Las Vegas Review-Journal

Drawing scheduled to break Virginia tie

Each candidate has been declared victorious once

- By Denise Lavoie The Associated Press

RICHMOND, Va. — As Democrats and Republican­s continued partisan sniping Friday over a House seat that could determine the balance of power in the Virginia House of Delegates, state elections officials moved to break the deadlock by scheduling a random drawing to pick the winner.

The Virginia Board of Elections said it will pick the winner’s name in the Newport News-based 94th District next Thursday, unless a recount court decides to intervene.

The race between Democrat Shelly Simonds and Republican Del. David Yancey has seesawed since the Nov. 7 election. Initially, it appeared that Yancey had won by 10 votes, but a recount put Simonds ahead by a single vote.

A three-judge recount court later declared the race a tie after agreeing with the Yancey campaign that a disputed ballot was a vote for him. On Wednesday, Simonds asked the court to reconsider, but the panel has not yet responded.

The fight over the seat has been intense as Republican­s try to hold on to a majority in the House after a bruising election in which Democrats erased the 66-34 advantage held by Republican­s as voters vented anger toward Republican President Donald Trump.

During a conference call with reporters Friday, GOP House Leader Kirk Cox — who hopes to become the next speaker of the House — criticized Democrats for causing “politicall­y motivated delays” in deciding the 94th District race.

“Democrats have sought to delay and obstruct at every turn,” Cox said.

“They’ve sought to litigate their way to victory.”

Cox called Simonds’ legal action a “deliberate strategy to make it more difficult for the House to organize smoothly” when the legislatur­e reconvenes Jan. 10.

Simonds said Yancey is to blame for the delay.

“We won the recount … it should have been over, and the next day, the Yancey team pulled a stunt. So this delay is squarely on him,” she said Friday.

If Simonds ultimately wins, the House would be evenly split, 50-50, between Democrats and Republican­s. If Yancey wins, the Republican­s would have a 51-49 edge.

 ??  ?? Shelly Simonds
Shelly Simonds
 ??  ?? David Yancey
David Yancey

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