Democrat Wins Pivotal Va. Race, Associated Press Numbers Suggest
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RICHMOND, Va. — Democrat Jim Webb won Virginia’s pivotal Senate race yesterday, unseating Senator Allen, a Republican, and giving the Democrats total control of Congress for the first time in 12 years.
After the defeat of Senator Burns, a Republican of Montana, the Virginia contest was the last undecided Senate race in the country. Mr. Webb’s victory gave the Democrats 51 Senate seats and majorities in both the House and Senate for the first time since 1994.
Control of the Senate hung in the balance for most of yesterday as Mr. Webb clung to an excruciatingly small lead.
AP contacted election officials in all 134 localities where voting occurred, obtaining updated numbers yesterday. About half the localities said they had completed their post-election canvassing and nearly all had counted outstanding absentees. Most were expected to be finished by Friday.
The new AP count showed Mr. Webb with 1,172,538 votes and Mr. Allen with 1,165,302, a difference of 7,236. Virginia has had two statewide vote recounts in modern history, but both resulted in vote changes of no more than a few hundred votes.
An adviser to Mr. Allen, speaking on condition of anonymity because his boss has not formally decided to end the campaign, said the senator wanted to wait until most canvassing was completed before announcing his decision, possibly as early as this evening.
The adviser said Mr. Allen was disinclined to request a recount if the final vote spread was similar to that of election night.
Moving swiftly to establish himself as the winner, Mr. Webb began assembling a transition team hours after he proclaimed victory around 1:30 a.m.
“The vote’s been counted and Jim won,” a campaign spokeswoman, Kristian Denny Todd, said. Some absentee ballots remained to be counted, she said, but Mr. Webb considers it “a formality more than anything else.”
Mr. Allen’s campaign, however, said the senator would wait for the completion of a full canvass — that is, a recheck of the numbers by local election officials. By law, it must be done by next Tuesday.
The chief counsel for the Republican Party of Virginia, Lee Goodman, said the senator had not decided whether to ask for a recount.
There are no automatic recounts in Virginia, but state law allows a candidate who finishes a half-percentage point or less behind to request a recount paid for by state and local governments.
Mr. Goodman said the GOP was concerned about a number of glitches involving new touch-screen computer voting machines, including power failures and calibration problems. But he said he knew of no fraud.
Mr. Webb was with family and military buddies yesterday and did not plan any public appearances.
A 60-year-old Naval Academy graduate, novelist and decorated Vietnam veteran who served as Navy secretary under President Reagan, Mr. Webb bitterly opposed the war in Iraq and switched to the Democratic Party. He tried to tie Mr. Allen to President Bush and the war.
Mr. Allen, the 54-year-old son of a Hall of Fame coach of the Washington Redskins, is a former governor once popular for abolishing parole, and he had once been expected to cruise to a second term this year as a warm-up for a run for the White House in 2008.
Then in August, he mockingly referred to a Webb campaign volunteer of Indian descent as “macaca,” regarded by some as a racial slur. Mr. Allen was also accused of fumbling his response when it became known that his mother’s family was Jewish. Mr. Allen was raised Christian. And some former football teammates from the University of Virginia charged that Mr. Allen had commonly used a slur for blacks — something he denied.
Mr. Allen battled back, accusing Mr. Webb of denigrating women in a 1979 magazine article decrying the admission of women to the Naval Academy. Mr. Allen also tried to portray sexual descriptions in Mr. Webb’s six best-selling war novels as demeaning to women.
The State Board of Elections is set to meet on November 27 to certify the results of the statewide canvass. Mr. Allen would have 10 days after that to go to court to ask for a recount, which would be overseen by three judges.
But Mr. Allen “hasn’t made a decision to litigate this at all,” Mr. Goodman said.