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Jerrauld Jones—civil rights pioneer, judge and state delegate—dies at 70

By KELSEY JONES, WTKR-TV

Jerrauld C. Jones, a longtime judge and state delegate, has died at 70. Jones became one of the first African-American students to integrate Ingleside Elementary School in 1961 and later the Virginia Episcopal School in Lynchburg in 1967. ... He became the first African American law clerk to the Supreme Court of Virginia, served as a Democratic member of the Virginia House of Delegates for 14 years, represented Norfolk’s 89th District and served as the long-time chair of the Virginia Legislative Black Caucus.

VaNews June 2, 2025


Williams: Asians beware. MAGA doesn’t care about racial justice

By MICHAEL PAUL WILLIAMS, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

The prestigious Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology — a Northern Virginia magnet school not to be confused with Richmond’s TJ — has become yet another Trump administration battleground in its war on diversity, equity and inclusion. At issue is an admissions process, adopted by the Fairfax County School Board in 2020, that a parents group argued was biased against Asian applicants. A lower court agreed, but the Richmond-based U.S. 4th Circuit Court of Appeals overturned that ruling in May 2023. The U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear the matter.

VaNews June 2, 2025


Trailblazing civil rights leader, state delegate and longtime Norfolk judge Jerrauld Jones dies at 70

By JANE HARPER, Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

Jerrauld C. Jones, a longtime judge and state delegate who began making a name for himself when he was among the first Black students to integrate one of Norfolk’s elementary schools, died Saturday. He was 70. Jones’ son, Jay — also a former state delegate and a current Virginia attorney general candidate in this month’s Democratic primary — made the announcement on Facebook late Saturday. A cause of death wasn’t provided.

VaNews June 2, 2025


Leighty: How America drifted from shared power to centralized control

By BILL LEIGHTY, published in Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

The government of the United States was never designed to be efficient. It was designed to be safe — from tyranny. Having just fought a war to escape centralized power, the founders intentionally created a government that divided authority in every possible direction. They built a system of pluralistic governance — one that splits power across three branches (executive, legislative, judicial) and three levels (federal, state and local). It was a system of friction by design, built to slow down decision-making so no one person — or branch — could dominate.

Leighty is the author of “Capitol Secrets: Leadership Wisdom from a Life of Public Service” and served as chief of staff to former Govs. Mark Warner and Tim Kaine. He served as assistant director of Gov. George Allen’s commission on government reform.

VaNews June 2, 2025


Jerrauld Jones, Norfolk judge and former state delegate, dies at 70

By ANDREW CAIN, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

Jerrauld C. Jones, a Norfolk judge, former state delegate and father of Democratic attorney general hopeful Jay Jones, has died at 70. His family, including Jay Jones, who previously held his father’s former seat in the House of Delegates, announced his death Saturday evening.

VaNews June 2, 2025


Va. House Republicans pick Del. Kilgore as new leader

By ANDREW CAIN, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

Republicans in the House of Delegates on Sunday chose Del. Terry Kilgore, R-Gate City, as their new leader. The chamber's prior GOP leader, former Speaker of the House Todd Gilbert, R-Shenandoah, is a candidate to become the next U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Virginia.

VaNews June 2, 2025


Youngkin signs Virginia law limiting ‘bell-to-bell’ cellphone use in public schools

By DEIRDRE HEAVEY, Fox News

Republican Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin signed a bill into law Friday limiting cellphone use for all Virginia public elementary, middle and high school students. Youngkin, who built his political career championing parents' rights in education, ceremoniously signed two versions of the bill, HB1961 and SB738, at the Carter G. Woodson Middle School in Hopewell, Virginia. Youngkin said it was a fitting location for a day filled with such "hope."

VaNews June 2, 2025


Virginia localities puzzled by inclusion on federal ‘sanctuary cities’ list

By MICHAEL POPE, WVTF-FM

The Department of Homeland Security is identifying 20 counties and 13 cities in Virginia they call “sanctuary jurisdictions.” To understand the list of 33 sanctuary cities in Virginia, perhaps it’s best to focus on one county that is NOT on the list: Loudoun County in Northern Virginia. Freddy Mejia at the Commonwealth Institute says this is the example used to strong-arm local law-enforcement officials to cooperate with federal immigration authorities. “Loudoun County saw a real large spike of car searches for Latino residents in that community," Mejia says. "And we know that that community, that sheriff is cooperating with ICE under a 287(g) agreement in Loudoun County.”

VaNews June 2, 2025


Richmond slapped with ‘sanctuary jurisdiction’ label and familiar threat of funding cuts

By LUCA POWELL, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

Richmond and its surrounding counties have been dubbed “sanctuary jurisdictions” by the Department of Homeland Security. In a news release Thursday evening, DHS Secretary Kristi Noem said that city policies are “endangering Americans and our law enforcement in order to protect violent criminal illegal aliens.” The department published a list with hundreds of qualifying cities and counties nationwide. “Sanctuary” status is a catch-all for local governments whose policies shield undocumented immigrants from agencies like DHS and its enforcement agency, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). The release said Richmond, Henrico, Hanover, Chesterfield and Dinwiddie obstruct the enforcement of federal immigration laws.

VaNews June 2, 2025


Hampton Roads cities accused by Homeland Security of obstructing federal immigration officials

By GAVIN STONE, Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

The Department of Homeland Security released a list of localities around the country that it alleges are obstructing enforcement of federal immigration law, including several in Hampton Roads. The list, which DHS says will be updated regularly, was compiled after an executive order from President Trump. Hampton Roads cities on the list: Virginia Beach, Hampton, Portsmouth, and Newport News — along with Gloucester County. In all, the list targets 33 Virginia localities — including Richmond and Fairfax County ...

VaNews June 2, 2025