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Youngkin: It’s not too late for Earle-Sears to win
Back from addressing Iowa Republicans who were eager to hear how he won office in a state that’s been leaning Democratic, Gov. Glenn Youngkin says it’s not too late for Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears to be elected the next governor of Virginia. “Now’s the time I just remind everybody that in the summer of 2021, I was down all summer,” Youngkin said Friday on WRVA’s Richmond Morning News with Rich Herrera. On a different radio show Friday, state Sen. Mark Peake, R-Lynchburg, chairman of the Republican Party of Virginia, fired back when conservative radio host John Fredericks called Earle-Sears’ campaign a “clown car.” “It’s not a clown car and I think we are fixing it as we speak,” Peake told Fredericks ...
E. coli spikes at Richmond river spots
Half of the eight Richmond river stations the James River Association monitors were showing elevated levels of E. coli as of Friday. If you're planning to take a dip in the James during this rare dry and sunny week, you may want to wait — and then double-check river conditions before you go. The James River Association collects river samples weekly in Richmond in summer and updates their map every Friday, the nonprofit's riverkeeper Tom Dunlap tells Axios.
Chesterfield officials say ICE courthouse detainments are causing people to not show up for court
Elected officials who manage the operations of the Chesterfield County Courthouse are speaking out after federal agents have made several visits to the courthouse for immigration enforcement in recent weeks. Clerk of the Chesterfield Circuit Court Amanda Pohl called the activity an "atrocity" in an interview with CBS 6 Friday. “Having this kind of action happen inside the court building is very frustrating, because it shows that courts are not a safe place for folks," Pohl said.
Immigration charges on the rise in Roanoke’s federal court
President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown has led to a sharp increase in the number of undocumented immigrants who find themselves in Roanoke’s federal court. So far this year, 32 people have been charged with illegally entering the country after previously being deported, the most common immigration charge brought in U.S. District Court for the Western District of Virginia. There were just 13 such cases in the district during the entire four years of former President Joe Biden’s administration, according to figures from the U.S. Attorney’s Office.
ICE arrests of people without criminal records surge in Virginia and D.C.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrests of people without criminal charges or convictions jumped in Virginia and D.C. in June, newly obtained data shows. The numbers illustrate a major shift that came soon after the Trump administration tripled ICE's arrest quota. In Virginia and D.C., people without criminal charges or convictions made up an average of 60% of daily ICE arrests in early June, up from about 50% in early May, before the quota increase.
Advocates protest detentions and deportations of cruise ship employees in Norfolk
Twenty-one employees of cruise ships have been detained — and some deported — while their ship was docked in Norfolk by federal authorities who accused them of possessing child pornography, immigrant advocates alleged Sunday morning. Customs and Border Protection officers, escorted by Carnival Cruise Line security staff, detained the crew members in a series of raids dating to April, advocates said ...
Yancey: Earle-Sears and Spanberger both say they want to eliminate the car tax. Here’s why that is unlikely to happen.
Today’s column is in the form of a consumer advisory: how to avoid getting tricked in the marketplace. Some of this should be simple. If some guy shows up at your door, says he’s part of a road crew that has some leftover asphalt and he’ll patch your driveway for a cut rate, don’t believe it. If you get a text purporting to be from your bank that says you need to send your account number to resolve a problem, don’t believe it. And if a candidate for governor says they intend to do away with the car tax, don’t believe that, either. We should know by now not to fall for the first two; Virginians may still need some warnings about the promise of a car tax repeal.
Ghazala Hashmi Could Become the First Muslim Woman Elected to Statewide Office
Ghazala Hashmi recalls adults, many of them meeting a Muslim for the first time, asking her awkward questions like whether she believed in multiple gods or prayed to Jesus. Hashmi had just emigrated from India to a small Georgia town, one of the first two Muslim families to move to the area. She was 8. The questions were unfair, at least for a child, but they helped Hashmi forge an identity at an early age — one that would shape her political career, she says now. ... More than 50 years later, Hashmi is the Democratic nominee for lieutenant governor in Virginia. She narrowly won a six-way primary in June and is running on a ticket with Democratic gubernatorial nominee Abigail Spanberger in what is widely seen as the first big electoral tests for her party in President Donald Trump’s second term.
Richmond public housing CEO says he doesn’t want to evict over small debts. Court records show it’s happening
Housing advocates say they feel misled by Richmond’s top housing official after the Richmond Redevelopment and Housing Authority initiated eviction proceedings against tenants with small rent debts. “We were led to believe that would not happen,” said Omari Al-Qadaffi, a senior housing organizer with the Legal Aid Justice Center, which among other services offers legal counsel and resources to residents facing eviction. The confusion stems from remarks made by RRHA Chief Executive Officer Steven Nesmith during a July 8 meeting of the authority’s real estate development committee.
Toscano: For Youngkin, a big bill is coming due
Twenty-six billion dollars. That’s the staggering price tag Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s own Department of Medical Assistance Services (DMAS) just placed on the Virginia impact of President Donald Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” (OBBBA). Over the next 14 years, this federal wealth redistribution bill will stretch Virginia’s budget, strain our hospitals, raise insurance premiums and harm many of our most vulnerable friends and neighbors. For weeks, Youngkin has dismissed warnings from Democrats as exaggerated and “made up.” But now, with these sobering estimates coming from his own administration, denial is no longer an option. The damage may not be immediate, but it will be deep.