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Southern Poverty Law Center report: Militia movement is ‘reformatting’

By DAVE CANTOR, WVTF-FM

The Southern Poverty Law Center issues an annual report tracking far-right movements across the country. Its most recent findings, which were released at the end of May, include information on the militia movement and its connections to the Commonwealth. Since 2020, at least 20 localities in Virginia have had active militia groups, according to media reports, though SPLC researcher Rachel Goldwasser says that number’s a bit higher.

VaNews June 17, 2025


Robinson: Selling federal lands would betray future generations

By GARRETT ROBINSON, published in Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

In early May, Congress slipped a provision deep into its budget resolution that should alarm every American. Buried in the text was language authorizing the sale of nearly half a million acres of our federally managed public lands — mostly in Utah and Nevada. It would set a precedent that threatens every corner of this country. This isn’t simply a Western issue. What happens in the deserts outside Salt Lake City today could be replicated tomorrow in the forests of Virginia or the marshes of Delaware.

Robinson of Stafford is a U.S. Marine Corps veteran, vice chair of the Mid-Atlantic Chapter of Backcountry Hunters & Anglers, and lifelong outdoorsman.

VaNews June 17, 2025


Trump looms over Virginia governor’s race: What to know on primary day

By SAVANNAH KUCHAR, USA Today

Virginians are heading to the polls in one of this year's banner election fights where President Donald Trump's name isn't on the ballot but his second-term policies are very much top of voters' minds. The most consequential of the June 17 primary races center around who will be the next governor of the Old Dominion, a state that has seen its share of the federal government workforce shrink at the hands of Trump and former DOGE leader Elon Musk.

VaNews June 17, 2025


Officials Investigate More Threats of Violence Against U.S. Politicians

By JOHN YOON, New York Times (Metered Paywall - 1 to 2 articles a month)

Officials in at least three states said on Monday that they were investigating or prosecuting people for making threats against politicians, a day after the police in Minnesota arrested and charged a man over the assassination of a state lawmaker. In Texas, the authorities said that an armed man who threatened to harm lawmakers at the State Capitol had been detained. In Georgia, a man was arraigned after prosecutors said he threatened sexual violence against two United States senators. And in Virginia, a former Coast Guard officer was arrested and accused of making threats against President Trump online.

VaNews June 17, 2025


Trump not on ballot but president influences Tuesday’s high-stakes primary

By PAUL STEINHAUSER, Fox News

Virginia, one of only two states to hold gubernatorial elections this year, conducts high-profile primaries on Tuesday that may grab national attention. Voters in Virginia, a competitive state in American political elections, will cast Democrat and Republican primary ballots for governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general and for state lawmakers in the House of Delegates. And while President Donald Trump isn't on the ballot, his sweeping and controversial agenda has been a key part of the conversation on the Virginia campaign trail.

VaNews June 17, 2025


Pokharel and Tanyu: In race to develop AI, colleges overlook cybersecurity

By SANSKAR POKHAREL AND YASEMIN TANYU, published in Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

Tomorrow’s data breaches are being written in today's classrooms. If we continue treating security as an afterthought, we risk graduating students who are ready to build the future — but unprepared to secure it. In an era where cyber threats evolve faster than textbooks, a staggering 43% of cyberattacks now target small- to medium-sized enterprises, many of which employ graduates unequipped with real-world cybersecurity skills. Arguably, our academic approach to cybersecurity is long overdue for a transformation.

Pokharel recently graduated from George Mason University with a bachelor’s degree in information technology. Tanyu is an incoming junior at Virginia Tech studying computer science.

VaNews June 17, 2025


Spanberger looks to unite party after primary day

By BRANDON JARVIS, Virginia Scope

On the eve of Virginia’s down-ballot primaries, Democratic gubernatorial nominee Abigail Spanberger announced a statewide bus tour and criticized her Republican opponent, Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears, during a campaign rally Monday. The event, held just hours before Democrats select nominees for other statewide races, signaled her intent to steer the party clear of the internal conflicts currently dogging the Republican ticket. Hundreds of supporters packed a hallway at the new J.R. Tucker High School, the school Spanberger attended growing up.

VaNews June 17, 2025


Texts show Richmond officials reversing course on boil water advisory

By SAMUEL B. PARKER, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

In the early morning hours of May 27, officials knew they would likely have to issue Richmond’s second boil advisory of the year due to collapsing water pressure, text messages obtained by The Times-Dispatch show. When contacted by The Times-Dispatch that morning, they said that overnight issues at the city’s water treatment plant hadn’t been serious enough to necessitate the notice — despite the internal communications to the contrary. Three hours later, they backtracked and warned Richmond residents in large swaths of the city against consuming the tap water without boiling it.

VaNews June 17, 2025


Yancey: 4 trends in the early voting that could determine who wins Tuesday’s primaries

By DWAYNE YANCEY, Cardinal News

Some things should not be lumpy. Mattresses and mashed potatoes, for instance. Some things often turn out lumpy, anyway. Mattresses and mashed potatoes — and elections. It looks as if we’ll have some lumpy results tonight in primary elections across the state. By “lumpy,” I mean some places will vote at higher or lower rates than others. That’s the case in every election. Case in point: In the 2021 governor’s race, 71% of registered voters in Goochland County cast ballots, while only 38% of those in Petersburg did. Every other locality in the state fell somewhere in between.

VaNews June 17, 2025


Charlottesville City Council primary is city’s first to use ranked choice voting

By HANNAH DAVIS-REID, VPM

In Tuesday’s City Council primary, Charlottesville is about to become the second locality in Virginia — after Arlington County — to use ranked choice voting, after a century of using a winner-take-all block system. In block voting, voters choose as many candidates as there are open seats for a certain office. With ranked choice voting, voters don’t just select their favorite candidates; instead, they rank as many of the candidates as they would like, in order of their preference.

VaNews June 17, 2025