2 months ago
At Earle-Sears election night party, disappointment as Spanberger claims victory
From Samantha-Jo Roth
LEESBURG, Virginia — Inside a half-empty ballroom at Winsome Earle-Sears’s election night party, supporters watched in uneasy silence as Fox News projected Democrat Abigail Spanberger the winner of Virginia’s governor’s race.
Moments earlier, campaign staff had cut the audio from the live election results and turned on music when it became clear the night wasn’t going their way. When Spanberger’s name appeared on the screen, the crowd erupted in boos, some shaking their heads, others staring down at their phones. Clusters of attendees stayed at their tables, scrolling through their phones or talking in hushed tones, waiting to see Earle-Sears make an appearance.
At one table, Caroline Chopek, 72, a retired Republican activist from Fauquier County, said she couldn’t understand the outcome. “I thought I was moving to a red state 23 years ago,” she said. “[Republican Gov. Glenn] Youngkin’s done a good job, the state’s in good shape, people are getting refunds. I don’t know why people want to change that.”
Across the room, Richard Eagan, 78, a retired Army Command Sergeant Major from Mineral, took the loss with military calm. “You figure out what went wrong, start over at the grassroots, and rebuild,” he said. “That’s how you recover from any mission that doesn’t go your way.”
Boo’s coming from the crowd as Fox News projects the winner of the VA Gov race is Spanberger. pic.twitter.com/sE6Wnqe1qJ
— Samantha-Jo Roth (@SamanthaJoRoth) November 5, 2025
Others spoke less about tactics and more about what they feared would be lost. Leila Longcor, 50, vice chairwoman of the Rockingham County Board of Supervisors, said the result could have real economic consequences for her community. “Without Gov. Youngkin, we wouldn’t have gotten $3 billion from [pharmaceutical company] Merck in our county,” she said. “I’m anxious all that kind of economic development will stop.”
The mood remained subdued as Spanberger took the stage on the screens, her victory speech flickering across the muted televisions while attendees absorbed the reality of a Democratic return to the governor’s mansion.
