ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: WEDNESDAY, November 3, 1993                   TAG: 9311030348
SECTION: VIRGINIA                    PAGE: A-7   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: ROB EURE STAFF WRITER
DATELINE: RICHMOND                                LENGTH: Medium


DEMOCRATS POINT FINGERS AND PONDER FUTURE RACES

Virginia Democrats barely waited for their wake to begin Tuesday night before deciding whom to blame and who should pay.

Just after the polls closed, but 2 1/2 hours before Mary Sue Terry delivered her gracious concession speech, the factions loyal to Gov. Douglas Wilder and U.S. Sen. Charles Robb began assessing blame and offering defense.

Sylvia Clute, a Richmond lawyer challenging Robb and Wilder in the nomination battle for Robb's Senate seat next year, declared the loss "the death knell for Robb-Wilder. . . . They are finished."

Generally, Democrats agreed that a poorly run Terry campaign was at least as much at fault as was the intense unpopularity of Robb and Wilder. The pair have feuded for years over the eavesdropping of a Wilder telephone call in 1988. A tape of that conversation ended up in Robb's Senate office and was leaked to reporters, spurring a federal grand jury investigation of the senator.

One district chairman argued that the party would be better off without Robb and Wilder next year.

"A lot of people active in politics and the community are very, very fed up with the Robb-Wilder construct," said Dan Alcorn, party chairman in the 11th Congressional District in Northern Virginia.

Among the names being floated as potential alternative candidates in that campaign Tuesday night were former Gov. Gerald Baliles, who met over the weekend with the state's best-known political analyst - Larry Sabato of the University of Virginia - as well as Alcorn and Democratic Party Chairman Mark Warner.

While he breakfasted Sunday with Sabato, a possible indication of his interest, Baliles has not begun to call his key backers from earlier years to talk about a race.

Baliles "is pretty well-situated in life now, and I'd be surprised if he decided to give up that position now to take on a good personal and political friend" in Robb, said state party Vice Chairman Ken Geroe.

A crowd of Democrats that grew to about 500 by the time Terry conceded at 9:20 Tuesday night milled quietly about, watching numbly as two large screens projected television coverage of their growing disaster. The evening began with the announcement of exit polls showing the final margin for governor at 59-41, a landslide that astounded the hopeful Democrats. After that, they began anxiously asking whether their once-sure bet, Lt. Gov. Don Beyer, would survive.

Terry conceded in an upbeat talk, congratulating Allen "on his political victory," but declaring that her cause continues.

"My campaign, and as Democrats and Virginians, our cause, is to never forget our children," she said, "their schools, their safety, their economic security."

Terry also declined to lower the curtain on her political career as she promised that Virginia eventually will elect a woman governor.

A number of Democrats complained bitterly Tuesday night - as they had for months to the Terry organization - about a campaign that never coalesced with public appearances, policy and advertising connected to a central message.

"We were never given a context within which to view her candidacy," said Geroe. "I think she was poorly served by the campaign consultants and media people."

Perhaps most bitter for Terry was the solid trouncing she took in rural Virginia. She had claimed solid backing from Southside and Southwest Virginia in her two attorney general contests - races in which she led the statewide ticket.

But her positions this year - from proposing gun control to backing abortion on demand - seemed to reject her upbringing in a tiny rural crossroads in Patrick County.

Former state Democratic Party Chairman Paul Goldman said he believed Terry never would have run a campaign so offensive to rural voters if A.L. Philpott of Bassett, the late House speaker, were still alive. Philpott, Terry's political mentor, died in 1991; he would have used his influence on her behalf in rural Virginia and forced her campaign to feature a less suburban-centered agenda, Goldman said.

Keywords:
ELECTION



 by CNB