biden tweeted on Tuesday morning.

Biden said while overseas in Scotland for COP26 conference that he thinks the more people who turn out to vote in Virginia, the better chances are for Democrats to win and for McAuliffe to be the next governor.

Youngkin's camp thinks that the GOP candidate can come out victorious in Virginia if he improves in some areas of the state where former President Donald Trump suffered to garner voters in the 2020 election.

Specifically, Youngkin wants to top Trump's numbers by 5 per cent in Loudoun County, Fairfax County, Virginia Beach and Richmond.

If he does that, he is predicting he will have the votes state-wide needed to win the governorship.

All three counties are largely urban or suburban and were dominated by Biden - except for Virginia Beach where Biden only beat Trump by 5.4 per cent. Youngkin has tried to earn voters in these increasingly bye areas distancing himself from Trump's political style, which puts them off.

Virginia has become a battleground area where Republicans feel they can gain more political control after Biden won the state by 10.1 percentage points in the 2020 presidential election.

In Monday's polling average from FiveThirtyEight, McAuliffe and Youngkin remain just under 1 percentage point apart, with the GOP candidate pulling ahead in the days leading up to the election.

While 47.9 per cent of voters say they will cast their ballot for Youngkin, another 47 per cent say they will vote for McAuliffe. Back in August there was a near 7 per cent split in favor of McAuliffe.

One of the areas most vital to the election is Loudoun County, which Biden won by 25 percentage points in 2020. The wealthy area, while veering more blue recently, could easily turn red as Republican candidate Glenn Youngkin promises to give parents more control over their childrens' education.

Loudoun is the richest county in the U.S., with an average household income of $142,299.

'It's no longer Republicans against Democrats,' Youngkin told Fox News on Tuesday morning. 'It's parents from all political perspectives, from all walks of life coming together and standing up for their children.'

'Virginia and New Jersey Democrats—it's Election Day! You must turn out and vote for @TerryMcAuliffe, @PhilMurphyNJ, and Democrats down the ballot,' Vice President Kamala Harrris tweeted on Tuesday.

Youngkin's rally crowds the day before the election significantly out-showed those who came out for Democrat Terry McAuliffe, who is a former governor of the Old Dominion State.

McAuliffe tried desperately to tie Youngkin's campaign to rump in an effort to make the candidate seem more far-right and deter independent voters from turning out for him.

'Guess how Glenn Youngkin is finishing his campaign?' McAuliffe said at his final Monday night campaign rally outside a brewery in Fairfax. 'He is doing an event with Donald Trump here in Virginia.'

But Youngkin did not do an event with Trump, instead holding his own rally 30 miles away from McAuliffe at the Loudoun County Fairgrounds with a crowd many times the size of his Democratic challenger.

In fact, Youngkin did not mention Trump once during his Monday night rally, but was careful not to alienate his potential voters who also support the former president.

Trump did not travel to Virginia nor campaign with Youngkin in the race. He did, however, hold a brief long distance tele-rally making the case for the GOP candidate on Monday evening and sent several statements endorsing him.

Youngkin passes an autographed basketball into the crowd with his family at his election night rally at the Westfields Marriott Washington Dulles

Youngkin at his election night rally at the Westfields Marriott Washington Dulles

Attendees wait to take a photo with Virginia Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin

Former cop Eric Adams will be the next mayor of New York City, after the Democrat defeated radio talk show host Curtis Sliwa.

He was on course to easily beat Sliwa with a lead of 66 percent to 29 percent after more than half of projected votes were counted.

Adams, 61, is the second black person to be elected New York mayor, after David Dinkins, who led the city from 1990 to 1993.

Adams, 61, is the second black person to be elected New York mayor, after David Dinkins, who led the city from 1990 to 1993.

He rode to victory on pledges to cut wasted government spending and made public safety a central tenet of his campaign following a year of record crime increased in the Big Apple amid the pandemic.

In a victory speech, Adams said: Tonight, New Yorkers have chosen one of their own. I am you.'

He added: 'Today, we take off the intramural jersey and we put on one jersey, Team New York ... Tonight is not just a victory over adversity, it is a vindication of faith. It is the proof that the forgotten can be the future.'

When asked about McAuliffe linking Youngkin's campaign to Trump, the Republican launched into a defense of the group effort mentality his Party took to get voters to turn out for this election.

'Listen, it was great that the president took time out of his busy schedule to hold a tele-town hall last night,' Youngkin told Fox News on Tuesday morning.

In his final pitch ahead of Election Day, Youngkin promised Virginians in Loudoun County that he would ban critical race theory teachings in schools and give parents more power over their children's education.

Youngkin took the stage Monday night in the battleground county, which has been the state's epicenter of anger regarding school curricula and policies - in particular, the teaching of critical race theory and rules regarding transgender students.

'We decide that we're going to take the power of our children's education,' he told the crowd of rally-goers.

'This is a defining moment to the future of our commonwealth. A defining moment where we can stand up and say no to this progressive liberal agenda taking over.'

Tensions are rising over trans issues in the area after the Loudoun County School Board voted Wednesday evening to allow transgender students access to school facilities and groups that match their gender identities, including on sports teams.

As the issue has become central to the election, DailyMail.com revealed on Tuesday that the mother of a boy who dressed in a skirt and raped a female classmate in the girl's bathroom and sexually assaulted another girl months later does not actually identify as female.

The mother defender her son, saying he did not dress in a disguise to get in the women's restroom and was just a hormonal, heterosexual teen who had consensual sex with the girl twice before the alleged rape.

'He's a 15-year-old boy that wanted to have sex in the bathroom, with somebody that was willing,' she said . 'And they're twisting this just enough to make it a political hot button issue.'

The story exploded when Scott Smith, the father of the rape victim, was dragged out of a school board meeting with a bloodied mouth on June 22 after listening to school officials deny that a girl had been sexually assaulted in the bathroom after his daughter had reported the rape.

The case became the searing tip of a raging debate in Loudoun County over transgender students' rights and parents' freedom of speech.

While Youngkin held his rallies Monday and focused on education issues, including the issue of trans students, McAuliffe held his own rally Monday evening where he criticized his Republican contender for his unsolicited endorsement from Trump.

'Guess how Glenn Youngkin is finishing his campaign? He is doing an event with Donald Trump here in Virginia. I'm here with you and they've got Trump over there,' he said.

'Donald Trump wants to win here tomorrow night so he can next day announce for president of the United States of America. Well, we're going to put an end to Donald Trump's future plans right here in Virginia. I've beaten Trump twice in Virginia, tomorrow we go 3 and 0.'

Youngkin, who did not mention the former president during his Monday night rally, remained focused on the issues that polls show to be of high importance amongst Virginia's voters.

'We have to have a moment where the power shifts away from the marble halls of Richmond to the kitchen tables,' Youngkin told his supporters.

'What can happen tomorrow can be a statement, a statement that can be heard across this country because America needs us to vote tomorrow as well.'

He continued: 'America's watching. Why? Because all across this country families are having the same discussions that you all have.

'I get notes all day long, 'Glenn stand up for our kids too. Stand up for the rights of our children because we can't vote this year.'

He promised that the state's schools would not be faucets for political agendas.

'What we won't do is teach our children to view everything through a lens of race where we divide them into buckets and one group is an oppressor and the other is a victim and we pit them against each other and we steal their dreams,' Youngkin said.

Youngkin also argued that Tuesday's election was the 'moment for Virginians to push back on this left, liberal, progressive agenda,' citing alleged McAuliffe agenda items that would put increase taxes and put the government between schools and families.

McAuliffe - who has repeatedly accused his opponent of using Virginia's children 'as pawns' in his campaign - has denied the existence of critical race theory in the state's education system and argued that he doesn't 'think parents should be telling schools what they should teach.'

However, at a campaign rally Sunday, the Democrat did address the hotbed topic of education, alleging that there were too many white educators in the state.

'We've got to diversify our teacher base here in Virginia. Fifty percent of students at Virginia schools — K-12 — 50 percent are students of color, and yet 80 percent of the teachers are white,' he said.

McAuliffe promised to diversify the state's teacher base and become the first state to pay college tuition and housing for minority educators.

'We all know what we have to do in a school to make everybody feel comfortable in school,' he argued.

'So, here's what I'm going to do. We'll be the first state in America — if you'll teach for five years here in Virginia in a high-demand area, whether that be geographic or course work, we will pay room, board, tuition, at any college, any university, any HBCU [historically black colleges and universities] here in the commonwealth of Virginia.'

Virginia Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin speaks during an election-night rally at the Westfields Marriott Washington Dulles on November 02, 2021 in Chantilly, Virginia

Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin claps after learning that polling numbers indicated that he was ahead in the Virginia Gubernatorial race Westfields Marriott Washington Dulles on November 02, 2021 in Chantilly, Virginia

Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin hugs his family including his wife Suzanne (2R) and son Thomas after learning that polling numbers indicated that he was ahead in the Virginia Gubernatorial race

Suzanne Youngkin, wife of Virginia Republican gubernatorial nominee Glenn Youngkin and his children react as they arrive to interact with the crowd during an election night party at a hotel in Chantilly, Virginia

Youngkin watches results come in on election night at the Westfields Marriott Washington Dulles on November 02, 2021 in Chantilly, Virginia

Attendees wait to take a photo with Virginia Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin at Youngkin's election night rally at the Westfields Marriott Washington Dulles

EXCLUSIVE: It was the woke cover-up that electrified the Virginia governor's race, now on election day the mother of skirt-wearing teen who raped a female classmate in girls' bathroom says he is a troubled boy who identifies as male and just wanted sex

The mother of the 15-year-old boy who dressed in a skirt and raped a female classmate in the girl's bathroom and was then charged with sexually assaulting another girl months later says her son doesn't identify as a female, and it wasn't just some disguise to slip into the girl's bathroom.

Speaking exclusively with DailyMail.com, the mother, who asked not to be identified for the sake of her underage son, defended his actions as that of a heterosexual, hormonal teen who, in the case of the rape, had consensual sex with the girl twice before.

'He's a 15-year-old boy that wanted to have sex in the bathroom, with somebody that was willing,' she declared, sitting in an empty kitchen in her townhouse in Loudoun County, Virginia. 'And they're twisting this just enough to make it a political hot button issue.'

The story exploded when Scott Smith, the father of the rape victim, was dragged out of a school board meeting with a bloodied mouth on June 22 after listening to school officials deny that a girl had been sexually assaulted in the bathroom after his daughter had reported the rape.

The case became the searing tip of a raging debate in Loudoun County over transgender students' rights and parents' freedom of speech.

The parents of a teen girl who alleges she was raped by a 15-year-old boy in a dress victim's parents were ridiculed by the left after her father Scott Smith (left) was pictured being dragged out of a school board meeting on June 22

Scott Smith, the victim's father, was pictured with a bloody mouth, being dragged out of a school board meeting on June 22 - a month after the attack - after listening to school officials say no one had been sexually assaulted in the bathrooms when that's what his daughter had reported the previous month

The school board has been routinely accused of pushing an ultra-liberal agenda on kids and parents and silencing those who disagree with them.

The scandal even entered Virginia's race for governor, giving life to the campaign of Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin who accused the Loudon school board of a coverup while warning, 'What tragedy next awaits our children?'

Despite his androgynous style and declaration that he's 'pansexual,' the boy's mother insisted he isn't the gender fluid boogeyman in a culture war about transgender policies.

'He would wear a skirt one day and then the next day, he would wear jeans and a t-shirt, a Polo or hoodie,' she explained. 'He was trying to find himself and that involved all kinds of styles. I believe he was doing it because it gave him attention he desperately needed and sought.'

At the same time, she concedes her son is deeply troubled, acknowledging his extensive history of misbehavior that included sending nude photos of himself to a girl in fifth grade.

She reached her own breaking point with the him in early October when he phoned her from the juvenile detention center following his second arrest.

'He asked me how I was doing, and I said, ''I'm broken, I'm shattered, you shattered me,'' the mom recalled. ''Do you have any idea what you've done to me, what you've done to your family?

'And his response was, ''No, what did I do?'' she said.

She had been his primary point of contact, with his dad living in New Jersey.

'At that point, I was like, 'You know what? I love you, I always will, I will do everything I can to always be there for you in any capacity possible,' she said. 'But I told him - 'You need to call your father for now on. Do not call me. I need to heal, and I need you to figure this out for yourself.'

That was Sunday, October 10. She did show up for his juvenile court appearance last Monday. She sat in the gallery while fuming at the boy's father who defied her wishes by showing up with his wife.

'He'd asked about bringing his wife and I said ''she's the reason you have been absent in (our son's) life. I hate her, I don't want her in the courthouse,'' she recalled telling him. 'I'm in the mix every day dealing with three probation officers, detectives, the Commonwealth and I don't know how many lawyers, and you're in your own little safety bubble in New Jersey.'

'And he didn't listen to me,' the mother told DailyMail.com, shaking her head and adding, 'They even brought a friend.'

