Background , the adopted hometown of
George Washington From the mid-1880s through the mid-1960s, Virginia politics were dominated by
Conservative Democrats. After
World War I, under the leadership of
Harry Flood Byrd, who became
Governor of Virginia and later a
U.S. senator, the group became known as the
Byrd Organization. With a power base in a network of the constitutional officers of most of Virginia's counties, they controlled Virginia's state government. The Byrd Organization largely followed conservative and anti-debt principles espoused by Byrd, who grew up in a rural setting during the fiscally stressed era following
Reconstruction. Although a member of the
Democratic Party and an initial supporter of President
Franklin D. Roosevelt, Senator Byrd became a bitter opponent of the
New Deal and related national policies, particularly those involving fiscal and social issues. He became Virginia's senior senator after the death of Senator
Carter Glass of
Lynchburg in 1946. Following
World War II, Virginia's suburban areas, including Northern Virginia,
Richmond, and
Hampton Roads, grew in size and diversity. People of the emerging middle class were increasingly less willing to accept the rural focus of the General Assembly, nor Byrd's extreme positions on public debt and social issues. The latter was nowhere more graphically illustrated than with Byrd's violent opposition to
racial integration of the state's
public schools. His leadership in the failed policy of
Massive Resistance to racial desegregation of the public schools and efforts to circumvent related rulings of the
United States Supreme Court ultimately caused closure of some public schools in the state and alienated many middle-class voters. The Byrd Organization had never been strong in Virginia's independent cities, and beginning in the 1960s, city and suburban factions increasingly supported efforts to make broad changes in Virginia. In this climate, the
Republican Party of Virginia began making inroads. Rulings by both state and federal courts that "Massive Resistance" was unconstitutional and a move to compliance with the court orders in early 1959 by Governor
J. Lindsay Almond, and the General Assembly could be described as marking the Byrd Organization's "last stand", although the remnants of the Organization continued to wield power for a few years longer. When Senator Byrd resigned in 1965, he was replaced by his son
Harry F. Byrd Jr. in the
U.S. Senate. In 1969, however, the 80-year domination of Virginia politics by the Byrds ended with the election of
Linwood Holton, a conservative Democrat who subsequently became a
Republican and was reelected in 1973, representing the first Republican governor had been elected in the 20th century. During the last quarter of the 20th century, Virginia's Republicans gained ground against the Democrats. Republican
John Warner from Northern Virginia gained one of the seats in the U.S. Senate in 1978. After longtime state senator
L. Douglas Wilder became governor in 1989, the first African American to be elected a governor in the United States, Republicans subsequently gained control of the Governor's mansion after the 1993 election. Republicans finally gained control of the General Assembly in the 1999 elections. For a number of years, the recurring Republican theme was to reduce waste in state government and taxes. However, this seemed to reach a peak during the administration of
Jim Gilmore, with a move to repeal an unpopular car tax accompanied by a failure to provide promised replacement funds to the counties, cities and towns. Subsequently, two Democrats were elected consecutively as governor, and control in the General Assembly shifted back to a more bipartisan balance of power. As governor, both
Mark Warner and
Tim Kaine were confronted with stabilizing state economics and dealing with a deteriorating transportation funding situation partially caused by the state's failure to index state fuel taxes to inflation, with a "cents per gallon" tax rate unchanged since the administration of Democratic Governor
Gerald Baliles in 1986.
21st century politics In the 21st century, Northern Virginia is known for becoming increasingly favorable to the
Democratic Party at both the state and national level. Fairfax County supported
John Kerry in the
2004 presidential election, and also voted heavily for
Barack Obama in the
2008 presidential election, the first time a Democratic candidate for president carried the Commonwealth of Virginia since
Lyndon Johnson in
1964. The area also voted for Democrats
Jim Webb in 2006 for U.S. Senate,
Tim Kaine in 2005 for governor, and
Mark Warner in 2001 for governor. In these three races for statewide office, the margins tallied in Northern Virginia provided the Democratic candidate with a winning margin of victory. Democrat
Jim Webb defeated incumbent Senator
George Allen by the slim margin of 49.6 to 49.2 percent in 2006. However, that margin increased to 58.1 to 40.7 percent in favor of the Democratic challenger in the counties and cities of Northern Virginia, whereas Webb ran behind Allen somewhat, 46.1 to 52.7 percent, in the remainder of the commonwealth. Webb carried
Fairfax County,
Prince William County, and
Loudoun County, as well as the more urban areas of
Arlington,
Alexandria, and
Falls Church. Allen's sole wins in Northern Virginia were the cities of
Manassas and
Manassas Park, winning the latter two only by the narrow margins of 3.54 and 2.38 percent, respectively. In the
2004 presidential election, 53 percent of Northern Virginia voters voted for
John Kerry, the Democratic candidate and 46 percent voted for
George W. Bush, the
Republican candidate. This contrasted with the rest of Virginia, which gave 43 percent to Kerry and 56 percent to Bush. Kerry also carried
Fairfax County, the most populous county in Virginia, and
Fairfax City, the first time those jurisdictions had voted Democratic since
Johnson's national landslide in 1964. The strongest support in the area for the Democrats lies inside
the Beltway, in Arlington,
