| The scandal that has come to stain Youngkin’s reputation, as scandals often do, appeared at the worst time for Republicans in Virginia. Earle-Sears, now the Republican gubernatorial candidate, was already well behind her Democratic rival Abigail Spanberger when the bad news dropped. John Reid, the Republican candidate for lieutenant governor, a former talk show host who is well-liked by the MAGA coalition, was privately asked to exit the race by Youngkin after opposition research found a blog allegedly connected to Reid which had published images of naked men. Reid denies the report and has suggested someone else, using his instagram handle, posted nude photos of “other men and other models” in an attempt to sabotage his campaign.
The private conversation, which was meant to stay between Youngkin and Reid, did not. Reid immediately took to Twitter, where he posted a five-minute diatribe against Youngkin and the state GOP. In the video, Reid states that he is a gay man, that he has watched pornography, and that he has participated in one-night stands. Soon after, images of Reid at a drag show began circulating across the internet. The former talk show host defended his presence at a drag show and vehemently protested what he claimed were attempts to strongarm him out of the race. “Drag is not for kids, but really who cares what adults watch or what they do in a restaurant or bar or club,” Reid said.
Reid then accused Youngkin’s political strategist, Matt Moran, of attempting to extort him if Reid refused to drop out of the race. Moran, head of Youngkin’s PAC, Spirit of Virginia, stepped down from his post amid the fallout. “That extortion and smear attempt was ridiculous and I refused to back down and I decided not to tell the press or the general public about it,” Reid responded defiantly.
And then something rather interesting happened: The conservative base in Virginia, long stereotyped as luddite fundamentalists who despise the LGTBQ-ification of America, rallied to Reid’s side. “It’s five to one,” said John Fredericks, the stalwart conservative talk show host whose broadcast is heard daily on Virginia airwaves. “[Voters] want Reid to stay in the race. They think the establishment is trying to screw him. Who cares about penises on Tumblr? No one cares.”
Fredericks’s frank admission speaks to the radical remaking of the conservative coalition under Trump, both in Virginia and throughout the country. The same political arm that has bitterly fought the left on progressive social issues is now engaged in defending a socially progressive gay man who is taunting the GOP establishment. Though a marriage of strange contradictions, Reid’s support from the MAGA base shouldn’t come as a surprise to anyone who has closely followed the arc of the Boomer Right this last decade. Trump, thoroughly criticized as being anti-LGBTQ by his critics, is largely misunderstood by the people who dislike him the most. The 47th president has repeatedly made clear his support for LGBTQ persons during both his administrations; his base, outside voices in the dissident sphere, have mostly agreed with Trump.
“Trump broke the evangelical stuff,” a campaign operative in Richmond, Virginia told Puck News. “The base has managed to look past purity tests and say, Hey, we can elect a real son of a bitch and get stuff done! There is purity, and there is winning. And they are both drugs, but one of them is a lot more addictive.”
As polling continues to suggest a blue wave in Virginia this November, the Reid scandal engulfing GOP politics in Virginia has turned a likely disappointing election season into a defining conversation about the new politics of the American right. Assumptions about the makeup of the MAGA coalition are falling on deaf ears as the most staunch conservative voices in the region have circled the wagons for Reid and launched incisive attacks on the Youngkin “establishment” in response to his attempts to dislodge the first gay person to run for statewide office.
Driving on the outskirts of Richmond this week, the support for Reid could not be more pronounced. Next to yard signs that still stand for Trump also stand Reid signs. What you won’t see, however, are signs for Earle-Sears, who leads the ticket and was uncomfortably silent throughout the Reid scandal. Earle-Sears, pressured to speak, finally posted what can only be characterized as soft support for Reid along with a bible quote.
“It’s [Reid’s] race, and his decision alone to move forward,” Earle-Sears stated.
Ironically, whether she knew it or not, Earle-Sears was noting the reality of the 2025 Virginia governor’s race: Spanberger appears to be a shoo-in less than six months out from election day and Earle-Sears is all but an afterthought. All eyes are firmly on Reid, the scandal-plagued talk show host whom MAGA has made their champion. What an odd set of circumstances it would be if Reid could somehow, against the wishes of the GOP establishment, find a narrow path to victory this fall. With his hardest days and nights behind him, now only the campaign trail awaits.
And Youngkin? How will he be remembered when this is all said and done? As the mild-tempered statesman who steered Virginia through one of its most chaotic eras or as a Benedict Arnold who attempted to overthrow the will of his people after once heeding their call? All signs likely point to the latter. It’s one that would keep the 58-year-old from pursuing higher office in the time of MAGA domination. In the age of anti-establishment politics, Youngkin is suddenly on the outside looking in. His legacy is likely to reflect that in years to come. |