On October 25, the teen was found guilty for the May 28 sexual assault at Stone Bridge High School. The judge 'substantiated' charges of forcible sodomy and forcible fellatio, the juvenile equivalent of a conviction.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10158725/Virginia-polls-CLOSE-nail-biting-race-governor-race.html

CNN, NBC and ABC have called the Virginia gubernatorial race in favor of Republican Glenn Youngkin just after 12:30am Wednesday morning.

www.dailymail.co.uk

11/02/2021

PUBLISHED: 19:03 EDT, 2 November 2021 | UPDATED: 19:10 EDT, 2 November 2021
BREAKING NEWS - Virginia polls CLOSE in nail-biting governor race: Vote between Youngkin and McAuliffe too close to call after Biden said he was convinced of a Democrat win in pivotal election

* The neck and neck gubernatorial race in Virginia has come down to just .9% in polls ahead of the results
* A loss has been chalked up to potential disaster for Biden and Democrats heading into the 2022 midterms
* The president said Tuesday his agenda succeeding or failing does not indicate whether Democrats will do well or not in local and federal-level elections
* On Tuesday, Virginians began lining up at polling places to cast their ballot despite some light rain
* McAuliffe and Youngkin traversed the Virginia as the nation turns its focus to the heated governor's race
* McAuliffe tried to tie his GOP challenger to Donald Trump in an effort to deter independent voters

All eyes are on Virginia as polls close in the state's cutthroat gubernatorial election, where polling showed Republican Glenn Youngkin and Democrat Terry McAuliffe neck and neck to lead the Old Dominion.

An early exit poll by NBC showed that 56% of voters disapprove of President Biden, who has campaigned for McAuliffe, and 43% approve. The NBC poll also showed that voters are most concerned with the economy, 33 percent ranking it as their top issue, and education, 24 percent.

McAuliffe, 64, previously served as Virginia's governor from 2014 to 2018. Due to the commonwealth's unusual election laws, governors can only serve one consecutive term. He would become the first governor of Virginia in nearly half a century to be elected to two non-consecutive terms.

During his term as governor, he issued a record 120 vetoes, mostly concerning social issues like abortion and LGBTQ rights, and touted his record fighting against the GOP legislature on the campaign trail.

McAuliffe nationalized the race by invoking former President Trump's name perhaps more than any other figure running for office.

Youngkin, 54, is a political newcomer and wealthy businessman who previously served as CEO of the Carlyle Group, a private equity firm. Though he won Trump's endorsement, Youngkin has distanced himself from the former president, who faired poorly in Virginia in 2020.

Trump was set to hold an 11th-hour telerally in Virginia, but Youngkin said he did not plan to attend.

Youngkin's personal wealth launched him into the spotlight, as he provided $5.5 million to his own campaign. The Republican has sought to mobilize voters by tying the race to school choice and education issues, holding Parents Matter rallies where he hit out against critical race theory.

And in what could spell trouble for McAuliffe, over 80% of voters in an NBC exit poll said parents should have a say in what their children are taught in schools. Fifty-three percent said parents should have 'a lot' of say, 31% said 'some.'

McAuliffe said during a debate in late September, 'I don't think parents should be telling schools what they should teach.'

Joe Biden signaled on Tuesday that he believes Democratic candidate Terry McAuliffe will be the next governor of Virginia in his nail-biting election with Republican Glenn Youngkin and insisted mounting problems and his poor performance in the polls will have nothing to do with the result.

'We're gonna win,' Biden said in a hushed tone while grinning and leaning into the microphone on stage at the United Nations Climate Change conference in Glasgow, Scotland, while polls showed the race at a dead heat before state voting booths closed at 7pm.

'I think we're gonna win in Virginia,' he continued. 'The race, it's very close. It's about who shows up, who turns out.'

The president was responding to a question on if he feels McAuliffe losing in the state Biden won by 10 points in 2020 would be a rebuke on his presidency and spell disaster for Democrats going into the 2022 midterms.

'Granted I did win by a large margin [in Virginia], but the point of the matter is I think that this is going to be – what we all knew from the beginning – it's going to be a tight race. And it is tight.'

Biden then insisted that his successes or failures as president cannot be attributed to the outcome of local and congressional elections, even though they are being seen as an indicator of how his administration is performing.

Although there is a gubernatorial race in New Jersey, two congressional races in Ohio and several mayoral contests, the nation has turned its attention to Virginia as a loss for Democrat Terry McAuliffe would be catastrophic for the Party as Joe Biden's approval dwindles ahead of the 2022 midterms.

A Republican win would cause a panic among the Democrats and could sway voters across the country in what is a bellwether election for an administration mired by mounting problems, including inflation and supply chain issues.

'I've not seen any evidence that whether or not I am doing well or poorly, whether or not I've got my agenda passed or not is going to have any real impact on winning or losing,' Biden said.

The career politician added that even if his Build Back Better agenda were passed in time for elections, that it wouldn't be able to be attributed to Democrats winning at a higher rate.

Biden added: 'The off-year is always unpredictable especially when we don't have a general election going at the same time.'

Voters began lining up at polling places across Virginia on a rainy Tuesday morning to cast their ballot for governor in a heated contest coming down to a nine tenths-of-a-point.

President Joe Biden predicted during a press conference Tuesday at the UN Climate Change Conference in Glasgow, Scotland that Democratic Terry McAuliffe will win the gubernatorial race in Virginia

'I think we're gonna win in Virginia. The race, it's very close. It's about who shows up, who turns out,' Biden said of the gubernatorial race in Virginia, previewing that Democrat Terry McAuliffe will come out victorious

'Go vote, Virginia and New Jersey!' President Biden tweeted on Tuesday morning.

Biden said while overseas in Scotland for COP26 conference that he thinks the more people who turn out to vote in Virginia, the better chances are for Democrats to win and for McAuliffe to be the next governor.

Youngkin's camp thinks that the GOP candidate can come out victorious in Virginia if he improves in some areas of the state where former President Donald Trump suffered to garner voters in the 2020 election.

Specifically, Youngkin wants to top Trump's numbers by 5 per cent in Loudoun County, Fairfax County, Virginia Beach and Richmond.

If he does that, he is predicting he will have the votes state-wide needed to win the governorship.

All three counties are largely urban or suburban and were dominated by Biden - except for Virginia Beach where Biden only beat Trump by 5.4 per cent. Youngkin has tried to earn voters in these increasingly bye areas distancing himself from Trump's political style, which puts them off.

Virginia has become a battleground area where Republicans feel they can gain more political control after Biden won the state by 10.1 percentage points in the 2020 presidential election.

In Monday's polling average from FiveThirtyEight, Democrat Terry McAuliffe and Republican Glenn Youngkin remain just under 1 percentage point apart, with the GOP candidate pulling ahead in the days leading up to the election.

While 47.9 per cent of voters say they will cast their ballot for Youngkin, another 47 per cent say they will vote for McAuliffe. Back in August there was a near 7 per cent split in favor of McAuliffe.

One of the areas most vital to the election is Loudoun County, which Biden won by 25 percentage points in 2020. The wealthy area, while veering more blue recently, could easily turn red as Republican candidate Glenn Youngkin promises to give parents more control over their childrens' education.

Loudoun is the richest county in the U.S., with an average household income of $142,299.

'It's no longer Republicans against Democrats,' Youngkin told Fox News on Tuesday morning. 'It's parents from all political perspectives, from all walks of life coming together and standing up for their children.'

Education issues have become the central focus of the Virginia gubernatorial race, as Youngkin rallies against schools teaching critical race theory and McAuliffe pushes for more diversity among teachers in the state.

'Virginia and New Jersey Democrats—it's Election Day! You must turn out and vote for @TerryMcAuliffe, @PhilMurphyNJ, and Democrats down the ballot,' Vice President Kamala Harrris tweeted on Tuesday.

Youngkin's rally crowds the day before the election significantly out-showed those who came out for Democrat Terry McAuliffe, who is a former governor of the Old Dominion State.

Virginians headed to their polling places to cast their vote in the state's gubernatorial election on a rainy Tuesday. Adrienne Schweer votes with children Georgia and Sully in tow at Chesterbrook Elementary School in McLean, Virginia

Republican candidate Glenn Youngkin picked up a basketball to shoot some hoops outside a voting location at Rocky Run Middle School in Chantilly, Virginia on Tuesday

Heating up: The GOP candidate removed his jacket to continue shooting hoops as drizzles cleared and the day warmed up

VIDEO
Logan Ratick@Logan_Ratick
Replying to @Logan_Ratick
Youngkin’s getting his shots up on Election Day
6:52 AM · Nov 2, 2021

McAuliffe, a former governor of Virginia, waves his arms in the air as he rallies with supporters at a canvass kickoff event in Falls Church, Virginia on Tuesday

Republican Glenn Youngkin (left) and Democrat Terry McAuliffe (right) continued to campaign on Tuesday after a full day of cross-state rallies on Monday. The two are only .9 percentage points apart going into the election on Tuesday – with Youngkin in the lead

Youngkin greets a voter outside Rocky Run Middle School on Election Day in Chantilly, Virginia

D-day in Virginia: What to expect in the election seen as a crucial indicator of the Biden administration
More than one million people cast ballots in the Virginia governor's race before election day. The race is being watched as an early indicator for 2022 and beyond – and is viewed as a barometer for President Biden's political strength.

Former Gov. Terry McAuliffe and Republican investor Glenn Youngkin have been hammering each other for months in the contest, with the bitter 2020 election and former President Donald Trump serving as the backdrop.

When will the votes come in?

Early voting normally favors the Democratic candidate and three of the four congressional districts with the earliest in-person ballots are blue.

Polls close at 7 pm in the state. The state will first start announcing the results of absentee ballots. That comes after the state General Assembly passed a new law requiring election officials to start processing those votes a week before election day.

The close polls leading up to the race mean there is the chance of a recount, or the possibility that we will not know the results until a later date.

That could have a pronounced effect on public perception of the count, even if all the ballots would get counted anyway. Former President Donald Trump, who continues to make claims of election fraud, has repeatedly remarked about how his Election Night lead in some states 'disappeared.' In many states, officials began or were required to count Election Day votes first, then started running through their mail-in ballots.


The key counties: The areas that will decide the fate of the election

McAuliffe looks set to take Fairfax County, which has the highest population in the state (700,000), is the closest proximity to Washington D.C. and has a high number of high-educated or high-income professionals.

In the last gubernatorial race, Democratic Gov. Ralph Northam picked up 255,000 votes in the county for a margin of 36.7, a haul that equals 10 percent of the statewide turnout. The neighboring counties in northern Virginia are also heavily blue.

Loudoun County, Chesterfield County and Richmond City are all battleground suburban states where the battle over education and critical race theory is at the forefront and could sway to either McAuliffe or Youngkin.

Biden won Chesterfield County by a 6.7 point margin in 2020, so the result there will prove to be a barometer of the nationwide battle between the Republicans and Democrats and whether voters approve of the Biden administration, in the face of declining polls.

Youngkin will need to pick up votes in Chesterfield and similar size counties to be in with a fighting chance.

The Republican candidate will also look for swing votes in Virginia Beach, the largest and most populous city in the Old Dominion, to counter the heavy Democrat votes in the North.

A five-point lead for either candidate could spell trouble for the other.

Rural Tazewell County, Scott County, and Bland County are Republican strongholds and should vote for Youngkin. But the turnout will be significant for his final result.

Buckingham, Caroline, Essex, Nelson and Westmoreland, which are also rural, backed Obama in 2008 and 2012 then flipped to Trump to 2016 and 2020.

These are considered pivot counties and could give an indicator of which way the vote is heading.


McAuliffe v Youngkin: What polls before election day have told us

The Democrat McAuliffe started out as the early leader in the race, but Youngkin has closed the gap as education has become a central issue.

Youngkin pulled ahead of his Democratic challenger and former Virginia governor on Saturday in a FiveThirtyEight polling average . On October 28, the two were tied at 47 per cent.

A loss by McAuliffe could cause a panic in his party and set a tone that could impact fundraising and retirements as Democrats seek to hold control of Congress in 2022.

The race will also be seen as a referendum on Trump, who didn't campaing in person for Youngkin but gave his endorsement and issued a statement Monday calling his opponents 'perverts.'

Youngkin's tactic of appealing to Trump's base without overtly embracing the former president at all times could offer a pathway for other Republicans seeking to gain or hold power without being forced to cross Trump or reject his claims of election fraud.


What has happened in Virginia in past elections?

With control of a 'purple' state and a potential bellwether on the line, 1.1 million Virginia voters turned in ballots by the deadline last weekend.

Democrat Joe Biden won that race by 10 percentage points, but this year analysts are watching the state to see what how Democrats fare in a lower-turnout off-year election, with Biden's overall popularity substantially lower than it was a year ago.

The Democrats won Loudoun County, which has been at the center of the fight over parental control of education and school board protests, in he last gubernatorial election.

