Freshman Reps. Glenn Nye and Tom Perriello share some similarities in their background and how they came to Congress.
The Virginia Democrats were elected last year, wielding impressive credentials in international policy but little background in local politics. Both unseated Republican incumbents in districts that traditionally have leaned toward the GOP.
But Perriello and Nye are taking different tacks in their voting behavior and campaign styles as they prepare to seek re-election against vigorous Republican opposition.
Perriello has been more of a populist and risk-taker in his votes and public statements. On closely divided votes, Perriello has sided with his party more frequently than Nye even though Perriellos district, located in the mostly rural Southside area of the state, backed Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) in the 2008 election and Nyes district, a more geographically compact area in and around Virginia Beach, backed President Barack Obama.
Perriello last year won by 727 votes over then-Rep. Virgil Goode (R) in what was one of the closest House elections of the 2008 cycle, while Nye won by the more comfortable margin of 5 points over then-Rep. Thelma Drake (R).
Nye has been running a more traditionally independent campaign that puts some distance between himself and the national party. Hes bucked Democratic leaders on some high-profile votes.
Perriello and Nyes votes diverged most recently and most notably on the health care bill the House narrowly passed on Saturday. Perriello voted for the bill, a rare Democratic freshman from a McCain-voting district who backed it, while Nye was among the 39 Democrats most of them from politically competitive districts who opposed it.
On the health care bill, Perriello said in a statement that he was proud to support this profound shift away from the status quo towards progress and better, cheaper health care for more Americans. He said the bill would reduce the deficit, included protections for rural health care and banned federal funding for abortion.
But Nye said the bill wouldnt do enough to curb skyrocketing health care costs for individuals and small businesses. He also said it would jeopardize funding for a hospital in his district.
Though it would be a stretch to call Perriellos voting record liberal, his vote for the health care overhaul wasnt the first time he sided with his party on a controversial big-ticket issue and most of his politically vulnerable colleagues did not.
In June, Perriello sided with his partys consensus position in voting for an energy bill that aims to curb greenhouse gases through a cap-and-trade system. Nye was among the 44 House Democrats who opposed the measure.
Nye is really trying to ensure that his voting record is more consistent with what he considers to be the views of the district than of the national party, and I think hes setting the framework for an election wheres he going to run as kind of an independent person, not someone beholden to party, said Robert Holsworth, a Virginia political analyst who runs the Web site Virginia Tomorrow.
Holsworth said Perriello, by contrast, is really setting up an election strategy based on his constant communication with his constituents.
He comes home regularly. He holds town halls, public forums by the dozens. He is really trying to be extraordinarily visible in the district, Holsworth said.
Roll Call has launched a new feature, Hill Navigator, to advise congressional staffers and would-be staffers on how to manage workplace issues on Capitol Hill. Please send us your questions anything from office etiquette, to handling awkward moments, to what happens when the work life gets too personal. Submissions will be treated anonymously.