The first returns from Virginia Beach are trickling in and they show McCain with a lead there. That's good for McCain, bad for Obama. Virginia Beach is another one of those swing localities that makes the difference in the state.
The three recent races we have to hold things up against are Bush-Kerry in 2004, Kaine-Kilgore for governor in 2005, and Webb-Allen for Senate in 2006. Bush won the beach. Kaine won the beach. And both won their elections. Webb lost it, but only narrowly. He eked out his victory in Northern Virginia.
And, increasingly, that's where we'll be looking tonight.
Obama needed to cut his McCain's margins in Southwest Virginia. He didn't do it. McCain is winning counties in the coalfields that no Republican has won since the Nixon landslide over McGovern in 1972. Buchanan and Dickenson counties have stuck with Democrats in (almost) the worst of times. Not this year.
That's not to declare McCain the winner in Virginia yet. It just means Obama really has to perform in Northern Virginia.
So far, we don't have much to go on there.
Only 2 percent of the vote in Fairfax County is in, and, well 2 percent is still only 2 percent. So far, Obama is taking 58 percent of the vote in Fairfax -- that's better than the 53 percent John Kerry did. Somebody could do the math and compute whether, if that margin held, what that would mean in terms of raw numbers.
Likewise, we only have 4 percent of the vote from Alexandria. So far, only has 74 percent of the vote, better than Kerry's 67 percent. Again, anyone want to do some math. Would that margin make up the votes that Obama is losing in Southwest Virginia that Democrats usually get?
-- Dwayne Yancey, senior editor