Biden beat Trump by 25 points in Loudoun County in the presidential election.

The last time McAuliffe was on the ballot, he barely won 50 percent of the vote. Youngkin finished off his campaign with a rally there on Monday night.

Hillary Clinton won the state by 5 percentage points in 2016.


The significance of early voting and whether it sways the count

The state experienced a record for early voting, and accounts for a fifth of the state's electorate, which totals 5.9 million, CNBC reported. That compares to fewer than 200,000 early voters in 2017 for the last governor's race.

It comes amid a push by candidates to bank early votes – and follows a change in state law in favor of 'no excuse' early voting, which also took effect during the 2020 presidential election.

Trump's apparent 'lead' in Virginia vanished at around midnight on Nov. 3, 2020, the Washington Post reported as these mail ballots were scanned and counted.

Election observers have again been predicting Democrat McAuliffe would have an edge in the early vote, with Youngkin likely to hold the advantage on Election Day itself.

Youngkin told Fox News last week his camp expected a ''surprisingly good' turnout among early voters. 'Historically early voting has been 75 to 80% Democrats, so for us to be so strong in the early voting just reflects the fact that there's not any enthusiasm on my opponent's side,' he said.
McAuliffe, who is backed by President Joe Biden, tried desperately to tie Youngkin's campaign to former President Donald Trump in an effort to make the candidate seem more far-right and deter independent voters from turning out for him.

'Guess how Glenn Youngkin is finishing his campaign?' McAuliffe said at his final Monday night campaign rally outside a brewery in Fairfax. 'He is doing an event with Donald Trump here in Virginia.'

But Youngkin did not do an event with Trump, instead holding his own rally 30 miles away from McAuliffe at the Loudoun County Fairgrounds with a crowd many times the size of his Democratic challenger.

In fact, Youngkin did not mention Trump once during his Monday night rally, but was careful not to alienate his potential voters who also support the former president.

Trump did not travel to Virginia nor campaign with Youngkin in the race. He did, however, hold a brief long distance tele-rally making the case for the GOP candidate on Monday evening and sent several statements endorsing him.

When asked about McAuliffe linking Youngkin's campaign to Trump, the Republican launched into a defense of the group effort mentality his Party took to get voters to turn out for this election.

'Listen, it was great that the president took time out of his busy schedule to hold a tele-town hall last night,' Youngkin told Fox News on Tuesday morning.

In his final pitch ahead of Election Day, Youngkin promised Virginians in Loudoun County that he would ban critical race theory teachings in schools and give parents more power over their children's education.

WATCH:

Youngkin took the stage Monday night in the battleground county, which has been the state's epicenter of anger regarding school curricula and policies - in particular, the teaching of critical race theory and rules regarding transgender students.

'We decide that we're going to take the power of our children's education,' he told the crowd of rally-goers.

'This is a defining moment to the future of our commonwealth. A defining moment where we can stand up and say no to this progressive liberal agenda taking over.'

Tensions are rising over trans issues in the area after the Loudoun County School Board voted Wednesday evening to allow transgender students access to school facilities and groups that match their gender identities, including on sports teams.

As the issue has become central to the election, DailyMail.com revealed on Tuesday that the mother of a boy who dressed in a skirt and raped a female classmate in the girl's bathroom and sexually assaulted another girl months later does not actually identify as female.

Voters check in at the Fairfax County Government Center on Tuesday to cast their ballots in the heated gubernatorial race

Virginia residents stand a socially-distanced line on Tuesday inside a voting location in Chantilly, Virginia, where Youngkin showed up top shoot some hoops and meet with voters

Voters check in at a polling place in a rainy Fairfax, Virginia on Tuesday

The race has become hotly contested as Democrats try to keep their seat and Republicans see it as an opportunity to gain some political ground in the Old Dominion State. Election Day is happening in several states, but the nation has turned its attention to Virginia

The mother defender her son, saying he did not dress in a disguise to get in the women's restroom and was just a hormonal, heterosexual teen who had consensual sex with the girl twice before the alleged rape.

'He's a 15-year-old boy that wanted to have sex in the bathroom, with somebody that was willing,' she said . 'And they're twisting this just enough to make it a political hot button issue.'

The story exploded when Scott Smith, the father of the rape victim, was dragged out of a school board meeting with a bloodied mouth on June 22 after listening to school officials deny that a girl had been sexually assaulted in the bathroom after his daughter had reported the rape.

The case became the searing tip of a raging debate in Loudoun County over transgender students' rights and parents' freedom of speech.

While Youngkin held his rallies Monday and focused on education issues, including the issue of trans students, McAuliffe held his own rally Monday evening where he criticized his Republican contender for his unsolicited endorsement from Trump.

'Guess how Glenn Youngkin is finishing his campaign? He is doing an event with Donald Trump here in Virginia. I'm here with you and they've got Trump over there,' he said.

'Donald Trump wants to win here tomorrow night so he can next day announce for president of the United States of America. Well, we're going to put an end to Donald Trump's future plans right here in Virginia. I've beaten Trump twice in Virginia, tomorrow we go 3 and 0.'

Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin promised Virginians that he would ban critical race theory teachings in at schools and that parents would have power over their children's educations. Here the candidate shoots some hoops at a Rocky Run Middle School on November 02, 2021 in Chantilly, Virginia, which doubles as a polling place

McAuliffe (pictured at a Monday night rally holding a glass of hard cider) has denied the existence of critical race theory in the state's education system and argued that he doesn't 'think parents should be telling schools what they should teach'

Youngkin held his rally in the battleground area of Loudoun County where residents have protested against the teaching of critical race theory and rules regarding transgender students

EXCLUSIVE: It was the woke cover-up that electrified the Virginia governor's race, now on election day the mother of skirt-wearing teen who raped a female classmate in girls' bathroom says he is a troubled boy who identifies as male and just wanted sex
The mother of the 15-year-old boy who dressed in a skirt and raped a female classmate in the girl's bathroom and was then charged with sexually assaulting another girl months later says her son doesn't identify as a female, and it wasn't just some disguise to slip into the girl's bathroom.

Speaking exclusively with DailyMail.com, the mother, who asked not to be identified for the sake of her underage son, defended his actions as that of a heterosexual, hormonal teen who, in the case of the rape, had consensual sex with the girl twice before.

'He's a 15-year-old boy that wanted to have sex in the bathroom, with somebody that was willing,' she declared, sitting in an empty kitchen in her townhouse in Loudoun County, Virginia. 'And they're twisting this just enough to make it a political hot button issue.'

The story exploded when Scott Smith, the father of the rape victim, was dragged out of a school board meeting with a bloodied mouth on June 22 after listening to school officials deny that a girl had been sexually assaulted in the bathroom after his daughter had reported the rape.

The case became the searing tip of a raging debate in Loudoun County over transgender students' rights and parents' freedom of speech.

The parents of a teen girl who alleges she was raped by a 15-year-old boy in a dress victim's parents were ridiculed by the left after her father Scott Smith (left) was pictured being dragged out of a school board meeting on June 22

Scott Smith, the victim's father, was pictured with a bloody mouth, being dragged out of a school board meeting on June 22 - a month after the attack - after listening to school officials say no one had been sexually assaulted in the bathrooms when that's what his daughter had reported the previous month

The school board has been routinely accused of pushing an ultra-liberal agenda on kids and parents and silencing those who disagree with them.

The scandal even entered Virginia's race for governor, giving life to the campaign of Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin who accused the Loudon school board of a coverup while warning, 'What tragedy next awaits our children?'

Despite his androgynous style and declaration that he's 'pansexual,' the boy's mother insisted he isn't the gender fluid boogeyman in a culture war about transgender policies.

'He would wear a skirt one day and then the next day, he would wear jeans and a t-shirt, a Polo or hoodie,' she explained. 'He was trying to find himself and that involved all kinds of styles. I believe he was doing it because it gave him attention he desperately needed and sought.'

At the same time, she concedes her son is deeply troubled, acknowledging his extensive history of misbehavior that included sending nude photos of himself to a girl in fifth grade.

She reached her own breaking point with the him in early October when he phoned her from the juvenile detention center following his second arrest.

'He asked me how I was doing, and I said, ''I'm broken, I'm shattered, you shattered me,'' the mom recalled. ''Do you have any idea what you've done to me, what you've done to your family?

'And his response was, ''No, what did I do?'' she said.

She had been his primary point of contact, with his dad living in New Jersey.

'At that point, I was like, 'You know what? I love you, I always will, I will do everything I can to always be there for you in any capacity possible,' she said. 'But I told him - 'You need to call your father for now on. Do not call me. I need to heal, and I need you to figure this out for yourself.'

That was Sunday, October 10. She did show up for his juvenile court appearance last Monday. She sat in the gallery while fuming at the boy's father who defied her wishes by showing up with his wife.

'He'd asked about bringing his wife and I said ''she's the reason you have been absent in (our son's) life. I hate her, I don't want her in the courthouse,'' she recalled telling him. 'I'm in the mix every day dealing with three probation officers, detectives, the Commonwealth and I don't know how many lawyers, and you're in your own little safety bubble in New Jersey.'

'And he didn't listen to me,' the mother told DailyMail.com, shaking her head and adding, 'They even brought a friend.'

On October 25, the teen was found guilty for the May 28 sexual assault at Stone Bridge High School. The judge 'substantiated' charges of forcible sodomy and forcible fellatio, the juvenile equivalent of a conviction.

Youngkin, who did not mention the former president during his Monday night rally, remained focused on the issues that polls show to be of high importance amongst Virginia's voters.

'We have to have a moment where the power shifts away from the marble halls of Richmond to the kitchen tables,' Youngkin told his supporters.

'What can happen tomorrow can be a statement, a statement that can be heard across this country because America needs us to vote tomorrow as well.'

He continued: 'America's watching. Why? Because all across this country families are having the same discussions that you all have.

'I get notes all day long, 'Glenn stand up for our kids too. Stand up for the rights of our children because we can't vote this year.'

Youngkin took the stage Monday night in Loudoun County, which has been the state's epicenter of anger regarding school curricula and policies. He told rally-goers: 'We decide that we're going to take the power of our children's education. This is a defining moment to the future of our commonwealth'

Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin, left, is pictured with his family: son Grant, wife Suzanne, and daughter Anna, at a campaign rally in Loudoun County

He promised that the state's schools would not be faucets for political agendas.

'What we won't do is teach our children to view everything through a lens of race where we divide them into buckets and one group is an oppressor and the other is a victim and we pit them against each other and we steal their dreams,' Youngkin said.

Youngkin also argued that Tuesday's election was the 'moment for Virginians to push back on this left, liberal, progressive agenda,' citing alleged McAuliffe agenda items that would put increase taxes and put the government between schools and families.

McAuliffe - who has repeatedly accused his opponent of using Virginia's children 'as pawns' in his campaign - has denied the existence of critical race theory in the state's education system and argued that he doesn't 'think parents should be telling schools what they should teach.'

McAuliffe and Youngkin have less than a 1 percent polling gap from each other as Tuesday's Virginia gubernatorial race comes down to the wire

McAuliffe, pictured at his campaign rally in Fairfax on Monday, criticized Youngkin for his unsolicited endorsement from former president Donald Trump. 'Guess how Glenn Youngkin is finishing his campaign? He is doing an event with Donald Trump here in Virginia. I'm here with you and they've got Trump over there'

However, at a campaign rally Sunday, the Democrat did address the hotbed topic of education, alleging that there were too many white educators in the state.

'We've got to diversify our teacher base here in Virginia. Fifty percent of students at Virginia schools — K-12 — 50 percent are students of color, and yet 80 percent of the teachers are white,' he said.

McAuliffe promised to diversify the state's teacher base and become the first state to pay college tuition and housing for minority educators.

'We all know what we have to do in a school to make everybody feel comfortable in school,' he argued.

'So, here's what I'm going to do. We'll be the first state in America — if you'll teach for five years here in Virginia in a high-demand area, whether that be geographic or course work, we will pay room, board, tuition, at any college, any university, any HBCU [historically black colleges and universities] here in the commonwealth of Virginia.'

McAuliffe and Youngkin have less than a 1 percent polling gap from each other as Tuesday's Virginia gubernatorial race comes down to the wire.

Youngkin pulled ahead of his Democratic challenger and former Virginia governor on Saturday in a FiveThirtyEight polling average.

On October 28, the two were tied at 47 percent, then on October 29, Youngkin pulled ahead of McAuliffe in a 47.5 to 46.9 percent split.

On Sunday, Youngkin raised to 47.6 percent to McAuliffe's 47 percent.

According to the latest Fox News poll, conducted by Democratic pollster Chris Anderson and Republican Daron Shaw, the majority of Virginians polled also indicated that they trusted Youngkin over McAuliffe when it comes to addressing educational issues.

'It's scary to see things so close,' Brooke Hall-Ewell, a 50-year-old nurse who attended McAuliffe's Monday event, told the Associated Press. 'We've got to keep Virginia blue.'

