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Jay Jones is going on TV with the first ad of the attorney general race

By BRANDON JARVIS, Virginia Scope

Former Del. Jay Jones is launching the first television ad of the Democratic primary for attorney general on Tuesday. “As a lawmaker, I protected abortion rights, and as an Assistant Attorney General, I took on big corporations, and I sued Glenn Youngkin to defend voting rights,” Jones says in the ad. The spot highlights Jones’ work from 2023, when he represented the Virginia NAACP in a lawsuit seeking access to a database used by Gov. Glenn Youngkin to decide whether to restore voting rights to individuals with felony convictions.

VaNews May 6, 2025


Earle-Sears wants Va. to boost power with fossil fuels

By CHER MUZYK AND JILL PALERMO, Prince William Times

Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears, the Republican candidate for governor, said Virginia needs more energy— including from carbon-based fuels such as coal, oil and natural gas — during a Manassas fundraiser over the weekend that was partly funded by local data center developers. During her speech at the Prince William County Republican Committee’s annual Lincoln-Reagan dinner, Earle-Sears, 61, emphasized her desire for Virginia to look to more fossil fuels and nuclear power to generate electricity for businesses both large and small.

VaNews May 6, 2025


Democrats respond to note from Earle-Sears on an anti-discrimination marriage bill

By BRANDON JARVIS, Virginia Scope

Democrats are responding to the note left by Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears on legislation last year. The bill, which Gov. Glenn Youngkin signed into law, prohibits officials from denying marriage licenses based on sex, gender or race. While fulfilling her constitutional responsibility of signing legislation that passes the state Senate, Earle-Sears wrote that she is “morally opposed to the content of HB 174 as passed by the General Assembly.”

VaNews May 6, 2025


Advocates celebrate Youngkin’s signature on ‘junk fees’ legislation

By MICHAEL POPE, WVTF-FM

Republican Governor Glenn Youngkin and Democrats who run the General Assembly are working together to go after junk fees. Anyone who has ever ordered a meal online knows the initial price is not what you end up paying – not after the transaction fee and the convenience fee and all the other charges. That's why Jay Speer at the Virginia Poverty Law Center says it was so important for the General Assembly to take action.

VaNews May 6, 2025


Va. higher education institutions weigh in on Youngkin’s budget cuts

By BRITTANY SLAUGHTER, WSET-TV

Governor Youngkin signed off on the budget on Friday and cut $900 million. Youngkin is pushing pause on capital projects at 10 higher education facilities, to the tune of over $600 million. Some of that money would have gone to Central Virginia Community College to renovate their Amherst and Campbell buildings. They were expecting an estimated $50 million in funds.

VaNews May 6, 2025


Prince William County supervisor’s new PAC gets $100K from data center developer

By CHER MUZYK AND JILL PALERMO, Prince William Times

Prince William County Supervisor Yesli Vega has received a whopping $100,000 campaign donation—likely the largest single contribution to any supervisor from an individual in the county’s history—from the wife of a local data center developer. Vega, a Republican who represents the Coles District, received the contribution through a political action committee called “YES PAC,” which was set up in December. Vega is the founder and director of the organization. Her county-paid chief of staff, Chelsea Quintern, is listed as the PAC’s treasurer, according to its statement of organization.

VaNews May 6, 2025


After another veto, Virginia Democrats vow to return next year with contraceptive protections

By BRAD KUTNER, WVTF-FM

Governor Glenn Youngkin has again vetoed legislation Virginia Democrats say will protect abortion access from future U.S. Supreme Court action. Republicans feared it would open up doctors to legal liability, but the bill’s authors disagree. Senator Ghazala Hashmi told Radio IQ Monday that in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court’s overturning of Roe v. Wade, states need to protect contraception in case federal protections are struck. But Governor Glenn Youngkin disagreed.

VaNews May 6, 2025


After Youngkin veto of data center bill, Democratic state senator says governor is ‘misguided’

By TAD DICKENS, Cardinal News

A measure that would have required developers to study proposed data centers’ impacts on their surroundings has died, at least for this year. Gov. Glenn Youngkin, after a back-and-forth with the General Assembly, vetoed the bill late last week. Youngkin wrote in his veto on Friday that data center decisions belong in the localities where they are proposed. Sen. Adam Ebbin, D-Alexandria, said Monday that his legislation would have benefited those localities by providing important information.

VaNews May 6, 2025


UVa. students have federal internship offers rescinded due to hiring freeze

By NINA BRODERICK, Cavalier Daily

Several University students have had federal internship offers rescinded, leaving them scrambling last-minute to determine summer plans. This is a result of the hiring freeze of federal civilian employees which President Donald Trump ordered in a presidential memorandum Jan. 20. Another memorandum April 17 extended the freeze through July 15. Until July 15, no presently vacant federal civilian positions may be filled, and no new positions may be created. Because summer federal government interns are not currently employed, and some had received offers during the previous administration, some internship positions were affected.

VaNews May 6, 2025


Youngkin signs bill to protect local pharmacies in Virginia

By KATHLEEN LUNDY, WVEC-TV

Governor Glenn Youngkin has signed into law a bill that creates a single pharmacy benefit manager for the state's Medicaid program. The legislation, part of the Save Local Pharmacies Act, will take effect on July 1, 2025. The move follows a broader effort to rein in the influence of PBMs, which are third-party companies that negotiate drug prices between manufacturers and insurers. Some of the largest PBMs, including Caremark (CVS Health), Express Scripts (Cigna), and OptumRx (UnitedHealth Group), also own pharmacies, a practice critics say creates a conflict of interest.

VaNews May 6, 2025