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Youngkin urges vigilance to combat antisemitism

By DAVE RESS, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

A new executive order will expand Virginia's fight against antisemitism, Gov. Glenn Youngkin said Monday night at the Combat Antisemitism Movement's Faith, Freedom, and Legacy: Honoring Virginia’s Jewish Heritage dinner in Richmond. "Antisemitism exists, and we must acknowledge it, we must educate people to it, and we must go to work to eradicate it," Youngkin said at the dinner, held at The Commonwealth Club.

VaNews May 20, 2025


‘It’s going to be tough’: Virginia Republicans brace for a grim November

By BRAKKTON BOOKER, LIZ CRAMPTON AND BEN JACOBS, Politico

Virginia Republicans are bracing for November with a growing sense of doom. The GOP already faced a tough climate in this year’s elections thanks to tech billionaire Elon Musk’s war on the state’s robust federal workforce. Then came a bitter, intraparty feud over Republicans’ lieutenant governor candidate. Now, some Republicans are privately expressing concerns about the viability of their gubernatorial nominee, Winsome Earle-Sears. “With the demographics of Richmond, in an off year with the Republican White House, it’s going to be tough,” said longtime Virginia Republican strategist Jimmy Keady. “To be a Republican to win in Virginia, you have to run a very good campaign. You’ve got to have [tailwinds] and the Democratic candidate’s got to make a mistake.”

VaNews May 20, 2025


Virginia’s budget surplus grows as revenues beat expectations despite national slowdown

By MARKUS SCHMIDT, Virginia Mercury

Virginia’s general fund revenues rose sharply in April, bucking signs of a national economic cooldown as the state continues to post steady long-time job growth and rake in more tax dollars than projected. Gov. Glenn Youngkin announced Monday that general fund revenues are up 6.3% — nearly $1.5 billion — compared to the same 10-month period last fiscal year. April alone brought in $322.4 million more than the same month in 2024, marking an 8.8% jump.

VaNews May 20, 2025


Despite federal backlash, Albemarle County teaching students ‘whole truth history’

By STEVEN YODER, THE HECHINGER REPORT, Charlottesville Tomorrow

“Remember, your listeners are from Mars,” teacher Susan Greenwood told one of her fifth graders at Brownsville Elementary. “They know nothing about slavery, they know nothing about the Civil War.” Greenwood was circulating the classroom on February 4, giving pointed feedback on students’ writing for an assignment in her Virginia Studies class. The goal was to develop arguments to answer the core question in this unit on the Civil War: Was violence justified to resist slavery? Educators in Albemarle County, such as Greenwood, are practicing a new approach to teaching social studies that requires students to think critically and understand key events from a range of perspectives, including those whose voices are often omitted from standard accounts.

VaNews May 20, 2025


Gobar: Without reform, Virginia remains the Wild West for campaign finance

By WES GOBAR, published in Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

Last month, billionaires and wealthy special interests poured over $100 million into Wisconsin’s Supreme Court race — a staggering sum for a supposedly nonpartisan state election. Elon Musk’s vote-buying schemes exposed a key vulnerability in our democracy, which is increasingly being auctioned off to the highest bidder. In Virginia, we don’t need to imagine what that future looks like — we’re already living it. If Musk and his billionaire buddies set their sights on Virginia’s upcoming elections — as they’ve hinted they might — they’ll find a playground built for them. With some of the weakest campaign finance laws in the country, Virginia offers a uniquely permissive environment for the ultra-wealthy to flood our elections and drown out the voices of everyday voters.

Gobar is the good governance director at Clean Virginia, a 501c(4) organization working to advance clean government and clean energy in Virginia.

VaNews May 21, 2025


Henrico reviews zoning changes to rein in data center growth

By LYNDON GERMAN, VPM

Last week, Henrico County’s Board of Supervisors held a joint meeting with the planning commission to discuss setting regulatory standards for data center developments that would limit their growth within the county. The proposed zoning regulations would incentivize the development of data centers in a specific area of Henrico, set regulatory building and environmental standards for each development and give the board of supervisors ample opportunity to review projects outside the designated zone.

VaNews May 20, 2025


Virginia lawmakers react to proposed federal moratorium on AI regulation

By MICHAEL POPE, WVTF-FM

Congress is considering a bill that could leave Virginia, and every other state, powerless to regulate artificial intelligence. You probably know the plot of the 1984 movie The Terminator – a cyborg hitman from the future arrives in the present, sent because of a future war between humans and A-I powered machines. Virginia might be encountering its own unwanted plot twist says State Senate Majority Leader Scott Surovell, if Congress approves a 10-year moratorium on state regulation of artificial intelligence.

VaNews May 20, 2025


Lewis: Va. statewide GOP nominees refuse to buck Trump in a state where he’s a proven albatross

By BOB LEWIS, Virginia Mercury

This is primary season and candidates have to double down on what the truest of your party’s true believers truly believe. The common logic is that you steer as far as you can to the right (for Republicans) or left (among Democrats) to rouse their base voters until they’re ready to chew barbed wire and spit out roofing nails. Then, after the preseason scrimmage is over, it’s time to tack back toward the center — where the dispositive mass of Virginia’s electorate has repeatedly proved it resides — and, if you still can, appear less the wild-eyed zealot and more the measured, moderate and sane candidate of November. But something weird is happening this year ...

VaNews May 20, 2025


Yancey: 5 new factors that are shaping the governor’s race

By DWAYNE YANCEY, Cardinal News

We’re expecting a new Roanoke College poll before the month ends, and that will give us some numerical sense of where Virginia’s governor’s race stands. However, we don’t need polls to tell us about some of the forces that are shaping the contest that will put a woman in the governor’s office for the first time in Virginia history. Some things we knew all along: how voters feel about President Donald Trump, how they feel about Governor Glenn Youngkin, how they feel about lots of other things. Here are five new factors: 1. Spanberger tries to take ‘right-to-work’ off the table, but Earle-Sears presses the attack anyway.

VaNews May 20, 2025


Decline in preschool access continues in Virginia, despite legislative efforts

By NATHANIEL CLINE, Virginia Mercury

Virginia has provided thousands of children access to preschool over a year’s time, but the commonwealth continues to trail other states, which are expanding services and providing more kids a chance at early learning. According to the National Institute for Early Education Research’s State of Preschool Yearbook, Virginia has dropped by three spots to 26th in the country in offering preschool access for 3-year-olds, but maintained its 30th place ranking for preschool access for 4-year-olds.

VaNews May 20, 2025