Democratic governor candidate Terry McAuliffe argues Virginia has too many white teachers

Terry McAuliffe, during a campaign in Manassas, Virginia on Sunday called for the Old Dominion State to 'diversify' its teacher base as the race comes down to some issues – including education and critical race theory.

The Democratic candidate promised to create a program to attract more minority teachers while lamenting that Virginia has too many white teachers.

'We got to work hard to diversify our teacher base,' McAuliffe said at the event.

'Fifty per cent of our students are students of color, 80 per cent of the teachers are White, so what I'm going to do for you – we'll be the first state in America,' he continued. 'If you go teach in Virginia for five years in a high-demand area — that could be geographic, it could be course work — we will pay room, board, tuition, any college, any university, or any HBCU here in Virginia.'

The reference to Historically Black Colleges and Universities insinuated that the free college program would be aimed at prioritizing attracting prospective non-white teachers to the state.

According to the latest Fox News poll, the majority of Virginians polled also indicated that they trusted Youngkin over McAuliffe when it comes to addressing educational issues

Youngkin pulled ahead of his Democratic challenger and former Virginia governor on Saturday in a FiveThirtyEight polling average

On October 28, the two were tied at 47 percent, then on October 29, Youngkin pulled ahead of McAuliffe in a 47.5 to 46.9 percent split. On Sunday, Youngkin raised to 47.6 percent to McAuliffe's 47 percent

However, Youngkin supporters argued that it was time for change.

'He's a straight shooter,' Dan Maloy, a 53-year-old small business owner, said Monday.

'He cares about the issues that we care about. You know, it's food on the table. What's the cost of groceries? What's the cost of gas? What do we need to do to move Virginia forward?'

If Youngkin win's election, he would be the first Republican to be elected as Virginia's governor in more than a decade.

Meanwhile, Democrats are fearful of losing their stronghold in Virginia.

A loss in the Virginia governor's race, long considered a bellwether for midterm elections, would trigger all-out panic among Democrats far beyond Virginia.

The party is already wary about their chances in elections that will decide control of the House and Senate and statehouses next year.

Read more:
Tight Virginia race becomes referendum on Biden presidency
Virginia Governor Polls | FiveThirtyEight

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10158725/Virginia-polls-CLOSE-nail-biting-race-governor-race.html/

All eyes are on Virginia as polls close in the state's cutthroat gubernatorial election, where polling showed Republican Glenn Youngkin and Democrat Terry McAuliffe neck and neck.

www.dailymail.co.uk

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12/07/2021

I just recently discovered the origins of the caduceus. Turns out that Hermès the patron of merchants, traders, thrives, liars and gamblers carries the caduceus. Nothing to do with “medicine”. The father of allopathic medicine Rockefeller, a free mason chose these symbols to represent his medicine....,pharmakeia...which we get pharmacy, pharmacist and pharmaceuticals from. Pharmakeia is defined as 1. the use of medicine, drugs and spells. 2 poisoning. 3 sorcery. I pointed out on fakebook that it was very interesting that the father of allopathic medicine chose this symbol along with the bowl of Hygeia and the rod of Asclepius. So many serpents. These symbols terrified me as a child. Now I know why they should terrify everyone. These symbols have only represented our current “medical” model for a little over a hundred years. In that time we’ve become the sickest developed country in the world. 80% of Europe was homeopathic before forced allopathy via the jab. Hermès the father of hermaphroditus. Hermaphroditus was merged with his wife and this the creation of two sexes in one. Its whereword hermaphrodite is derived. . All Freemasons worship the Baphomet.....an androgynous beast that holds the caduceus in its lap to represent the male phallus. These symbols have nothing to do with medicine but the occult and it's symbology. Doesn’t matter if you believe it. They do.
They want a sexless society the current movements towards no longer identifying as male, female,mother , father, only back it up. It’s very interesting the sudden surge in men’s clinics. The petrol based medicine that Rockefeller replaced with poison was first known to cause cancer so he rested the American cancer society to cover it up and no one thinks they've been doing the same with our endocrine systems and our hormones. All medical facilities under the allopathic model are represented by the caduceus.....the occult
There are no coincidences. Just a bunch of rich psychopaths that have ruled the world and destroyed it who knows how many times over. Boredom and a life of vapid, shallow, narcissism and the need to control everyone and everything is what you get when your mind is as decayed as your soul. Unfortunately they don’t have one of those either. Fakebook told me that they would post my my discovery on null. What would be so bad about sharing this 🤔

11/03/2021


PUBLISHED: 19:03 EDT, 2 November 2021 | UPDATED: 08:34 EDT, 3 November 2021
Welcome home, Joe! Stoney-faced Biden REFUSES to comment on Republican Glenn Youngkin's stunning victory over McAuliffe in Virginia's governor race - ending GOP's 12-year losing streak in statewide races and leaving Democrats in serious trouble.

* Glenn Youngkin pulled off a stunning upset to beat Democrat Terry McAuliffe, with a 2.1 lead for the Republican with 99 percent of the vote counted. Youngkin, 54, is the state's first red Governor since 2009
* Another stunner is pending in NJ where GOP candidate Jack Ciattarelli has narrow lead over Gov. Phil Murphy
* Votes are widely viewed as a referendum on Joe Biden's presidency, and defeat will jangle Democrat nerves
* Biden won by 10 points in Virginia and by 16 points in New Jersey in the presidential election just a year ago
* Biden looked shattered as he arrived at Andrews Air Force Base after the COP climate summit in Scotland

A shattered Joe Biden arrived back at the White House in the early hours of Wednesday morning following his COP26 climate change trip to Europe to find a party in disarray after a thundering win for the Republicans in Virginia and dismal performances for top Democrats across the country.

Glenn Youngkin pulled off a stunning upset to beat Democrat Terry McAuliffe, with a 2.1 lead for the Republican with 99 percent of the vote counted. Youngkin, 54, is the state's first red Governor since 2009.

Another shocker could be on the cards in New Jersey where GOP candidate Jack Ciattarelli has taken a narrow lead over Democrat Governor Phil Murphy with 88 percent of votes counted. Both candidates held off declaring victory overnight as they wait for 'every vote' to be tallied.

WATCH:

The ballots are widely viewed as a referendum on Biden's presidency, and Democrats are already in a panic and have started pointing figures with just 12 months until the 2020 midterms,

Biden won by 10 points in Virginia and by 16 points in New Jersey in the presidential election just a year ago.

The President looked tired and worn down as he arrived at Andrews Air Force Base, in a dark grey overcoat, before he was seen walking up the White House lawn.

It was a different atmosphere over in the Youngkin camp where raucous celebrations took place as the former investment banker was joined on stage by his wife Suzanne and their children.

'Alrighty Virginia we won this thing,' Youngkin shouted to the crowd.

'Our kids can't wait,' Youngkin said. 'On day one we're going to work ... We work in real people time, not government time.'

Congratulations poured in from the GOP top brass including Nikki Haley who tweeted: 'Congratulations to @GlennYoungkin! He is a rockstar and I have full confidence that he will make Virginia proud!'

Former Vice President Mike Pence said: 'Congratulations to Governor @GlennYoungkin on a HUGE victory! Glenn will serve the people of Old Dominion well with common sense Conservative policies that will benefit parents, families, and hard-working Virginians! The Conservative Comeback is HERE!'

Despite the national significance of his race Youngkin kept it local in his victory speech, avoiding mention of former President Trump or veering away from attacks on Democrats.

'The spirit of Virginia is coming together like never before, of Virginia taking our commonwealth back,' he told the adoring fans.

President Joe Biden walks on the South Lawn as he arrives at the White House early Wednesda

President Joe Biden arrives at Andrews Air Force Base, Md., early Wednesday, right, and walked up the South Lawn after the devastating Democratic defeat in Virginia

Glenn Youngkin kisses his wife Suzanne as he celebrates victory on stage with his children in Chantilly, Virginia

It was a different atmosphere over in the Youngkin campaign camp where celebrations look set to continue through the night after his shock win

Youngkin shoots an autographed basketball into the crowd with his family at an election-night rally

A glum-looking Biden arrived back at the White House in the early hours of Wednesday morning following his COP26 climate change trip to Europe to find a party in disarray and a thundering win for the Republicans

President Joe Biden salutes a Marine Corps honor guard as he arrives at the White House early Wednesday

Watch video: President Biden appears to fall asleep during COP26 summit in UK

Youngkin and his wife embrace on stage after the stunning victory - becoming the first Republican Governor of Virginia since 2009

Virginia Gov.-elect Glenn Youngkin greets supporters at an election night party in Chantilly early on Wednesday

Republican Glenn Youngkin pulled off a stunning upset in Virginia to beat out Democrat Terry McAuliffe, the Associated Press projected around 1am on Wednesday morning. 'Alrighty Virginia we won this thing,' Youngkin shouted in his victory speech

Youngkin (2-L) thanks his family after giving his victory speech at the Westfields Marriott Hotel in Chantilly, Virginia, USA, 03 November POOL

Virginia has now elected its first Republican governor since 2009. 'Alrighty Virginia we won this thing,' Youngkin shouted in his victory speech

He opened his victory address much as he did his campaign remarks, by focusing on education. 'Our kids can't wait,' Youngkin said. 'On day one we're going to work. We're going to restore excellence in our schools. We will invest largest education budget in history of commonwealth.'

Virginia parents are hailing Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin's victory over Democrat Terry McAuliffe Tuesday night, saying his election was a win for education and parental rights.

Education became a key issue in the gubernatorial race in Virginia as Youngkin and McAuliffe clashed over hot button issues such as critical race theory and the recent sexual assault of a female student in the bathrooms by a boy wearing a skirt.

But it appears that voters chose to elect a public servant instead of a political servant,' Virginia mother Elizabeth Perrin told Fox News.

She supports Youngkins' pledge to ban CRT and support parental say in education.

'What we have seen is the importance of family values and parental rights in our education system.'

'Youngkin wants the best for our children, and I think he's going to thank Loudoun for all the work they did to make that the issue,' Patti Menders, a mother and president of the Loudoun County Republican Women's Club echoed.

Education has been a key issue throughout Virginia's race for governor, especially in battleground Loudoun County, which has been the state's epicenter of anger regarding school curriculum and policies.

Youngkin, while on the campaign trail, promised Virginia parents: 'We're going to take the power of our children's education.'

As the results rolled in and he was declared victor, Virginians celebrated what they believed to be 'a win for parents all over the Commonwealth.'

'Parental rights in education were on the ballot this election,' Laura Zorc, director of education reform at Building Education for Students Together, argued.

'Parents (Republican, Independent, and Democrat) across the country have been saying, 'We don't want your politics in our schools.' Tonight, parents delivered on their promises to vote these elites out of office.'

The parents allege that Youngkin's election means their voices were heard and 'that our children matter.'

'It has been great to see how the importance of our children's education and the parents matter movement has brought so many people together,' said Brandon Michon, a father of three who was spoken out at numerous Loudoun County School Board meetings.

'This is Virginia's opportunity to raise the bar, and we will be doing it with Glenn Youngkin as governor.'

Youngkin then turned to his plans for tax cuts, and supporting law enforcement and reestablishing 'trust' between police officers and communities.

'We will reduce our cost of living ... We're going to eliminate the grocery tax, suspend the most recent hike in the gas tax ... We are going to save Virginia families $1500 year one. We are going to keep our communities safe.'

Youngkin said his campaign had attracted people of 'all races, all political ideologies and it turned into a movement.'

Virginia also elected its first black woman to statewide office in the state's history, Winsome Sears, to the office of lieutenant governor as a Republican.

'Its a historic night yes,' Sears said of her win. 'But I didn’t run to make history, I just wanted to leave it better than I found it.'

McAuliffe has not yet admitted defeat in the race.

Hours earlier, McAuliffe had refused to concede the race when he took the stage at 10:20pm, saying: 'We're going to continue to count the votes because every single Virginian deserves to have their vote counted.'

Republican National Committee chairwoman Ronna McDaniel put out a statement declaring Youngkin victorious and congratulating him on the win.

'The red wave is here! Congratulations to Republicans Glenn Youngkin, Winsome Sears, and Jason Miyares on their incredible campaigns and hard fought victories.'

'A Republican wave is coming in 2022, and Virginia is just the start,' she said.

Jason Miyares, a Republican, is projected to win his race for attorney general, in a GOP sweep in the Old Dominion, where Republicans also flipped the House of Delegates in their favor.

Republicans have not won a statewide race in Virginia in 12 years, and President Joe Biden carried the state by 10 percentage points.

Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey, chair of the Republican Governors' Association, also congratulated Youngkin. 'The RGA is thrilled to congratulate Governor-elect Glenn Youngkin on winning a hard-fought race that many wrote off as unwinnable for Republicans.'

If the margin of the final count is within 1%, a candidate can request a recount. If the margin is 0.5% or less, the state will pay for it.

