By Derrick Max,
Senator Ghazala Hashmi, chair of the Virginia Senate Education and Health Committee, is introducing a bill that has no chance of becoming law — apparently trying to carry water on behalf of the Virginia Education Association (VEA) in hopes of gaining support for her campaign for Lieutenant Governor. Hashmiโs bill would require a โdelayโ in the implementation of the Youngkin administrationโs new popular school accountability system to allow time to makeย significant and unneeded revisions to the new system. Surely, Sen. Hashmi and her fellow Democrats know that if Sen. Hashmiโs delay legislation passes, the Governor will veto it.ย ย
The new accountability framework, which was just approved by President Joe Bidenโs U.S. Department of Education, takes full effect next fall.ย While the Youngkin administration may be willing to make a deal with Democrats on minor revisions that do not involve a delay in hopes of gaining broad bipartisan support, they are not likely to negotiate on anything approaching what Sen. Hashmi has proposed.ย ย
Democrats in the legislature really have 2 choices:ย ย
(A) Do not pass a messaging bill unpopular with the general electorate and get a bipartisan deal that incorporates some of their requested substantive revisions; or ย
(B) Pass a partisan messaging bill to be vetoed and that is unpopular with the general electorate but pleases the VEA and get little-to-no substantive revisions.














