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Loudoun congressional delegation critical of U.S. bombing of Iran
Members of Loudoun County's congressional [delegation] condemned President Trump's bombing of Iran on Saturday, saying it was unconstitutional. After the bombing of three Iranian nuclear sites, Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Virginia, said in an online statement that the majority of Americans oppose war with Iran and noted Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar said on June 20 that Israeli bombing had set back Iran's nuclear program "at least two or three years."
D.C. region leaders criticize, endorse U.S. attack on Iran
U.S. military strikes on Iranian nuclear sites drew mixed reactions from Washington, D.C.-area leaders, whose response to President Donald Trump’s actions split along partisan lines. Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Virginia) called Trump’s orders a reckless display of “horrible judgment,” as Democrats suggested that the United States was being drawn into Israel’s war with Iran.
Clean Virginia looks for change with entire Democratic ticket as allies
After hard-fought primaries for lieutenant governor and attorney general — where Clean Virginia and Dominion Energy poured money into opposing candidates — Clean Virginia now backs the entire Democratic ticket, an unprecedented shift that the group hopes will weaken Dominion’s political influence. Clean Virginia, a nonprofit that advocates for clean government and clean energy by fighting what it terms utility monopoly corruption in Virginia politics, donated $957,543 directly to statewide candidates this year, according to the Virginia Public Access Project. Dominion, the state’s largest public utility, donated $1.27 million to their candidates this year.
Williams: Stoney's ambitions ran aground in Richmond
Richmond was going to be a problem for former mayor Levar Stoney even before the city’s water system ran dry in early January. Stoney, a former secretary of the commonwealth and protege of former Gov. Terry McAuliffe, once appeared destined for big things as an energetic millennial mayor riding the wave of a resurgent capital city. He seldom bothered to camouflage his ambition.
Same-sex marriage key topic in first stop of Virginia Democrats’ ‘Worst of Winsome Tour’
The battle to become Virginia’s next governor came to Charlottesville on Friday, as part of a statewide tour aimed at criticizing the Republican nominee, current Lieutenant Governor Winsome Earle-Sears. The topic Democrats zeroed in on at Friday’s rally outside City Hall is one with ties to Charlottesville and strong opinions on both sides: same-sex marriage. “It’s fundamental,” Llezelle Dugger, the Clerk of Court for Charlottesville’s Circuit Court, told 29News. “It’s a fundamental right for us.”
Hating on Stoney won’t help Spanberger
If this week felt good to you — Richmond’s long-clueless ex-mayor got his comeuppance, didn’t he? — I have some bad news. Sure, the city probably averted becoming a political punching bag. Levar Stoney, if he’d won the Democratic primary for lieutenant governor, would have given current Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears and the MAGA boys fresh meat — a once-great racist city, built on the backs of the enslaved, driven into the ground by another liberal, woke mayor.
The fall of Levar Stoney: How Richmond cost him the race for lieutenant governor
In 2016, the city of Richmond elected a 35-year-old upstart Democrat named Levar Stoney as its mayor. In 2020, the city elected him again. But on Tuesday, Richmond voters summarily rejected him in the Democratic primary for lieutenant governor. He finished second among six candidates statewide and lost the race to Sen. Ghazala Hashmi, D-Chesterfield. It was a close but stunning defeat for a candidate who was once a protégé to then-Gov. Terry McAuliffe and remains well-funded and well-connected.
Winsome Earle-Sears, John Reid speak to each other for first time in weeks
After not speaking to each other for eight weeks, Republican nominees Winsome Earle-Sears and John Reid have spoken to each other. Lieutenant Governor Winsome Earle-Sears, the Republican nominee for Virginia’s governor, spoke to John Reid, the Republican nominee for lieutenant governor, on Wednesday after eight weeks since they last spoke, according to a source familiar with the situation.
From VPAP New Episode: The Virginia Press Room Podcast
In the latest episode of the podcast from VaNews and VPM, Michael Pope is joined by Shannon Heckt of the Virginia Mercury, Teo Armus of The Washington Post, and Graham Moomaw of The Richmonder. They discuss the week's top headlines: the results of the Democratic primaries for lieutenant governor and attorney general, Richmond voters turning against former mayor Levar Stoney, and Virginia's patchwork data center regulation policies. Tune in for insights and analysis on Virginia politics. Listen here or wherever you get your podcasts.
Vital sites in Williamsburg’s Black history take steps forward on Juneteenth
Two important sites in Williamsburg’s Black history took the spotlight on Thursday as the region observed the holiday celebrating the end of slavery in the United States. Dozens of people gathered on Nassau Street on Juneteenth for a groundbreaking ceremony that will kick off the rebuilding of one of the nation’s oldest Black churches. Nearby, visitors were welcomed inside the Bray School, one of the oldest surviving schools for Black children that has been recreated to look as it did in the 18th century.