
Leaving us McAuliffe and Cuccinelli, both of whom have their own, ahem, issues.
For McAuliffe, it’s what one friend at a recent dinner party referred to as the “slimy factor.”
“He just seems slimy to me. I want to take a shower just thinking about voting for him,” said the friend, a lifelong Democrat and Barack Obama campaign volunteer in 2008 and 2012.
I know more than a few liberal Democrats who feel the same way.
Cuccinelli doesn’t have to worry about his party’s wing – conservatives love the guy. It’s the middle that he has to worry about. Moderate Republicans were aligning themselves behind Bolling and preparing themselves for a pitched fight for the GOP nomination. How they react to what Bolling has been pushing as a forced departure from the governor’s race will play a role in determining Cuccinelli’s fate.
Expect to see Bolling stalwarts sit out the race. Also expect to see a number of Democratic volunteers on the sidelines to avoid the slime.
Both sides will have less troops to build their campaigns around. Neither side will have trouble raising money – McAuliffe tapping into his past as having been the Clintons’ chief fundraiser, Cuccinelli tapping into the crazy-nut fringe that loves him for his efforts to combat ObamaCare and climate-change research.
Less troops, more money, more negative ads … it’s going to be an ugly 2013 in Virginia.