by James A. Bacon
Having Governor Glenn Youngkin tell him to drop out of the race for lieutenant governor might have been the best thing that happened to John Reid’s election campaign. The former Richmond talk-radio host is generating more headlines and bigger crowds than ever.
People don’t normally get worked up over the race for lieutenant governor, a statewide position that has far less visibility and power than governor and attorney general. Most voters don’t even know who the candidates are.
That’s no longer an issue for Reid who, though he was well known in the Richmond area, faced a major challenge with an underfunded campaign in introducing himself to voters across the state. In stark contrast to the leftist-perpetuated stereotype of Republicans as homophobes, it turns out that most GOP activists don’t care that Reid is gay. They may not be wild about the online expression of Reid’s gay lifestyle — attending drag shows, posting images of hunky nude male models on a five-year-old social media account (which he denies doing) — but they see him as a fighter for every other issue important to conservatives.
Three weeks ago, Reid couldn’t beg, borrow or steal publicity from the legacy media. Now he’s getting more attention than he ever imagined. Surprisingly little of that attention is negative, and his larger message is getting through.