Former President Trump released a statement declaring Youngkin the winner as votes rolled in:

't is looking like Terry McAuliffe's campaign against a certain person named “Trump” has very much helped Glenn Youngkin. All McAuliffe did was talk Trump, Trump, Trump and he lost! What does that tell you, Fake News? I guess people running for office as Democrats won’t be doing that too much longer. I didn’t even have to go rally for Youngkin, because McAuliffe did it for me.

Thank you to the MAGA voters for turning out big!'

A Republican win is sure to cause a panic among the Democrats and could sway voters across the country in what is a bellwether election for an administration mired by mounting problems, including inflation and supply chain issues.

Even Kamala Harris noted the consequences the Virginia race could spell for Democrats. Four days ago, while campaigning in Virginia for McAuliffe, she said: 'What happens in Virginia will in large part determine what happens in 2022, 2024, and on.'

Youngkin kisses his wife Suzanne as they finish speaking onstage stage at an election-night rally at the Westfields Marriott Washington Dulles


McAuliffe has not yet admitted defeat in the race. Hours earlier, McAuliffe had refused to concede the race when he took the stage at 10:20pm, saying: 'We're going to continue to count the votes because every single Virginian deserves to have their vote counted'

Youngkin supporters cheer in delight as he is declared Governor-elect of Virginia

Supporters of Republican nominee for Governor of Virginia Glenn Youngkin react as Fox News declares Youngkin has won his race against Democratic Governor Terry McAuliffe

Virginia Gov.-elect Glenn Youngkin greets supporters at an election night party in Chantilly, Va., early Wednesday

McAuliffe departs after speaking during his election night event at the Hilton McLean Tysons Corner on November 02

Gun-toting former Marine Winsome Sears defeats Democrat Hala Ayala is to become Virginia's first female black lieutenant governor
Gun-toting former Marine Winsome Sears has defeated Democrat Hala Ayala to become Virginia's first female black lieutenant governor.

Unofficial results showed Sears, 57, with 1,591,434 votes, or 51.4 percent, with Democratic candidate Hala Ayala, 48, at 1,501,533 or 48.5 percent, CNN reported.

The job of the state's lieutenant governor is frequently tipped as a launching pad to the governor's mansion. Half of the past 10 lieutenant governors went on to become governor.

Sears is a former Marine who immigrated to the United States from Jamaica as a child and vaulted to victory in a crowded primary on the enthusiasm generated by a campaign photo of her posing with a military rifle.

Sears, a gun-loving former Marine, will not only make history as the first woman to hold office, but also as the first woman of color

She had a brief stint in electoral politics 20 years ago as a one-term delegate in the General Assembly, representing parts of Hampton roads. Her return to politics after a two-decade absence began when she served as national chairperson for Black Americans to Re-Elect President Trump.

During the primary, Sears ridiculed mask mandates put in place by Democratic Gov. Ralph Northam, posting a video in which she pulled a mask off a cardboard cutout of Northam and stomped it into the sand, with the Virginia Beach boardwalk in the background.

Until now, Sears may have be the most unconventional candidate on the statewide ballot this year. She speaks in a stream-of-consciousness style and loves to tell the story of her first campaign for office, when someone superimposed her face onto a pornographic photo.

'I looked good!' she jokes to the audience.

But the story is emblematic, she says, of the obstacles she faced as a Black Republican who was taking on an establishment that expects Blacks to vote Democratic.

'The other side wants to use the problems of the past to define us and we shouldn't let them,' she told a crowd in rural Chesterfield County earlier this month. 'It is time for them to find another victim. ... Yes, we know that there are problems, but we can fix them.'

When she served in the legislature, she earned top ratings from anti-abortion and gun-rights organizations. She touted that record in her successful primary campaign, but has revised her website during the general election to remove those references.

McAuliffe, 64, previously served as Virginia's governor from 2014 to 2018. Due to the commonwealth's unusual election laws, governors can only serve one consecutive term. He would become the first governor of Virginia in nearly half a century to be elected to two non-consecutive terms.

During his term as governor, he issued a record 120 vetoes, mostly concerning social issues like abortion and LGBTQ rights, and touted his record fighting against the GOP legislature on the campaign trail.

McAuliffe nationalized the race by invoking former President Trump's name perhaps more than any other figure running for office.

Youngkin, 54, is a political newcomer and wealthy businessman who previously served as CEO of the Carlyle Group, a private equity firm. Though he won Trump's endorsement, Youngkin has distanced himself from the former president, who faired poorly in Virginia in 2020.

Trump held an 11th-hour tele-rally for the Virginia race, but Youngkin said he did not participate.

Youngkin's personal wealth launched him into the spotlight, as he provided $5.5 million to his own campaign. The Republican has sought to mobilize voters by tying the race to school choice and education issues, holding Parents Matter rallies where he hit out against teachings like critical race theory.

And in what could spell trouble for McAuliffe, over 80% of voters in an NBC exit poll said parents should have a say in what their children are taught in schools. Fifty-three percent said parents should have 'a lot' of say, 31% said 'some.'

McAuliffe said during a debate in late September, 'I don't think parents should be telling schools what they should teach.'

Voters began lining up at polling places across Virginia on a rainy Tuesday morning to cast their ballot for governor in a heated contest coming down to a nine tenths-of-a-point.

In one county, turnout was so high that elections officials had to print off ballots and dole them out as voters waited at the polls.

Albemarle election officials said a majority of the county's 30 precincts needed excess emergency ballots from the voter registration office, which began printing them off at lightning speed.

'We just got a turnout far in excess of what we expected,' registrar Jake Washburne said, according to the Daily Progress. He said the printer-paper ballots would have to be counted by hand.

Biden had signaled on Tuesday that he believed McAuliffe would be the next governor of Virginia in his nail-biting election with Republican Glenn Youngkin and insisted mounting problems and his poor performance in the polls will have nothing to do with the result.

'We're gonna win,' Biden said in a hushed tone while grinning and leaning into the microphone on stage at the United Nations Climate Change conference in Glasgow, Scotland, while polls showed the race at a dead heat before state voting booths closed at 7pm.

'I think we're gonna win in Virginia,' he continued. 'The race, it's very close. It's about who shows up, who turns out.'

The president was responding to a question on if he feels McAuliffe losing in the state Biden won by 10 points in 2020 would be a rebuke on his presidency and spell disaster for Democrats going into the 2022 midterms.

'Granted I did win by a large margin [in Virginia], but the point of the matter is I think that this is going to be – what we all knew from the beginning – it's going to be a tight race. And it is tight.'

Biden then insisted that his successes or failures as president cannot be attributed to the outcome of local and congressional elections, even though they are being seen as an indicator of how his administration is performing.

Although there is a gubernatorial race in New Jersey, two congressional races in Ohio and several mayoral contests, the nation has turned its attention to Virginia as a loss for Democrat Terry McAuliffe would be catastrophic for the Party as Joe Biden's approval dwindles ahead of the 2022 midterms.

Republican Glenn Youngkin responds to a question from media on Election Day at Rocky Run Middle School in Fairfax, Virginia on November 2

Democratic gubernatorial candidate Terry McAuliffe speaks to supporters during a Canvass Kickoff event on November 2 in Falls Church, Virginia

Republican Glenn Youngkin (left) and Democrat Terry McAuliffe (right) continued to campaign on Tuesday after a full day of cross-state rallies on Monday. The two are only .9 percentage points apart going into the election on Tuesday – with Youngkin in the lead

Winsome Sears is the first black woman elected to a statewide office in Virginia's history

Supporters of Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin gather for an election night party in Chantilly, Va.,Tuesday

Cruz is pictured above at an election night party for Youngkin at a hotel in Chantilly, Va.

Sen. Ted Cruz made a guest appearance at Youngkin's campaign headquarters watch party

Supporters of Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin gather for an election night party in Chantilly, Va.,Tuesday

Virginia's Albemarle County runs out of ballot papers in a THIRD of their 30 polling stations amid record turnout for the gubernatorial race - and poll worker scramble to copy centers to print off more forms

Poll workers in a Virginia county were forced to rush to a copy shop and photocopy ballot papers after polling stations ran out Tuesday amid a record turnout.

Officials in Albemarle County, which surrounds Charlottesville, were unprepared for the huge turnout with a third of its 30 polling stations reporting issues.

A panicked Peter Wurzer, chairman of the Albemarle County Electoral Board, said he drove so fast around his county to deliver additional ballot papers that he called the police to register his license plate, giving them advance warning not to stop him as he sped around the area.

'We're cooked when these ballots are gone,' he said over the scanner at around 5:40pm, according to The Daily Progress.

Wurzer was racing in his car from Free Union to Baker-Butler Elementary.

Jim Heilman, Secretary of the Electoral Board, said he did not remember a prior election where the county had to print emergency ballots.

The county's voter registrar's office said they had received more than 13,000 early voters - the highest ever total for a gubernatorial race.

Virginia on Tuesday saw an intensely-watched contest between Democrat Terry McAuliffe and Republican Glenn Youngkin - a battle that Youngkin appeared to be winning.

He becomes the first Republican to win statewide office in Virginia since 2009, in a major setback for Democrats.

And, with the nation's eyes on the close race, Virginians turned out in such high numbers that the polling stations in Albemarle County could not cope.

'We just got a turnout far in excess of what we expected,' said Jake Washburne, the registrar of Albemarle County.

He said the printer-paper ballots, rapidly fired off in copy shops, would have to be counted by hand.

Washburne said the county ordered ballots for 75 per cent of active voters in the county, but that apparently wasn't enough.

He said they sent out all ballots they had in reserve and there started to be issues at precincts such as Crozet and Red Hill.

'So we had to begin making emergency paper ballots that we'd get out to the precincts as rapidly as we could,' he said.

'And they will have to be hand counted when the polls close this evening.'

Albemarle County has 30 precincts, and Crozet, Red Hill and Baker-Butler reported issues.

NBC 29 reported that seven other county precincts also reported that they ran out of ballots: Jackk Jouett, Ivy, Country Green, Mountain View, Stone Robinson, Brownsville, and Mechums River, taking the total to ten.

Albemarle County was not alone.

State officials said other counties, including Appomattox, Chesterfield, Floyd, Powhatan and Madison, had issues and also had run out of ballots.

'I've not seen any evidence that whether or not I am doing well or poorly, whether or not I've got my agenda passed or not is going to have any real impact on winning or losing,' Biden said.

The career politician added that even if his Build Back Better agenda were passed in time for elections, that it wouldn't be able to be attributed to Democrats winning at a higher rate.

Biden added: 'The off-year is always unpredictable especially when we don't have a general election going at the same time.'

'Go vote, Virginia and New Jersey!' President Biden tweeted on Tuesday morning.

Biden said while overseas in Scotland for COP26 conference that he thinks the more people who turn out to vote in Virginia, the better chances are for Democrats to win and for McAuliffe to be the next governor.

Youngkin's camp thinks that the GOP candidate can come out victorious in Virginia if he improves in some areas of the state where former President Donald Trump suffered to garner voters in the 2020 election.

Specifically, Youngkin wants to top Trump's numbers by 5 per cent in Loudoun County, Fairfax County, Virginia Beach and Richmond.

If he does that, he is predicting he will have the votes state-wide needed to win the governorship.

All three counties are largely urban or suburban and were dominated by Biden - except for Virginia Beach where Biden only beat Trump by 5.4 per cent. Youngkin has tried to earn voters in these increasingly bye areas distancing himself from Trump's political style, which puts them off.

Virginia has become a battleground area where Republicans feel they can gain more political control after Biden won the state by 10.1 percentage points in the 2020 presidential election.

In Monday's polling average from FiveThirtyEight, McAuliffe and Youngkin remain just under 1 percentage point apart, with the GOP candidate pulling ahead in the days leading up to the election.

While 47.9 per cent of voters say they will cast their ballot for Youngkin, another 47 per cent say they will vote for McAuliffe. Back in August there was a near 7 per cent split in favor of McAuliffe.

One of the areas most vital to the election is Loudoun County, which Biden won by 25 percentage points in 2020. The wealthy area, while veering more blue recently, could easily turn red as Republican candidate Glenn Youngkin promises to give parents more control over their childrens' education.

Loudoun is the richest county in the U.S., with an average household income of $142,299.

'It's no longer Republicans against Democrats,' Youngkin told Fox News on Tuesday morning. 'It's parents from all political perspectives, from all walks of life coming together and standing up for their children.'

'Virginia and New Jersey Democrats—it's Election Day! You must turn out and vote for @TerryMcAuliffe, @PhilMurphyNJ, and Democrats down the ballot,' Vice President Kamala Harrris tweeted on Tuesday.

Youngkin's rally crowds the day before the election significantly out-showed those who came out for Democrat Terry McAuliffe, who is a former governor of the Old Dominion State.

McAuliffe tried desperately to tie Youngkin's campaign to rump in an effort to make the candidate seem more far-right and deter independent voters from turning out for him.

'Guess how Glenn Youngkin is finishing his campaign?' McAuliffe said at his final Monday night campaign rally outside a brewery in Fairfax. 'He is doing an event with Donald Trump here in Virginia.'

