Democratic U.S. Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia is vying for a third term against a GOP challenger who is trying to become the first Republican in the state since 2002 to win a seat to the upper chamber.
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Democratic U.S. Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia is vying for a third term against a GOP challenger who is trying to become the first Republican in the state since 2002 to win a seat to the upper chamber.
Hung Cao broke through to win a crowded Republican primary and face off against Kaine, who won reelection in 2018 by 16 percentage points.
Kaine, Virginia’s junior U.S. senator, said last year that he was preparing for a tough race and noted that “Virginians will vote for Republicans in statewide elections,” as they did in 2021 for Gov. Glenn Youngkin.
“Nobody can take that for granted,” Kaine said when he announced his reelection bid.
Cao scored former President Donald Trump’s endorsement during the primary. And the former president stated then that Cao would help to stop inflation, secure the border and “defend our always under siege Second Amendment.”
Donald Callihan, 62, of Virginia Beach, said he voted for Cao because of his Republican positions on border security, the economy and other issues. Callihan also praised Cao’s biography.
Cao served in the Navy for 25 years, deploying as a special operations officer in Iraq, Afghanistan and Somalia before retiring at the rank of captain.
Cao is also the son of immigrants who fled Vietnam in the 1970s. Callihan noted that Cao’s family came to the U.S. legally and that Cao embodies the American dream.
“They came in the right way,” said Callihan, who is an Army veteran and works as a harbor master at the local port. “And with him, it just shows that if you’re willing to work hard, you can make it.”
Carolyn Jones, 58, said she’s supporting Kaine in part because he’ll fight for women’s reproductive rights and to preserve the Affordable Care Act.
Cao has aligned himself with Trump, which is a deal breaker for Jones.
Like Cao, Jones is a Navy veteran and served for 24 years, rising to the rank of Chief Warrant Officer. She said the Navy prides itself on its diversity.
“All of the things the Navy ingrained in us —- service, integrity, honor, courage —- seemed to go right over his head when he got out,” Jones said of Cao. “If he’s hanging out with Trump, we can’t be good. Something is wrong there.”
Political scientists have said there’s a narrow path to victory for the GOP given Virginia’s moderate electorate, aversion to Trump in the 2020 election and Kaine’s salience with voters.
“This is definitely an uphill climb for the Republican Party in this state, particularly with a candidate who could be more easily tied to Trump,” Rebecca Bromley-Trujillo, a Christopher Newport University political science professor, told The Associated Press in June.
In their only debate in October, Cao and Kaine sparred over everything from illegal immigration to tariffs on foreign goods, with each candidate sticking mostly to the tenets of their respective political parties.
Cao criticized COVID vaccine mandates for service members and the chaotic troop withdrawal from Afghanistan when asked about the military’s collective failure to recently meet recruiting goals. He also condemned diversity, equity and inclusion efforts at the debate in Norfolk, which is home to the nation’s largest Navy base.
“When you’re using a drag queen to recruit for the Navy, that’s not the people we want,” Cao said. “What we need is alpha males and alpha females who are going to rip out their own guts, eat them and ask for seconds. Those are the young men and women that are going to win wars.”
Kaine, who is on the Senate Armed Services Committee, responded by saying that railing at DEI “is a red herring,” and the real challenge is informing more Americans about the benefits of the military when only about 1% of the population serves in the armed forces.
“We need to do a better job of talking about the GI Bill and other benefits as well as the tremendous leadership training that you get in the military,” Kaine said.
Cao made a decent showing in 2022 in his race against Democratic U.S. Rep. Jennifer Wexton in blue-leaning northern Virginia. He lost by 6.5 percentage points in a district that Biden won two years earlier by 19 percentage points.
Kaine has won all of his statewide races, including as governor and technically as a vice presidential candidate in 2016, when he and Hillary Clinton carried the Commonwealth but lost the general election to Trump and Mike Pence.
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