2012 Election Night: George Allen concession speech

2012 Election Night: George Allen concession speech

2012 Election Night: George Allen concession speech

  • Election News
Long election lines forgotten in GA
Long election lines forgotten in GA

Despite calls from thousands of citizens who waited for hours …

Electoral College count affirms Obama's win
Vote count affirms Obama's win

It's official. A tally of the Electoral College vote affirms …

House re-elects Boehner speaker
House re-elects Boehner speaker

The House and Senate ushered in a new Congress Thursday, …

Electoral College set to affirm Obama re-election
Electoral College: Now it's official

Tradition trumped suspense Monday as members of the Electoral …

Must-see US political photos of 2012
Must-see US political photos of 2012

A look back at some memorable images of 2012.

Advertisement

GOP George Allen concedes Senate race

Updated: Wednesday, 07 Nov 2012, 7:52 AM EST
Published : Tuesday, 06 Nov 2012, 11:32 PM EST

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - Republican George Allen has conceded the Virginia U.S. race to Tim Kaine.

With 88 percent of the vote in, Kaine led Allen with 50.6 percent of the vote, or by about 37,000 votes.

The victory denies Republicans an open seat they targeted for more than a year in hopes of ending Democratic Senate rule.

For Allen, it was a bitter second loss for the same seat, one that leaves his once-bright political future in doubt.

Allen held the seat from 2001 to 2007, losing re-election to Democrat Jim Webb in a 2006 campaign marred by Allen's use of the slur "macaca" aimed at a Virginia-born Webb campaign aide of Indian descent.

Kaine, a former Democratic National Committee chairman, depicted Allen as a bare-knuckled GOP partisan hostile toward bipartisan compromise.

Click on the video player on this page to watch Allen's full concession speech.

Opinions that are derogatory, attack other users or are offensive in nature may be removed. WAVY is not responsible for the content posted in this comment section. We reserve the right to remove any offensive or off-topic remark or thread. To mark a comment for review by a moderator, click "Flag as inappropriate."

 

comments powered by Disqus

  • onPolitix: Track, Debate, Discuss

Latest political headlines

Get the latest on the race for the White House, plus national political news at onPolitix.com.

Advertisement
Advertisement

Advertisement