
Friend,
I grew up in Northern Virginia;
right along the border between McLean and Falls Church. My springs
were spent at McLean Little League. My Saturday mornings were spent at
Temple Rodef Shalom, struggling through Hebrew school.
Though I left Virginia many years
ago, the place I once called home is at the precipice. Next week, the
Old Dominion will choose its next governor. Democratic nominee Terry
McAuliffe has served as governor once and seeks to return to Richmond.
The Republican, Glenn Youngkin, is a self-funding former Carlyle Group
executive who wants to bring his business experience to state
government.
Youngkin, though, is little more
than a Trump in Mitt’s clothing. Beneath the Great Falls horse estate
and the zip-up vest lurks something dark and threatening to Virginia’s
future. To win in vital Northern Virginia’s Loudoun and Fairfax
counties, he desperately needs to play a moderate and reasonable
character to win over soft Republicans and Independents.
The true Glenn Youngkin is on
display in Bedford and beyond; all-out MAGA, boasting of Trump’s
endorsement and backing, and joining forces with election deniers,
anti-vax conspiracy nuts, and everything else that goes with being in
Trump’s pocket.
The Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
routine is wearing off. Why? Because Youngkin’s values are dictated
not by belief but by an inflated sense of self-worth only made
possible by hundreds of millions of dollars of private equity
money. It’s been reported that Youngkin left Carlyle because
he lost an internal political fight when he was Co-CEO.
The groups and individuals to whom
Youngkin kowtows would never have been invited to a dinner party at
his estate. When he and his family sit around the dining table with
friends, he disclaims any ownership of the insanity he publicly
embraces. He tells his cohort that, once in office, he’ll be able to
manage the crazy.
Wrong.
Glenn’s mask is already slipping.
Throughout 2021, numerous Republican candidates have employed
anti-Semitism in their political communications. Some of it was paid
for by the Virginia Republican Party, to whom Youngkin is a major
donor. The Washington
Post has called them out
for it. Time and again, though, the Republican nominee has stayed
silent on the issue. Why? Because he knows that MAGA’s loyalty is
tenuous at best and he’s made the calculation that he’s better off
clamming up in the face of hate and ugliness than risking upsetting
Virginia Republicans. And that’s who Glenn Youngkin is: A
transactional business man is now a transactional pol. In the
boardroom, that’s a wise strategy. On the campaign trail, it’s an
indicator of how someone will govern: not by values but by expedience.
As former President Barack Obama said over the weekend, “Maybe that’s
worse.”
Donald Trump, whose endorsement
Youngkin proclaims he was proud to receive, is actively pushing for
more loyalty and for that loyalty to be repaid in actions that will
help Trump in the 2024 election. Does anyone think Glenn
Youngkin won’t conduct an election audit on Trump’s orders?
In a recent statement, Trump made the extortion obvious, telling
Republican voters to withhold their votes from candidates who aren’t
sufficiently loyal to his MAGA movement. Such missives are aimed
squarely at the Glenn Youngkins of the world.
It’s why Youngkin winks and nods to
the pro-life movement; he’s a phony who wants it both ways. It’s why
he rails against critical race theory when he can’t explain it and
knows it’s not taught anyway — he is talking to the racists and he
knows it. It’s why, despite numerous Black leaders denouncing “defund
the police,” Youngkin continues to lie that McAuliffe will take money
from Virginia police. He won’t, and Youngkin knows it.
The
stakes are too high — in the Old Dominion and beyond, to let another
callous, empty vessel take a position of public trust. The Lincoln
Project is educating Virginia voters about exactly who Youngkin is and
how he will govern our home state. We have just hours left. Support
our efforts by donating today.
If Youngkin wins, Trump wins.
Thanks for being on the right side of this, Friend.
— Reed Galen
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