Alexandria, and parts of Fairfax County. The more distant areas (i.e.,
Loudoun County,
Stafford County and
Prince William County) historically have been more conservative; however, as they have increased in population, they have become more liberal. Both Mark Warner in 2001 and John Kerry in 2004 lost Loudoun and Prince William counties. Tim Kaine won
Prince William County, and
Loudoun counties in 2005. Tim Kaine won
Stafford County in 2018. In 2006 despite not polling as strongly as Mark Warner statewide, Democratic senate candidate Jim Webb won both Loudoun and Prince William counties. In 2005, 65 percent of the voters of Northern Virginia voted for Democrat
Tim Kaine for governor over
Jerry Kilgore, who received only 32 percent of the vote, easily 14 points lower than George W. Bush's showing only a year earlier. The Democrats in Virginia also have made considerable gains in the
Virginia House of Delegates which helped turn both chambers of the state legislature to the Democrats. Since 2015 Democrats have flipped districts in the suburbs of Washington D.C in counties such as
Stafford County,
Prince William County, and
Loudoun County. These flips have shown the changing demographics and voting bloc in these counties and the expansion of suburbanization and Northern Virginia. For example, the 28th district a seat held by Republicans since 1984 in Stafford County and parts of Fredericksburg and seat of former Republican Virginia Speaker of the House
William J. Howell. 10 years ago Republicans won the Virginia House of Delegates election with 74% of the vote in the district. In the 2019 election
Joshua G. Cole, a fierce Democrat and supporter of the Green New Deal, flipped the district by 4 points. Another district the 2nd district that encompasses Prince William County and Stafford County was once a swing district held by both Republicans and Democrats. In 2017, Democrats flipped the district with 64% of the vote and was re-elected with 60% of the vote with
Jennifer Caroll Foy a supporter of the Equal Rights Amendment which she passed this year with the new Democratic trifecta in the state. The
7th,
8th, the
10th, and the
11th congressional districts lie within Northern Virginia.(As of 5/15/2023) The current representatives are from the 8th district is
Don Beyer (D), from the 7th district is
Eugene Vindman (D), from the 10th district is
Suhas Subramanyam (D), and the current representative from the 11th district is
James Walkinshaw (D). Three of four districts voted for Jim Webb in the 2006 Senate election. In the 2005 gubernatorial election, the entire region continued to move away from the Republicans. Fairfax County, Arlington County, the cities of Alexandria, Fairfax City, and Falls Church, and for the first time, Loudoun County and Prince William County, went to Tim Kaine, the Democratic candidate. The area continued to be more Democratic the closer it was to Washington, D.C., but Richmond resident Kaine was able to accomplish what Northern Virginian Mark Warner had been unable to do just four years earlier in 2001: carry Loudoun County and Prince William County (as well as win over 60 percent of the vote in Fairfax County). In 2008, economist
Nancy Pfotenhauer, a spokesperson and adviser for the
John McCain presidential campaign, created controversy by referring to the areas of Virginia not included in Northern Virginia as "real Virginia", picking up on a Republican
talking point that
Sarah Palin promoted; namely that red states are the "real America" and more "pro-America".
Joe McCain, brother of John McCain, also called Arlington and Alexandria in Northern Virginia "communist country". In the
2008 presidential election, the majority of Northern Virginia voters voted for Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama. Over 70 percent of registered voters in Arlington, Alexandria and Falls Church voted for Obama. Fairfax County, Loudoun County, Manassas and Prince William County also went to Obama, with Obama receiving 60 percent of the vote in Fairfax County compared to Republican candidate John McCain's 39 percent. In 2011, a poll by
The Washington Post found that 47 percent of Virginians favored the legalization of same-sex marriage, 43 percent opposed it, and 10 percent had no opinion. It found 55 percent favored allowing same-sex couples to adopt children, while 35 percent opposed that and 10 percent had no opinion. The same poll found that 64 percent of residents
Arlington,
Alexandria,
Fairfax,
Fairfax County support same-sex marriage, 63 percent of residents of
Loudoun,
Prince William,
Manassas,
Manassas Park,
Stafford,
Fauquier,
Culpeper,
Madison,
Rappamannock,
Warrenton,
Clarke County,
Frederick, and
Winchester support same-sex marriage, while only 42 percent of the rest of Virginia supports same-sex marriage. Arlington, Clarke, Culpeper, Fairfax, Fauquier, Frederick, Loudoun, Prince William, Rappahannock, Spotsylvania, Stafford, and Warren counties, as well as Alexandria, Falls Church, Fairfax, Fredericksburg, Manassas, Manassas Park, and Winchester cities, form Northern Virginia's contribution to the Washington metropolitan area;
Hillary Clinton received 849,758 votes compared to
Donald Trump's 503,120 votes in the twelve-county and seven-city region, a 63–37 percent split in the
2016 presidential election. Despite the 26 percent margin of victory for Clinton, seven counties voted for Trump. This compares to Clinton's 825,974 votes to Trump's 236,827 votes (78 to 22 percent) in Calvert, Charles, Frederick, Montgomery, and Prince George's counties in Maryland as well as her 282,830 votes to his 12,723 votes (96 to 4 percent) in Washington, D.C. Among the aforementioned counties in Maryland, Trump carried two of them. The entire Washington metropolitan area – all seventeen counties and seven cities in Maryland and Virginia, plus the District of Columbia – voted 1,958,562 ballots to 752,670 ballots (72 to 28 percent) for Clinton and Trump, respectively. Compared to the entire state, Northern Virginia's twelve counties and seven cities represent 36 percent of the total electorate. ==Culture==