By Chris Braunlich
For more than a half century, it has been the case that Virginia elects a Governor who is from the opposite party as the President elected the year before.
With one exception.
In 2013, the year after Barack Obamaโs re-election, Virginians sent Democrat Terry McAuliffe to the Governorโs Mansion.ย ย The background to that should send a chill down the spine of gubernatorial candidate Abigail Spanberger.
As National Review observed, โDemocrats are confident that they can work with their allies in the media to blame any shutdown on Republicansโฆ.But historically, the public has tended to place the blame on the party that rejects a clean bill and forces a shutdown to make policy demands on issues that arenโt directly related to disagreements over the government spending levels.โ
Back in October of 2013, Republicans in the House of Representatives refused to support a budget keeping the government open.ย Their demand was to delay or make major changes to the Affordable Care Act in exchange for passing the resolution โ disagreements unrelated to differences over funding.ย Then-Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid called Republicans โanarchistsโ and advocated a hard line against Republicans declaring โWe will not go to conference with a gun at our heads.โย
Reid convinced then-President Obama to not meet with Republicans, and on the morning of October 1, Obama declared โOne faction, of one party, in one house of Congress, in one branch of government, shut down major parts of the government โ all because they didnโt like one law.โ