But Youngkin did not do an event with Trump, instead holding his own rally 30 miles away from McAuliffe at the Loudoun County Fairgrounds with a crowd many times the size of his Democratic challenger.

In fact, Youngkin did not mention Trump once during his Monday night rally, but was careful not to alienate his potential voters who also support the former president.

Trump did not travel to Virginia nor campaign with Youngkin in the race. He did, however, hold a brief long distance tele-rally making the case for the GOP candidate on Monday evening and sent several statements endorsing him.

Youngkin passes an autographed basketball into the crowd with his family at his election night rally at the Westfields Marriott Washington Dulles

Youngkin at his election night rally at the Westfields Marriott Washington Dulles

Attendees wait to take a photo with Virginia Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin

Former cop Eric Adams will be the next mayor of New York City, after the Democrat defeated radio talk show host Curtis Sliwa.

He was on course to easily beat Sliwa with a lead of 66 percent to 29 percent after more than half of projected votes were counted.

Adams, 61, is the second black person to be elected New York mayor, after David Dinkins, who led the city from 1990 to 1993.

Adams, 61, is the second black person to be elected New York mayor, after David Dinkins, who led the city from 1990 to 1993.

He rode to victory on pledges to cut wasted government spending and made public safety a central tenet of his campaign following a year of record crime increased in the Big Apple amid the pandemic.

In a victory speech, Adams said: Tonight, New Yorkers have chosen one of their own. I am you.'

He added: 'Today, we take off the intramural jersey and we put on one jersey, Team New York ... Tonight is not just a victory over adversity, it is a vindication of faith. It is the proof that the forgotten can be the future.'

When asked about McAuliffe linking Youngkin's campaign to Trump, the Republican launched into a defense of the group effort mentality his Party took to get voters to turn out for this election.

'Listen, it was great that the president took time out of his busy schedule to hold a tele-town hall last night,' Youngkin told Fox News on Tuesday morning.

In his final pitch ahead of Election Day, Youngkin promised Virginians in Loudoun County that he would ban critical race theory teachings in schools and give parents more power over their children's education.

Youngkin took the stage Monday night in the battleground county, which has been the state's epicenter of anger regarding school curricula and policies - in particular, the teaching of critical race theory and rules regarding transgender students.

'We decide that we're going to take the power of our children's education,' he told the crowd of rally-goers.

'This is a defining moment to the future of our commonwealth. A defining moment where we can stand up and say no to this progressive liberal agenda taking over.'

Tensions are rising over trans issues in the area after the Loudoun County School Board voted Wednesday evening to allow transgender students access to school facilities and groups that match their gender identities, including on sports teams.

As the issue has become central to the election, DailyMail.com revealed on Tuesday that the mother of a boy who dressed in a skirt and raped a female classmate in the girl's bathroom and sexually assaulted another girl months later does not actually identify as female.

The mother defender her son, saying he did not dress in a disguise to get in the women's restroom and was just a hormonal, heterosexual teen who had consensual sex with the girl twice before the alleged rape.

'He's a 15-year-old boy that wanted to have sex in the bathroom, with somebody that was willing,' she said . 'And they're twisting this just enough to make it a political hot button issue.'

The story exploded when Scott Smith, the father of the rape victim, was dragged out of a school board meeting with a bloodied mouth on June 22 after listening to school officials deny that a girl had been sexually assaulted in the bathroom after his daughter had reported the rape.

The case became the searing tip of a raging debate in Loudoun County over transgender students' rights and parents' freedom of speech.

While Youngkin held his rallies Monday and focused on education issues, including the issue of trans students, McAuliffe held his own rally Monday evening where he criticized his Republican contender for his unsolicited endorsement from Trump.

'Guess how Glenn Youngkin is finishing his campaign? He is doing an event with Donald Trump here in Virginia. I'm here with you and they've got Trump over there,' he said.

'Donald Trump wants to win here tomorrow night so he can next day announce for president of the United States of America. Well, we're going to put an end to Donald Trump's future plans right here in Virginia. I've beaten Trump twice in Virginia, tomorrow we go 3 and 0.'

Youngkin, who did not mention the former president during his Monday night rally, remained focused on the issues that polls show to be of high importance amongst Virginia's voters.

'We have to have a moment where the power shifts away from the marble halls of Richmond to the kitchen tables,' Youngkin told his supporters.

'What can happen tomorrow can be a statement, a statement that can be heard across this country because America needs us to vote tomorrow as well.'

He continued: 'America's watching. Why? Because all across this country families are having the same discussions that you all have.

'I get notes all day long, 'Glenn stand up for our kids too. Stand up for the rights of our children because we can't vote this year.'

He promised that the state's schools would not be faucets for political agendas.

'What we won't do is teach our children to view everything through a lens of race where we divide them into buckets and one group is an oppressor and the other is a victim and we pit them against each other and we steal their dreams,' Youngkin said.

Youngkin also argued that Tuesday's election was the 'moment for Virginians to push back on this left, liberal, progressive agenda,' citing alleged McAuliffe agenda items that would put increase taxes and put the government between schools and families.

McAuliffe - who has repeatedly accused his opponent of using Virginia's children 'as pawns' in his campaign - has denied the existence of critical race theory in the state's education system and argued that he doesn't 'think parents should be telling schools what they should teach.'

However, at a campaign rally Sunday, the Democrat did address the hotbed topic of education, alleging that there were too many white educators in the state.

'We've got to diversify our teacher base here in Virginia. Fifty percent of students at Virginia schools — K-12 — 50 percent are students of color, and yet 80 percent of the teachers are white,' he said.

McAuliffe promised to diversify the state's teacher base and become the first state to pay college tuition and housing for minority educators.

'We all know what we have to do in a school to make everybody feel comfortable in school,' he argued.

'So, here's what I'm going to do. We'll be the first state in America — if you'll teach for five years here in Virginia in a high-demand area, whether that be geographic or course work, we will pay room, board, tuition, at any college, any university, any HBCU [historically black colleges and universities] here in the commonwealth of Virginia.'

Virginia Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin speaks during an election-night rally at the Westfields Marriott Washington Dulles on November 02, 2021 in Chantilly, Virginia

Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin claps after learning that polling numbers indicated that he was ahead in the Virginia Gubernatorial race Westfields Marriott Washington Dulles on November 02, 2021 in Chantilly, Virginia

Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin hugs his family including his wife Suzanne (2R) and son Thomas after learning that polling numbers indicated that he was ahead in the Virginia Gubernatorial race

Suzanne Youngkin, wife of Virginia Republican gubernatorial nominee Glenn Youngkin and his children react as they arrive to interact with the crowd during an election night party at a hotel in Chantilly, Virginia

Youngkin watches results come in on election night at the Westfields Marriott Washington Dulles on November 02, 2021 in Chantilly, Virginia

Attendees wait to take a photo with Virginia Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin at Youngkin's election night rally at the Westfields Marriott Washington Dulles

EXCLUSIVE: It was the woke cover-up that electrified the Virginia governor's race, now on election day the mother of skirt-wearing teen who raped a female classmate in girls' bathroom says he is a troubled boy who identifies as male and just wanted sex

The mother of the 15-year-old boy who dressed in a skirt and raped a female classmate in the girl's bathroom and was then charged with sexually assaulting another girl months later says her son doesn't identify as a female, and it wasn't just some disguise to slip into the girl's bathroom.

Speaking exclusively with DailyMail.com, the mother, who asked not to be identified for the sake of her underage son, defended his actions as that of a heterosexual, hormonal teen who, in the case of the rape, had consensual sex with the girl twice before.

'He's a 15-year-old boy that wanted to have sex in the bathroom, with somebody that was willing,' she declared, sitting in an empty kitchen in her townhouse in Loudoun County, Virginia. 'And they're twisting this just enough to make it a political hot button issue.'

The story exploded when Scott Smith, the father of the rape victim, was dragged out of a school board meeting with a bloodied mouth on June 22 after listening to school officials deny that a girl had been sexually assaulted in the bathroom after his daughter had reported the rape.

The case became the searing tip of a raging debate in Loudoun County over transgender students' rights and parents' freedom of speech.

The parents of a teen girl who alleges she was raped by a 15-year-old boy in a dress victim's parents were ridiculed by the left after her father Scott Smith (left) was pictured being dragged out of a school board meeting on June 22

Scott Smith, the victim's father, was pictured with a bloody mouth, being dragged out of a school board meeting on June 22 - a month after the attack - after listening to school officials say no one had been sexually assaulted in the bathrooms when that's what his daughter had reported the previous month

The school board has been routinely accused of pushing an ultra-liberal agenda on kids and parents and silencing those who disagree with them.

The scandal even entered Virginia's race for governor, giving life to the campaign of Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin who accused the Loudon school board of a coverup while warning, 'What tragedy next awaits our children?'

Despite his androgynous style and declaration that he's 'pansexual,' the boy's mother insisted he isn't the gender fluid boogeyman in a culture war about transgender policies.

'He would wear a skirt one day and then the next day, he would wear jeans and a t-shirt, a Polo or hoodie,' she explained. 'He was trying to find himself and that involved all kinds of styles. I believe he was doing it because it gave him attention he desperately needed and sought.'

At the same time, she concedes her son is deeply troubled, acknowledging his extensive history of misbehavior that included sending nude photos of himself to a girl in fifth grade.

She reached her own breaking point with the him in early October when he phoned her from the juvenile detention center following his second arrest.

'He asked me how I was doing, and I said, ''I'm broken, I'm shattered, you shattered me,'' the mom recalled. ''Do you have any idea what you've done to me, what you've done to your family?

'And his response was, ''No, what did I do?'' she said.

She had been his primary point of contact, with his dad living in New Jersey.

'At that point, I was like, 'You know what? I love you, I always will, I will do everything I can to always be there for you in any capacity possible,' she said. 'But I told him - 'You need to call your father for now on. Do not call me. I need to heal, and I need you to figure this out for yourself.'

That was Sunday, October 10. She did show up for his juvenile court appearance last Monday. She sat in the gallery while fuming at the boy's father who defied her wishes by showing up with his wife.

'He'd asked about bringing his wife and I said ''she's the reason you have been absent in (our son's) life. I hate her, I don't want her in the courthouse,'' she recalled telling him. 'I'm in the mix every day dealing with three probation officers, detectives, the Commonwealth and I don't know how many lawyers, and you're in your own little safety bubble in New Jersey.'

'And he didn't listen to me,' the mother told DailyMail.com, shaking her head and adding, 'They even brought a friend.'

On October 25, the teen was found guilty for the May 28 sexual assault at Stone Bridge High School. The judge 'substantiated' charges of forcible sodomy and forcible fellatio, the juvenile equivalent of a conviction.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10158725/Virginia-polls-CLOSE-nail-biting-race-governor-race.html

CNN, NBC and ABC have called the Virginia gubernatorial race in favor of Republican Glenn Youngkin just after 12:30am Wednesday morning.

www.dailymail.co.uk

11/02/2021

PUBLISHED: 19:03 EDT, 2 November 2021 | UPDATED: 19:10 EDT, 2 November 2021
BREAKING NEWS - Virginia polls CLOSE in nail-biting governor race: Vote between Youngkin and McAuliffe too close to call after Biden said he was convinced of a Democrat win in pivotal election

* The neck and neck gubernatorial race in Virginia has come down to just .9% in polls ahead of the results
* A loss has been chalked up to potential disaster for Biden and Democrats heading into the 2022 midterms
* The president said Tuesday his agenda succeeding or failing does not indicate whether Democrats will do well or not in local and federal-level elections
* On Tuesday, Virginians began lining up at polling places to cast their ballot despite some light rain
* McAuliffe and Youngkin traversed the Virginia as the nation turns its focus to the heated governor's race
* McAuliffe tried to tie his GOP challenger to Donald Trump in an effort to deter independent voters

All eyes are on Virginia as polls close in the state's cutthroat gubernatorial election, where polling showed Republican Glenn Youngkin and Democrat Terry McAuliffe neck and neck to lead the Old Dominion.

An early exit poll by NBC showed that 56% of voters disapprove of President Biden, who has campaigned for McAuliffe, and 43% approve. The NBC poll also showed that voters are most concerned with the economy, 33 percent ranking it as their top issue, and education, 24 percent.

McAuliffe, 64, previously served as Virginia's governor from 2014 to 2018. Due to the commonwealth's unusual election laws, governors can only serve one consecutive term. He would become the first governor of Virginia in nearly half a century to be elected to two non-consecutive terms.

During his term as governor, he issued a record 120 vetoes, mostly concerning social issues like abortion and LGBTQ rights, and touted his record fighting against the GOP legislature on the campaign trail.

McAuliffe nationalized the race by invoking former President Trump's name perhaps more than any other figure running for office.

Youngkin, 54, is a political newcomer and wealthy businessman who previously served as CEO of the Carlyle Group, a private equity firm. Though he won Trump's endorsement, Youngkin has distanced himself from the former president, who faired poorly in Virginia in 2020.

