White Women Voters Powered Youngkin To Victory In Virginia, Exit Polling Data Shows

As Jay-Z famously rapped, “men lie, women lie, numbers don’t.”

And the numbers behind Republican Glenn Youngkin‘s gubernatorial victory over Democrat Terry McAuliffe in Virginia on Tuesday paint a vividly pale as white women emerged as an electorate force to be reckoned with while Black voter turnout reportedly lagged in Virginia, according to exit polling data provided by NBC News.

In particular, it was white women Virginians pulling their support from Democrats and, instead, casting ballots for a Republican candidate that seemingly made all the difference this time around. The voting bloc provided a definitive swing toward Youngkin to the tune of 15 percentage points. The fact that Youngin was a Trumpublican who has garnered support from the former president paid off majorly for the conservative candidate who is much more like 45 than he would ever care to admit publicly.

MORE: Glenn Youngkin’s No. 1 Campaigners Are Suspected Proud White Supremacists Who Love Racial Slurs And Black Death Fantasies

NBC News political reporter Sahil Kapur posted a brief Twitter thread of before-and-after exit polling data centered on how white women voted in the 2020 presidential election and the way they voted Tuesday. The numbers illustrate a clear contrast and may suggest the election was a referendum on President Joe Biden and the entire Democratic Party. It definitely suggested that Virginia’s white women voters may think that Trump — whose rhetoric is espoused by Youngkin, albeit in a much more toned-down codified dog-whistling style instead of overt hatred — wasn’t so bad after all.

Virginia Republican Gubernatorial Candidate Glenn Youngkin Holds Election Night Rally

Attendees embrace during an election night event for Glenn Youngkin, Republican gubernatorial candidate for Virginia, in Chantilly, Virginia, on Tuesday, Nov. 2, 2021. | Source: Bloomberg / Getty

Either way, data shows that after 50 percent of white women voters in Virginia supported Biden’s Democratic candidacy last year instead of Trump’s, that number ballooned to 57 percent in favor of Youngkin on Tuesday.

On a more granular level in Virginia, both college-educated white women and those without a post-secondary education voted in droves for Youngkin, a decided reverse from the trend in which ballots were cast for the 2020 election.

Fifty-eight percent of college-educated white women in Virginia voted for Biden last year, data shows. But on Tuesday, the number of college-educated white women in Virginia supporting the Republican candidate grew to 62 percent.

The numbers are even starker among non-college-educated white women in Virginia.

While 56 percent of non-college-educated white women in Virginia voted for Trump last year, a whopping 75 percent of voters belonging to that same group cast ballots for Youngkin. It accounted for a nearly 40 percentage point swing for Republicans from last year.

NBC News also reported that “Black turnout was down in some key places” in Virginia. While exact numbers were not immediately available, Reecie Colbert, a political commentator and founder of BlackWomenViews Media, cautioned people about blaming Black voters for Youngkin’s victory. Colbert accurately pointed out how that flawed narrative is a convenient excuse that selectively ignores the fluctuating partisan support consistently displayed by white voters.

SEE ALSO:

Virginia’s New Republican Black Woman Lieutenant Governor And The Era Of The ‘Safe Negro’

Youngkin Runs Ad Featuring A Karen Who Tried To Get Toni Morrison’s ‘Beloved’ Removed From Her Son’s School

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