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Chaplick: Youngkin refuses to fight for disabled children like mine

By TREVOR CHAPLICK, published in Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

In 2021, Glenn Youngkin seized a rare political opportunity in Virginia to persuade a bipartisan majority of Virginians to sweep him into office under the promise of education reform and parental rights. The watershed moment when everything changed occurred in his debate with former Gov. Terry McAuliffe, who infamously said, “I don’t think parents should be telling schools what they should teach.” Youngkin wasted no time skewering McAuliffe with his own words and exploiting that gaffe to win over swing voters. Youngkin’s express promise was to fight for parents to achieve education reform for Virginia.

Chaplick is one of the lead plaintiffs in the class action filed in the United States District Court of the Eastern District of Virginia entitled D.C., et al v. Fairfax County School Board, et al.

VaNews May 26, 2025


Virginia’s western congressional delegation forms own search committee for U.S. attorney post

By ELIZABETH BEYER, Cardinal News

Virginia’s three Republican congressmen from the western part of the state have formed their own search committee to select candidates for the next U.S. attorney for the commonwealth’s Western District. Their effort comes after Virginia’s two Democratic U.S. senators conducted interviews and provided two names for consideration to the White House to replace acting U.S. Attorney Zachary Lee. Lee assumed the role on Dec. 21, following the resignation of U.S. Attorney Christopher Kavanaugh. The power to appoint a new U.S. attorney belongs to President Donald Trump, subject to Senate confirmation.

VaNews May 23, 2025


What to expect from a special election to replace late Rep. Gerry Connolly

By JARED SERRE, FFXnow

In an election year dominated by state offices, Fairfax County voters now face the prospect of also electing a new lawmaker to represent them in Congress. Following the death of longtime Rep. Gerry Connolly yesterday (Wednesday), voters will soon need to select a new representative for Virginia’s 11th Congressional District — a critical decision given the Republican Party’s slim majority in the U.S. House of Representatives. But, when could that happen? And how does the special election process work? According to Virginia law, it’s a joint effort between the state executive and local political parties.

VaNews May 23, 2025


Virginia Supreme Court, examining new law, rules in railroad’s favor against internet provider

By TAD DICKENS, Cardinal News

A Virginia law meant to speed broadband deployment across railroad lines has hit its first guardrail, in the form of a state Supreme Court ruling. The court, drawing a distinction between a “public benefit” and a “public use,” ruled that Cox Communications cannot use the 2023 law to impose eminent domain on railways’ property while trying to reach the commonwealth’s more remote areas. Cox, a private, for-profit company, attempted to use the law to cross Norfolk Southern lines in eastern Virginia last year.

VaNews May 23, 2025


Dems’ lieutenant governor candidates split over Tysons casino, skill games at debate

By ANNA BRYSON, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

Virginia’s six Democratic candidates for lieutenant governor debated issues ranging from education to transgender rights during a Thursday night debate in Prince William County, the last time all the candidates will appear together in public ahead of the June 17 primary. While the candidates shared common ground on many progressive priorities, the biggest point of contention was a proposal to allow a casino in Fairfax County's Tysons Corner — one of the few issues that revealed a real divide among the field.

VaNews May 23, 2025


Education Department opens investigation of admissions at selective Virginia high school

By ANNIE MA, Associated Press

The Education Department said Thursday it is opening a civil rights investigation into Fairfax County Public Schools in Virginia over the admissions policy at an elite, selective high school. A change in the admissions policy introduced five years ago at Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology led to the enrollment of more Black and Hispanic students and faced a court challenge from some parents. The plaintiffs argued it came at the expense of Asian American students, whose numbers at the school dropped.

VaNews May 23, 2025


Magnet school in Northern Virginia faces federal racial discrimination probe over admissions policy

By VALERIE RICHARDSON, Washington Times

The Trump administration launched an investigation Thursday into the admissions policy at Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology in Alexandria, citing a state report that found that the elite program lowered its standards to increase racial diversity at the expense of Asian-American students. The Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights opened the probe a day after Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares released the results of a two-year investigation into the 2020 revisions to the prestigious magnet school’s admissions criteria.

VaNews May 23, 2025


Trump Administration Opens Investigation Into Diversity Efforts at Virginia School

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

The Trump administration announced on Thursday that it was investigating the admissions system at an elite public high school in Fairfax County, Va., which has been accused of discriminating against Asian American students to favor other racial groups. The administration has repeatedly argued that the Supreme Court’s ban on affirmative action in college admissions should also apply to K-12 education. But the court has never made such a statement, and it chose last year to allow the high school’s admissions program to stand.

VaNews May 23, 2025


Youngkin announces $16.9M investment in workforce housing

By MAIR FAMET, WHSV-TV

Governor Glenn Youngkin visited the Harrisonburg Innovation Hub on Wednesday, May 21 to announce more than $16.9 million in state funding for workforce housing investments across Virginia. The funds, which are part of the Virginia Workforce Housing Investment Program, will support 10 projects statewide and are expected to leverage more than $254 million in private investment.

VaNews May 23, 2025


Watson: Spanberger’s tepid support for ‘right to work’ is all politics

By MICHAEL B. WATSON, published in Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

I read with some skepticism the recent opinion piece ("Spanberger displays a rare trait in politics – intellectual honesty," May 16) by my good friend and former House of Delegates colleague, David Ramadan, suggesting that a vague campaign statement by the Democratic nominee for governor somehow demonstrates a rare example of political courage. On the contrary, former Congresswoman Abigail Spanberger’s declaration that she would not sign legislation that “fully repeals Virginia’s right-to-work law” was a predictable tactic intended to preempt a vulnerable issue in her campaign for governor.

Watson, a former member of the House of Delegates, is founder and retired CEO of Control Automation Technologies Corp.

VaNews May 23, 2025