by Paul Goldman
When I ran Doug Wilder first historic statewide campaign, we initially didnโt take the โWilder is pro-criminalโ attacks very seriously. Doug was a war veteran. A long-time, well-known state senator. He had a solid mainstream record on criminal justice issues. Calling him pro-criminal was absurd. What reasonable person could possibly believe it? I was sure the Republicans would seem desperate.ย Eventually, I had to change my perspective — and our strategy to combat the attacks.
Accordingly, my old campaign-manager instincts perked up when reading the recent article in Baconโs Rebellion by Jacob Grandstaff about Democratic Attorney General candidate Jay Jones. The article was entitled, โJones a Woke Champion of Criminals,โ with โJonesโ soft-on-crime, anti-police stances will undermine public safety in Virginiaโ the sub headline.
As the saying goes, the article went downhill from there. One quote should suffice: โVirginians deserve an attorney general who will prioritize public safety and uphold the rule of lawโnot someone who will make their state a magnet for criminals.โ (Emphasis added).ย
Wow. But politics is a contact sport. Played at the hardball level when youโre running statewide. Rough back in the 1980s for sure. Especially since Doug was trying to rip down the โNo Blacks Need Applyโ sign hanging for hundreds of years on the door to statewide office.
We can debate whether itโs rougher or less so in the MAGA age.ย
The basic point being however: It will be rough enough in 2025 by any relative standard one may choose to adopt.
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