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mahatmakanejeeves

(57,437 posts)
23. Tim Kaine might beg to differ.
Wed Nov 3, 2021, 11:52 AM
Nov 2021
Linwood Holton

{snip}

Political career

Holton was active in the Republican Party when it barely existed in Virginia. He was one of the leading Republicans who fought the Byrd Organization during the three decades it dominated Virginia politics.

In 1965, Holton ran for governor as the Republican candidate and was defeated by Democrat Mills E. Godwin Jr. In 1969, Holton won 52.51% of the vote in the gubernatorial election, defeating Democrat William C. Battle, Virginia Conservative Beverly B. McDowell, American Independent William A. Pennington, and Independent George R. Walker. He became the first Republican governor of Virginia since 1869.


Holton at Virginia Tech in 1971

In 1970, when desegregation was an issue in Virginia, Holton voluntarily placed his children, including future First Lady Anne Holton, in the mostly-black Richmond Public Schools, garnering much publicity.

As governor, he increased employment of blacks and women in state government, created the Virginia Governor's Schools Program in 1973, provided the first state funds for community mental health centers, and supported environmental efforts.

A moderate Republican, Holton was against welcoming conservative Byrd Democrats into the Virginia Republican Party. As the GOP moved increasingly rightward, it turned its back on Holton. When Harry F. Byrd Jr. broke ranks with the increasingly liberal national Democrats and ran as an independent for the Senate in 1970, Holton insisted on running a Republican candidate rather than endorsing an independent. That eventually led to the nomination of Ray Garland. Byrd went on to win the three-way election with an absolute majority.

Holton also encouraged a moderate Republican to run in the special election in 1971 to choose a successor for deceased Lieutenant Governor J. Sargeant Reynolds, an election that was won by another independent, populist Henry Howell.

Holton was not eligible to run in 1973, as Virginia does not allow governors to serve consecutive terms. In 1973, Mills Godwin, the conservative former Democrat who had defeated Holton in the 1965 election, was the Republican nominee. Godwin had supported massive resistance to racial integration and had first identified himself as a Republican in his speech accepting the Virginia Republican convention's nomination for governor.

Later life

Following his term as governor, Holton served one year in the Nixon Administration as the Assistant Secretary of State for Congressional Relations. After leaving Washington, he practiced law as a shareholder at McCandlish Holton, P.C. He later served as President of the Center for Innovative Technology.

Holton later unsuccessfully sought the Republican nomination for the United States Senate in 1978, finishing third in a race against Richard D. Obenshain, John Warner, and Nathan H. Miller. Warner subsequently became the nominee after Obenshain's death in a plane crash.

After his retirement, Holton supported moderate Republicans, including John Warner. As the Virginia Republican Party became more conservative, however, he found himself more in line with the state Democratic Party and endorsed several Democrats for statewide office, including his son-in-law, Governor Tim Kaine. Holton endorsed Barack Obama in the 2008 presidential election.

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The school curriculum issues created the path to defeat (IMHO). Steelrolled Nov 2021 #1
Those issues were completely made up out of pure BS IronLionZion Nov 2021 #16
Silver platter The Mouth Nov 2021 #26
Welcome to DU orangecrush Nov 2021 #24
Thanks! Steelrolled Nov 2021 #32
The President's party ALWAYS loses the VA gov race the year after a new president is elected Fiendish Thingy Nov 2021 #2
The media Traildogbob Nov 2021 #3
Exactly! Plus, 2009 was worse. SouthBayDem Nov 2021 #4
51% or 58% matters little to me Polybius Nov 2021 #6
Right, that difference only matters if you care about performance. Bucky Nov 2021 #13
agreed 10x !! the media & all these tabloid non- journalism ! monkeyman1 Nov 2021 #30
This was about school closures due to Covid. Jon King Nov 2021 #5
So they vote malletgirl02 Nov 2021 #8
The Five Laws of Stupidity Bucky Nov 2021 #14
All of the repub governors in Virginia have been terrible BonnieJW Nov 2021 #20
Tim Kaine might beg to differ. mahatmakanejeeves Nov 2021 #23
Wedge issues, Biden's weakness in the polls, and Trump not present to demonize andym Nov 2021 #7
Creepy ananda Nov 2021 #9
Virginians are the biggest losers here SouthernDem4ever Nov 2021 #10
THIS 👆🏻👆🏻👆🏻 LenaBaby61 Nov 2021 #27
It's a blow to Virginia and its citizens jcmaine72 Nov 2021 #11
don't vote ! pay the price ! no -pity ! live with it ! monkeyman1 Nov 2021 #31
My Concern is that even with Top Shelf help ... PBC_Democrat Nov 2021 #12
I really wonder how much it helps to bring in "big names" Steelrolled Nov 2021 #21
I hate to say this but McAuliffe came across to me as kind of annoying. It was not his message so CTyankee Nov 2021 #22
It was a sweep for the Repubs, which is what is so bad about this. Calista241 Nov 2021 #15
No Matter How Bad Last Night Was...And It Was Bad, Here In Virginia.... COL Mustard Nov 2021 #17
.... orangecrush Nov 2021 #25
Trumpism won IronLionZion Nov 2021 #18
Seems to be a troubling trend. Moebym Nov 2021 #33
Great article if you have a WaPo subscription IronLionZion Nov 2021 #34
All politics is local Deminpenn Nov 2021 #36
I wish our party would do this better IronLionZion Nov 2021 #38
So my former home state followed the James M Buchannan BS turbinetree Nov 2021 #19
Sad UCmeNdc Nov 2021 #28
This should have been a slam dunk. OneCrazyDiamond Nov 2021 #29
Or maybe some things that we support aren't as popular as we think Polybius Nov 2021 #35
Agree Deminpenn Nov 2021 #37
That's the same argument Manchin uses. OneCrazyDiamond Nov 2021 #39
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