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Election 2019: talking points and things to know

Photo illustration by Holly Marcus

By Andrew Jenner and Ryan Alessi // Photos by Holly Marcus

It’s Tuesday and voting is on in the 2019 state legislative elections. For Harrisonburg voters, names on the ballot in the two General Assembly races should look familiar, as both the House of Delegates and State Senate races are rematches from last time around.

Del. Tony Wilt (R)

In House District 26, Republican incumbent Tony Wilt is looking to win his sixth consecutive election. As was the case two years ago, he’s facing a challenge from Democrat Brent Finnegan. Voters in the district — which includes all of Harrisonburg and the northwestern part of Rockingham County — are close to evenly divided between the city and county, and their tendencies stand in stark contrast. While Harrisonburg voters overwhelmingly prefer Democrats, Republican candidates dominate the county precincts.

In the 2017 race, Finnegan won 63.6 percent of 10,175 votes cast in Harrisonburg. Wilt, though, earned 72.9 percent of the county vote (10,165 total), earning him reelection by a relatively comfortable margin of nearly 2,000 votes.

A year ago, however, the US Senate race between incumbent Tim Kaine (D) and Corey Stewart (R), drew more than 3,000 additional voters in Harrisonburg. Kaine won 69.5 percent of those votes and didn’t get beat quite as badly in the county (31.5 percent), where turnout was up by a much smaller margin. End result: Kaine won the HD26 precincts with 51.8 percent of the vote.

Brent Finnegan (D)

When voting ends tonight, it’s a safe bet that Finnegan and Wilt will have scored big victories in their respective city and county strongholds. Winning the entire district, then, will come down to a) how badly they run up the score on friendly turf and b) how many voters turn out (or not) to amplify (or dampen) the district-wide impact of their respective friendly-turf slam dunks.

As compared to 2017, the total number of active voters in the city has increased by 832, or 3.8 percent. Meanwhile, according to data from the Virginia Department of Elections, the number of active voters in the county precincts within HD26 has increased by 5.1 percent, or 956 voters. The chart below shows active voters registered in HD26 over the past three years:

201720182019
City21,89823,20422,730
County (portion)18,77619,35219,732
Total40,67442,55642,462

Other HD26 items of note:

And a State Senate rematch

Sen. Mark Obenshain

Sen. Mark Obenshain (R) has been in office since 2004 and chairs the Senate Courts of Justice committee. In 2015, he defeated Democratic challenger April Moore by a large margin, earning 68.7 percent of the vote.

Senate District 26 includes Harrisonburg and five counties stretching north and east: Rockingham, Shenandoah, Page, Warren and Rappahannock. In 2015, Obenshain won in all of those localities except his Harrisonburg, where Moore won by just under 100 votes.

In this election cycle, Obenshain vastly out-raised Moore, bringing in more than $781,000, including a $25,000 donation from the National Rifle Association and another $20,000 from Dominion Energy within the last week. His campaign has spread much of that money around to Republican colleagues in the Senate, with donations totaling $180,000 to the Virginia Senate Republican Caucus and more than $150,000 to individual senators’ campaigns.

Moore, meanwhile has raised a total of about $81,000.

Other Rockingham Co. districts

While the 26th District is expected to be the most competitive race in the Harrisonburg area Tuesday, voters in other communities across Rockingham County will be weighing in on other House races because the county is split among four districts. 

Republicans represent all four districts. All are contested this fall and one — the 25th District — will be guaranteed to have a new person elected in the wake of Del. Steve Landes’s decision not to run again. 

Here’s a quick rundown of the other districts:

A new role for the delegate in the 26th? 

Should Del. Tony Wilt hang on to the 26th House District seat, there’s a chance he’ll return to Richmond in a new role — as a member of the minority party. Democrats have outraised Republicans — including incumbents — in key districts across Northern Virginia, Richmond and Hampton Roads. That Democrats are on the offense in so many districts only raises the odds that the party could flip the two seats needed to take control of the lower chamber. 

If you’re looking for other districts with interesting storylines to watch Tuesday night, here’s a look at a few other districts around Virginia that will help decide which party controls the House of Delegates: 


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