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Split-Ticket Voters Could Affect Kaine, Allen

Voters for President Barack Obama or Gov. Mitt Romney may split their ticket and not vote a straight Democrat or Republican down the ballot. How will "split ticket voters" affect Senate candidates George Allen and Tim Kaine?

 

Driving through Northern Virginia, it's quite rare to see yards with signs revealing that a homeowner plans to vote both Republican and Democrat on Nov. 6.

Even if they don't openly proclaim their split-ticket status, they're out there, according to polling.

These "split ticket voters" plan to step into the polling booth on Election Day to vote for a Republican and a Democrat: Voting for President Barack Obama and Republican Senate candidate George Allen, or for Republican presidential candidate Gov. Mitt Romney and Democratic Senate candidate Tim Kaine.

"It is a real possibility that Romney could win Virginia while George Allen loses," said Mark Rozell, professor of Public Policy at George Mason University. "Some polls have shown that Tim Kaine runs slightly better than President Obama in the state, suggesting that there is a small but notable percentage of potential split-ticket voters."

Part of the reason, Rozell said, "may be that George Allen's image still suffers from the events of his unexpected loss in 2006. Also, Tim Kaine has been running a bit to the right of Obama on some issues and has carved out some swing voter support that the president may not be getting right now. It may be a small percentage, yet enough to carry Kaine, even in an Obama loss in the state."

"It is hard though to imagine a combined Obama and Allen victories scenario," Rozell said.

Overall, voters have split their ballots in presidential and U.S. Senate races less than 30 percent of the time since popular vote senatorial races were introduced about a century ago, doing so in just 245 out of 829 elections (29.6 percent), according to the Humphrey School of Public Affairs at the University of Minnesota.

Kaine told The New York Times this summer he thought he could appeal to Romney supporters.

“There will be thousands of Romney-Kaine voters,” Kaine said in the story. “Whether it will be 2,000 or 50,000, I don’t know.”

Kaine campaign aides told the newspaper that they would find Romney-Kaine voters in the suburbs of Washington and Richmond, where voters might see Kaine and Romney as pro-business technocrats, and Allen and Obama as partisan flag carriers for their parties.

The National Journal puts it this way: "...in the Northern Virginia suburbs, voters who care about transportation issues as much as anything else, might be inclined to register their disapproval of Obama — especially with the pending budget sequester threatening defense industry jobs — but also to stick with Kaine."

More than six in 10 ticket-splitters are younger independents, according to polling, National Journal says:

  • under 50 years old (while the electorate as a whole is split evenly between those over and under 50)
  • self-identified independents, with whom Kaine outperforms Obama.

University of Virginia's Larry Sabato says the presidential and Senate races across the country are not related. “Right now these [Senate] contests are running on different tracks,” he told the Washington Times earlier this month. “Sometimes you have [presidential and Senate races] on parallel tracks. I don’t think these are right now. But they will be to a greater extent on Election Day.”

In previous years, here's how Virginia voted:

  • 2000: Virginia voted a straight Republican ticket, voting for candidate George Bush and Republican candidate for Senate, George Allen, according to Virginia State Board of Elections records. Fairfax County voted for Bush and Democrat Chuck Robb, according to SBE records.
  • 2008: Virginia and Fairfax County voted a straight Democratic ticket, voting for Obama for president and Mark Warner in a Senate race.

In 2006, with no presidential race, Jim Webb defeated Allen, 49.59 percent to 49.20 percent for the Senate seat.

For complete election coverage of both state and national elections from a Northern Virginia perspective, click on the elections tab at the top of the page.

Related Topics: George Allen, Tim Kaine, Virginia Senate Race, and election 2012

Jsmith

7:39 am on Friday, October 26, 2012

Before you vote for Kaine, think back to when he was governor and wanted to raise taxes. The legislature wouldn't allow it, so he shut every rest area in the state for the rest of his term. We don't need anyone so petty in the Senate. While I don't like Allen, at least he didn't make me drive to North Carolina to pee.

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Laurie Dodd

12:36 am on Tuesday, October 30, 2012

"Mr. Allen paints himself as a fiscal conservative, but general fund spending jumped when he was governor, in the boom years of the ’90s. It was flat during Mr. Kaine’s term, which coincided with the sharp economic downturn of 2008-09. Moreover, by embracing the Bush-era tax cuts and opposing their repeal, Mr. Allen helped dig the massive fiscal ditch in which this country is mired." I prefer the fiscal management offered by Tim Kaine, and I feel he would be a much more effective senator than George Allen, whose disrespect for minorities disqualifies him as a true representative for our diverse citizens.

Cindy Williams

8:26 am on Friday, October 26, 2012

Really? There are plenty of McDonald's from here to NC. I frankly think rest areas are a waste of money anyway. Shut them all down permanently. We'd save a lot of money and not lose a thing.

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Greendayer

8:55 am on Friday, October 26, 2012

Kaine did a poor job of managing the budget. When McDonnell took office, the budget deficit was cured, the rest stops were opened, and the there was genuine bipartisanship to moved the Commonwealth ahead.

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Robert Mowbray

3:55 pm on Friday, October 26, 2012

bipartisanship? I haven't seen any evidence of that.

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Laurie Dodd

2:25 pm on Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Comparing Kaine to McDonnell is pointless. It is Allen's record that is relevant here, and Kaine is head and shoulders above Allen.

Tammi Petrine

12:15 pm on Friday, October 26, 2012

"Macacca" Allen? Never, ever. Shameful.

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PHYLLIS PILKINS

8:16 pm on Friday, October 26, 2012

Think about when he closed the rest areas down and yes there are McDonalds but when your traveling its nice to have the rest areas in sure he has benefited from them. lil. weasel. lol

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the-stix

5:54 am on Saturday, October 27, 2012

Every time you pay tolls on the Dulles Toll Road, and especially as they are increased astronomically in the future to pay for the Silver Line, you should remember Tim Kaine. It was he who spearheaded giving unilateral toll authority to the publically unaccountable MWAA.

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