Trump was set to hold an 11th-hour telerally in Virginia, but Youngkin said he did not plan to attend.

Youngkin's personal wealth launched him into the spotlight, as he provided $5.5 million to his own campaign. The Republican has sought to mobilize voters by tying the race to school choice and education issues, holding Parents Matter rallies where he hit out against critical race theory.

And in what could spell trouble for McAuliffe, over 80% of voters in an NBC exit poll said parents should have a say in what their children are taught in schools. Fifty-three percent said parents should have 'a lot' of say, 31% said 'some.'

McAuliffe said during a debate in late September, 'I don't think parents should be telling schools what they should teach.'

Joe Biden signaled on Tuesday that he believes Democratic candidate Terry McAuliffe will be the next governor of Virginia in his nail-biting election with Republican Glenn Youngkin and insisted mounting problems and his poor performance in the polls will have nothing to do with the result.

'We're gonna win,' Biden said in a hushed tone while grinning and leaning into the microphone on stage at the United Nations Climate Change conference in Glasgow, Scotland, while polls showed the race at a dead heat before state voting booths closed at 7pm.

'I think we're gonna win in Virginia,' he continued. 'The race, it's very close. It's about who shows up, who turns out.'

The president was responding to a question on if he feels McAuliffe losing in the state Biden won by 10 points in 2020 would be a rebuke on his presidency and spell disaster for Democrats going into the 2022 midterms.

'Granted I did win by a large margin [in Virginia], but the point of the matter is I think that this is going to be – what we all knew from the beginning – it's going to be a tight race. And it is tight.'

Biden then insisted that his successes or failures as president cannot be attributed to the outcome of local and congressional elections, even though they are being seen as an indicator of how his administration is performing.

Although there is a gubernatorial race in New Jersey, two congressional races in Ohio and several mayoral contests, the nation has turned its attention to Virginia as a loss for Democrat Terry McAuliffe would be catastrophic for the Party as Joe Biden's approval dwindles ahead of the 2022 midterms.

A Republican win would cause a panic among the Democrats and could sway voters across the country in what is a bellwether election for an administration mired by mounting problems, including inflation and supply chain issues.

'I've not seen any evidence that whether or not I am doing well or poorly, whether or not I've got my agenda passed or not is going to have any real impact on winning or losing,' Biden said.

The career politician added that even if his Build Back Better agenda were passed in time for elections, that it wouldn't be able to be attributed to Democrats winning at a higher rate.

Biden added: 'The off-year is always unpredictable especially when we don't have a general election going at the same time.'

Voters began lining up at polling places across Virginia on a rainy Tuesday morning to cast their ballot for governor in a heated contest coming down to a nine tenths-of-a-point.

President Joe Biden predicted during a press conference Tuesday at the UN Climate Change Conference in Glasgow, Scotland that Democratic Terry McAuliffe will win the gubernatorial race in Virginia

'I think we're gonna win in Virginia. The race, it's very close. It's about who shows up, who turns out,' Biden said of the gubernatorial race in Virginia, previewing that Democrat Terry McAuliffe will come out victorious

'Go vote, Virginia and New Jersey!' President Biden tweeted on Tuesday morning.

Biden said while overseas in Scotland for COP26 conference that he thinks the more people who turn out to vote in Virginia, the better chances are for Democrats to win and for McAuliffe to be the next governor.

Youngkin's camp thinks that the GOP candidate can come out victorious in Virginia if he improves in some areas of the state where former President Donald Trump suffered to garner voters in the 2020 election.

Specifically, Youngkin wants to top Trump's numbers by 5 per cent in Loudoun County, Fairfax County, Virginia Beach and Richmond.

If he does that, he is predicting he will have the votes state-wide needed to win the governorship.

All three counties are largely urban or suburban and were dominated by Biden - except for Virginia Beach where Biden only beat Trump by 5.4 per cent. Youngkin has tried to earn voters in these increasingly bye areas distancing himself from Trump's political style, which puts them off.

Virginia has become a battleground area where Republicans feel they can gain more political control after Biden won the state by 10.1 percentage points in the 2020 presidential election.

In Monday's polling average from FiveThirtyEight, Democrat Terry McAuliffe and Republican Glenn Youngkin remain just under 1 percentage point apart, with the GOP candidate pulling ahead in the days leading up to the election.

While 47.9 per cent of voters say they will cast their ballot for Youngkin, another 47 per cent say they will vote for McAuliffe. Back in August there was a near 7 per cent split in favor of McAuliffe.

One of the areas most vital to the election is Loudoun County, which Biden won by 25 percentage points in 2020. The wealthy area, while veering more blue recently, could easily turn red as Republican candidate Glenn Youngkin promises to give parents more control over their childrens' education.

Loudoun is the richest county in the U.S., with an average household income of $142,299.

'It's no longer Republicans against Democrats,' Youngkin told Fox News on Tuesday morning. 'It's parents from all political perspectives, from all walks of life coming together and standing up for their children.'

Education issues have become the central focus of the Virginia gubernatorial race, as Youngkin rallies against schools teaching critical race theory and McAuliffe pushes for more diversity among teachers in the state.

'Virginia and New Jersey Democrats—it's Election Day! You must turn out and vote for @TerryMcAuliffe, @PhilMurphyNJ, and Democrats down the ballot,' Vice President Kamala Harrris tweeted on Tuesday.

Youngkin's rally crowds the day before the election significantly out-showed those who came out for Democrat Terry McAuliffe, who is a former governor of the Old Dominion State.

Virginians headed to their polling places to cast their vote in the state's gubernatorial election on a rainy Tuesday. Adrienne Schweer votes with children Georgia and Sully in tow at Chesterbrook Elementary School in McLean, Virginia

Republican candidate Glenn Youngkin picked up a basketball to shoot some hoops outside a voting location at Rocky Run Middle School in Chantilly, Virginia on Tuesday

Heating up: The GOP candidate removed his jacket to continue shooting hoops as drizzles cleared and the day warmed up

VIDEO
Logan Ratick@Logan_Ratick
Replying to @Logan_Ratick
Youngkin’s getting his shots up on Election Day
6:52 AM · Nov 2, 2021

McAuliffe, a former governor of Virginia, waves his arms in the air as he rallies with supporters at a canvass kickoff event in Falls Church, Virginia on Tuesday

Republican Glenn Youngkin (left) and Democrat Terry McAuliffe (right) continued to campaign on Tuesday after a full day of cross-state rallies on Monday. The two are only .9 percentage points apart going into the election on Tuesday – with Youngkin in the lead

Youngkin greets a voter outside Rocky Run Middle School on Election Day in Chantilly, Virginia

D-day in Virginia: What to expect in the election seen as a crucial indicator of the Biden administration
More than one million people cast ballots in the Virginia governor's race before election day. The race is being watched as an early indicator for 2022 and beyond – and is viewed as a barometer for President Biden's political strength.

Former Gov. Terry McAuliffe and Republican investor Glenn Youngkin have been hammering each other for months in the contest, with the bitter 2020 election and former President Donald Trump serving as the backdrop.

When will the votes come in?

Early voting normally favors the Democratic candidate and three of the four congressional districts with the earliest in-person ballots are blue.

Polls close at 7 pm in the state. The state will first start announcing the results of absentee ballots. That comes after the state General Assembly passed a new law requiring election officials to start processing those votes a week before election day.

The close polls leading up to the race mean there is the chance of a recount, or the possibility that we will not know the results until a later date.

That could have a pronounced effect on public perception of the count, even if all the ballots would get counted anyway. Former President Donald Trump, who continues to make claims of election fraud, has repeatedly remarked about how his Election Night lead in some states 'disappeared.' In many states, officials began or were required to count Election Day votes first, then started running through their mail-in ballots.


The key counties: The areas that will decide the fate of the election

McAuliffe looks set to take Fairfax County, which has the highest population in the state (700,000), is the closest proximity to Washington D.C. and has a high number of high-educated or high-income professionals.

In the last gubernatorial race, Democratic Gov. Ralph Northam picked up 255,000 votes in the county for a margin of 36.7, a haul that equals 10 percent of the statewide turnout. The neighboring counties in northern Virginia are also heavily blue.

Loudoun County, Chesterfield County and Richmond City are all battleground suburban states where the battle over education and critical race theory is at the forefront and could sway to either McAuliffe or Youngkin.

Biden won Chesterfield County by a 6.7 point margin in 2020, so the result there will prove to be a barometer of the nationwide battle between the Republicans and Democrats and whether voters approve of the Biden administration, in the face of declining polls.

Youngkin will need to pick up votes in Chesterfield and similar size counties to be in with a fighting chance.

The Republican candidate will also look for swing votes in Virginia Beach, the largest and most populous city in the Old Dominion, to counter the heavy Democrat votes in the North.

A five-point lead for either candidate could spell trouble for the other.

Rural Tazewell County, Scott County, and Bland County are Republican strongholds and should vote for Youngkin. But the turnout will be significant for his final result.

Buckingham, Caroline, Essex, Nelson and Westmoreland, which are also rural, backed Obama in 2008 and 2012 then flipped to Trump to 2016 and 2020.

These are considered pivot counties and could give an indicator of which way the vote is heading.


McAuliffe v Youngkin: What polls before election day have told us

The Democrat McAuliffe started out as the early leader in the race, but Youngkin has closed the gap as education has become a central issue.

Youngkin pulled ahead of his Democratic challenger and former Virginia governor on Saturday in a FiveThirtyEight polling average . On October 28, the two were tied at 47 per cent.

A loss by McAuliffe could cause a panic in his party and set a tone that could impact fundraising and retirements as Democrats seek to hold control of Congress in 2022.

The race will also be seen as a referendum on Trump, who didn't campaing in person for Youngkin but gave his endorsement and issued a statement Monday calling his opponents 'perverts.'

Youngkin's tactic of appealing to Trump's base without overtly embracing the former president at all times could offer a pathway for other Republicans seeking to gain or hold power without being forced to cross Trump or reject his claims of election fraud.


What has happened in Virginia in past elections?

With control of a 'purple' state and a potential bellwether on the line, 1.1 million Virginia voters turned in ballots by the deadline last weekend.

Democrat Joe Biden won that race by 10 percentage points, but this year analysts are watching the state to see what how Democrats fare in a lower-turnout off-year election, with Biden's overall popularity substantially lower than it was a year ago.

The Democrats won Loudoun County, which has been at the center of the fight over parental control of education and school board protests, in he last gubernatorial election.

Biden beat Trump by 25 points in Loudoun County in the presidential election.

The last time McAuliffe was on the ballot, he barely won 50 percent of the vote. Youngkin finished off his campaign with a rally there on Monday night.

Hillary Clinton won the state by 5 percentage points in 2016.


The significance of early voting and whether it sways the count

The state experienced a record for early voting, and accounts for a fifth of the state's electorate, which totals 5.9 million, CNBC reported. That compares to fewer than 200,000 early voters in 2017 for the last governor's race.

It comes amid a push by candidates to bank early votes – and follows a change in state law in favor of 'no excuse' early voting, which also took effect during the 2020 presidential election.

Trump's apparent 'lead' in Virginia vanished at around midnight on Nov. 3, 2020, the Washington Post reported as these mail ballots were scanned and counted.

Election observers have again been predicting Democrat McAuliffe would have an edge in the early vote, with Youngkin likely to hold the advantage on Election Day itself.

Youngkin told Fox News last week his camp expected a ''surprisingly good' turnout among early voters. 'Historically early voting has been 75 to 80% Democrats, so for us to be so strong in the early voting just reflects the fact that there's not any enthusiasm on my opponent's side,' he said.
McAuliffe, who is backed by President Joe Biden, tried desperately to tie Youngkin's campaign to former President Donald Trump in an effort to make the candidate seem more far-right and deter independent voters from turning out for him.

'Guess how Glenn Youngkin is finishing his campaign?' McAuliffe said at his final Monday night campaign rally outside a brewery in Fairfax. 'He is doing an event with Donald Trump here in Virginia.'

But Youngkin did not do an event with Trump, instead holding his own rally 30 miles away from McAuliffe at the Loudoun County Fairgrounds with a crowd many times the size of his Democratic challenger.

In fact, Youngkin did not mention Trump once during his Monday night rally, but was careful not to alienate his potential voters who also support the former president.

Trump did not travel to Virginia nor campaign with Youngkin in the race. He did, however, hold a brief long distance tele-rally making the case for the GOP candidate on Monday evening and sent several statements endorsing him.

When asked about McAuliffe linking Youngkin's campaign to Trump, the Republican launched into a defense of the group effort mentality his Party took to get voters to turn out for this election.

'Listen, it was great that the president took time out of his busy schedule to hold a tele-town hall last night,' Youngkin told Fox News on Tuesday morning.

In his final pitch ahead of Election Day, Youngkin promised Virginians in Loudoun County that he would ban critical race theory teachings in schools and give parents more power over their children's education.

WATCH:

Youngkin took the stage Monday night in the battleground county, which has been the state's epicenter of anger regarding school curricula and policies - in particular, the teaching of critical race theory and rules regarding transgender students.

'We decide that we're going to take the power of our children's education,' he told the crowd of rally-goers.

'This is a defining moment to the future of our commonwealth. A defining moment where we can stand up and say no to this progressive liberal agenda taking over.'

Tensions are rising over trans issues in the area after the Loudoun County School Board voted Wednesday evening to allow transgender students access to school facilities and groups that match their gender identities, including on sports teams.

As the issue has become central to the election, DailyMail.com revealed on Tuesday that the mother of a boy who dressed in a skirt and raped a female classmate in the girl's bathroom and sexually assaulted another girl months later does not actually identify as female.

Voters check in at the Fairfax County Government Center on Tuesday to cast their ballots in the heated gubernatorial race

Virginia residents stand a socially-distanced line on Tuesday inside a voting location in Chantilly, Virginia, where Youngkin showed up top shoot some hoops and meet with voters

Voters check in at a polling place in a rainy Fairfax, Virginia on Tuesday

The race has become hotly contested as Democrats try to keep their seat and Republicans see it as an opportunity to gain some political ground in the Old Dominion State. Election Day is happening in several states, but the nation has turned its attention to Virginia

The mother defender her son, saying he did not dress in a disguise to get in the women's restroom and was just a hormonal, heterosexual teen who had consensual sex with the girl twice before the alleged rape.

'He's a 15-year-old boy that wanted to have sex in the bathroom, with somebody that was willing,' she said . 'And they're twisting this just enough to make it a political hot button issue.'

The story exploded when Scott Smith, the father of the rape victim, was dragged out of a school board meeting with a bloodied mouth on June 22 after listening to school officials deny that a girl had been sexually assaulted in the bathroom after his daughter had reported the rape.

The case became the searing tip of a raging debate in Loudoun County over transgender students' rights and parents' freedom of speech.

While Youngkin held his rallies Monday and focused on education issues, including the issue of trans students, McAuliffe held his own rally Monday evening where he criticized his Republican contender for his unsolicited endorsement from Trump.

'Guess how Glenn Youngkin is finishing his campaign? He is doing an event with Donald Trump here in Virginia. I'm here with you and they've got Trump over there,' he said.

'Donald Trump wants to win here tomorrow night so he can next day announce for president of the United States of America. Well, we're going to put an end to Donald Trump's future plans right here in Virginia. I've beaten Trump twice in Virginia, tomorrow we go 3 and 0.'

Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin promised Virginians that he would ban critical race theory teachings in at schools and that parents would have power over their children's educations. Here the candidate shoots some hoops at a Rocky Run Middle School on November 02, 2021 in Chantilly, Virginia, which doubles as a polling place

McAuliffe (pictured at a Monday night rally holding a glass of hard cider) has denied the existence of critical race theory in the state's education system and argued that he doesn't 'think parents should be telling schools what they should teach'

Youngkin held his rally in the battleground area of Loudoun County where residents have protested against the teaching of critical race theory and rules regarding transgender students

EXCLUSIVE: It was the woke cover-up that electrified the Virginia governor's race, now on election day the mother of skirt-wearing teen who raped a female classmate in girls' bathroom says he is a troubled boy who identifies as male and just wanted sex
The mother of the 15-year-old boy who dressed in a skirt and raped a female classmate in the girl's bathroom and was then charged with sexually assaulting another girl months later says her son doesn't identify as a female, and it wasn't just some disguise to slip into the girl's bathroom.

Speaking exclusively with DailyMail.com, the mother, who asked not to be identified for the sake of her underage son, defended his actions as that of a heterosexual, hormonal teen who, in the case of the rape, had consensual sex with the girl twice before.

'He's a 15-year-old boy that wanted to have sex in the bathroom, with somebody that was willing,' she declared, sitting in an empty kitchen in her townhouse in Loudoun County, Virginia. 'And they're twisting this just enough to make it a political hot button issue.'

The story exploded when Scott Smith, the father of the rape victim, was dragged out of a school board meeting with a bloodied mouth on June 22 after listening to school officials deny that a girl had been sexually assaulted in the bathroom after his daughter had reported the rape.

The case became the searing tip of a raging debate in Loudoun County over transgender students' rights and parents' freedom of speech.

The parents of a teen girl who alleges she was raped by a 15-year-old boy in a dress victim's parents were ridiculed by the left after her father Scott Smith (left) was pictured being dragged out of a school board meeting on June 22

Scott Smith, the victim's father, was pictured with a bloody mouth, being dragged out of a school board meeting on June 22 - a month after the attack - after listening to school officials say no one had been sexually assaulted in the bathrooms when that's what his daughter had reported the previous month

The school board has been routinely accused of pushing an ultra-liberal agenda on kids and parents and silencing those who disagree with them.

The scandal even entered Virginia's race for governor, giving life to the campaign of Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin who accused the Loudon school board of a coverup while warning, 'What tragedy next awaits our children?'

Despite his androgynous style and declaration that he's 'pansexual,' the boy's mother insisted he isn't the gender fluid boogeyman in a culture war about transgender policies.

'He would wear a skirt one day and then the next day, he would wear jeans and a t-shirt, a Polo or hoodie,' she explained. 'He was trying to find himself and that involved all kinds of styles. I believe he was doing it because it gave him attention he desperately needed and sought.'

At the same time, she concedes her son is deeply troubled, acknowledging his extensive history of misbehavior that included sending nude photos of himself to a girl in fifth grade.

She reached her own breaking point with the him in early October when he phoned her from the juvenile detention center following his second arrest.

'He asked me how I was doing, and I said, ''I'm broken, I'm shattered, you shattered me,'' the mom recalled. ''Do you have any idea what you've done to me, what you've done to your family?

'And his response was, ''No, what did I do?'' she said.

She had been his primary point of contact, with his dad living in New Jersey.

'At that point, I was like, 'You know what? I love you, I always will, I will do everything I can to always be there for you in any capacity possible,' she said. 'But I told him - 'You need to call your father for now on. Do not call me. I need to heal, and I need you to figure this out for yourself.'

That was Sunday, October 10. She did show up for his juvenile court appearance last Monday. She sat in the gallery while fuming at the boy's father who defied her wishes by showing up with his wife.

'He'd asked about bringing his wife and I said ''she's the reason you have been absent in (our son's) life. I hate her, I don't want her in the courthouse,'' she recalled telling him. 'I'm in the mix every day dealing with three probation officers, detectives, the Commonwealth and I don't know how many lawyers, and you're in your own little safety bubble in New Jersey.'

'And he didn't listen to me,' the mother told DailyMail.com, shaking her head and adding, 'They even brought a friend.'

On October 25, the teen was found guilty for the May 28 sexual assault at Stone Bridge High School. The judge 'substantiated' charges of forcible sodomy and forcible fellatio, the juvenile equivalent of a conviction.

Youngkin, who did not mention the former president during his Monday night rally, remained focused on the issues that polls show to be of high importance amongst Virginia's voters.

'We have to have a moment where the power shifts away from the marble halls of Richmond to the kitchen tables,' Youngkin told his supporters.

'What can happen tomorrow can be a statement, a statement that can be heard across this country because America needs us to vote tomorrow as well.'

He continued: 'America's watching. Why? Because all across this country families are having the same discussions that you all have.

'I get notes all day long, 'Glenn stand up for our kids too. Stand up for the rights of our children because we can't vote this year.'

Youngkin took the stage Monday night in Loudoun County, which has been the state's epicenter of anger regarding school curricula and policies. He told rally-goers: 'We decide that we're going to take the power of our children's education. This is a defining moment to the future of our commonwealth'

Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin, left, is pictured with his family: son Grant, wife Suzanne, and daughter Anna, at a campaign rally in Loudoun County

He promised that the state's schools would not be faucets for political agendas.

'What we won't do is teach our children to view everything through a lens of race where we divide them into buckets and one group is an oppressor and the other is a victim and we pit them against each other and we steal their dreams,' Youngkin said.

Youngkin also argued that Tuesday's election was the 'moment for Virginians to push back on this left, liberal, progressive agenda,' citing alleged McAuliffe agenda items that would put increase taxes and put the government between schools and families.

McAuliffe - who has repeatedly accused his opponent of using Virginia's children 'as pawns' in his campaign - has denied the existence of critical race theory in the state's education system and argued that he doesn't 'think parents should be telling schools what they should teach.'

McAuliffe and Youngkin have less than a 1 percent polling gap from each other as Tuesday's Virginia gubernatorial race comes down to the wire

McAuliffe, pictured at his campaign rally in Fairfax on Monday, criticized Youngkin for his unsolicited endorsement from former president Donald Trump. 'Guess how Glenn Youngkin is finishing his campaign? He is doing an event with Donald Trump here in Virginia. I'm here with you and they've got Trump over there'

However, at a campaign rally Sunday, the Democrat did address the hotbed topic of education, alleging that there were too many white educators in the state.

'We've got to diversify our teacher base here in Virginia. Fifty percent of students at Virginia schools — K-12 — 50 percent are students of color, and yet 80 percent of the teachers are white,' he said.

McAuliffe promised to diversify the state's teacher base and become the first state to pay college tuition and housing for minority educators.

'We all know what we have to do in a school to make everybody feel comfortable in school,' he argued.

'So, here's what I'm going to do. We'll be the first state in America — if you'll teach for five years here in Virginia in a high-demand area, whether that be geographic or course work, we will pay room, board, tuition, at any college, any university, any HBCU [historically black colleges and universities] here in the commonwealth of Virginia.'

McAuliffe and Youngkin have less than a 1 percent polling gap from each other as Tuesday's Virginia gubernatorial race comes down to the wire.

Youngkin pulled ahead of his Democratic challenger and former Virginia governor on Saturday in a FiveThirtyEight polling average.

On October 28, the two were tied at 47 percent, then on October 29, Youngkin pulled ahead of McAuliffe in a 47.5 to 46.9 percent split.

On Sunday, Youngkin raised to 47.6 percent to McAuliffe's 47 percent.

According to the latest Fox News poll, conducted by Democratic pollster Chris Anderson and Republican Daron Shaw, the majority of Virginians polled also indicated that they trusted Youngkin over McAuliffe when it comes to addressing educational issues.

'It's scary to see things so close,' Brooke Hall-Ewell, a 50-year-old nurse who attended McAuliffe's Monday event, told the Associated Press. 'We've got to keep Virginia blue.'

Democratic governor candidate Terry McAuliffe argues Virginia has too many white teachers

Terry McAuliffe, during a campaign in Manassas, Virginia on Sunday called for the Old Dominion State to 'diversify' its teacher base as the race comes down to some issues – including education and critical race theory.

The Democratic candidate promised to create a program to attract more minority teachers while lamenting that Virginia has too many white teachers.

'We got to work hard to diversify our teacher base,' McAuliffe said at the event.

'Fifty per cent of our students are students of color, 80 per cent of the teachers are White, so what I'm going to do for you – we'll be the first state in America,' he continued. 'If you go teach in Virginia for five years in a high-demand area — that could be geographic, it could be course work — we will pay room, board, tuition, any college, any university, or any HBCU here in Virginia.'

The reference to Historically Black Colleges and Universities insinuated that the free college program would be aimed at prioritizing attracting prospective non-white teachers to the state.

According to the latest Fox News poll, the majority of Virginians polled also indicated that they trusted Youngkin over McAuliffe when it comes to addressing educational issues

Youngkin pulled ahead of his Democratic challenger and former Virginia governor on Saturday in a FiveThirtyEight polling average

On October 28, the two were tied at 47 percent, then on October 29, Youngkin pulled ahead of McAuliffe in a 47.5 to 46.9 percent split. On Sunday, Youngkin raised to 47.6 percent to McAuliffe's 47 percent

However, Youngkin supporters argued that it was time for change.

'He's a straight shooter,' Dan Maloy, a 53-year-old small business owner, said Monday.

'He cares about the issues that we care about. You know, it's food on the table. What's the cost of groceries? What's the cost of gas? What do we need to do to move Virginia forward?'

If Youngkin win's election, he would be the first Republican to be elected as Virginia's governor in more than a decade.

Meanwhile, Democrats are fearful of losing their stronghold in Virginia.

A loss in the Virginia governor's race, long considered a bellwether for midterm elections, would trigger all-out panic among Democrats far beyond Virginia.

The party is already wary about their chances in elections that will decide control of the House and Senate and statehouses next year.

Read more:
Tight Virginia race becomes referendum on Biden presidency
Virginia Governor Polls | FiveThirtyEight

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10158725/Virginia-polls-CLOSE-nail-biting-race-governor-race.html/

All eyes are on Virginia as polls close in the state's cutthroat gubernatorial election, where polling showed Republican Glenn Youngkin and Democrat Terry McAuliffe neck and neck.

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