• One Step Closer to Mob Rule

    An illustration depicting a woman signing a document titled 'National Popular Vote Compact' with state maps in the background. The map highlights Virginia's voting status as 'null and void' and shows the Statue of Liberty. There's also a bear on the map representing California, with contrasting popular vote results between Trump and Virginia.

    by Kerry Dougherty

    Of all the bad bills signed into law by Gov. Abigail Spanberger this week – and there are an abundance – perhaps the worst is the law that commits Virginia to the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact.

    With her signature this week, Virginia became the 18th state to violate Article II of the Constitution by pledging its electoral votes to the winner of the popular vote, regardless of how Virginia votes.

    This means Virginiaโ€™s voters could – and probably will – be wiped out by voters in mega states like California and New York if more states rashly join in.

    On the plus side, Virginia would be largely ignored in presidential campaigns, with candidates campaigning only in California, New York, Texas and Florida. That might be a relief.

    Democrats have been seething about the electoral college since Al Gore in 2000 and Hillary Clinton in 2016 lost their bids for the presidency despite winning the popular vote. These same people develop amnesia when reminded that in 2024 Donald Trump won the popular vote and if this unconstitutional measure been in effect, the Democrat voters in the Old Dominion would have watched helplessly as Virginiaโ€™s electoral votes went to Trump. In fact, he would have taken all 538 electoral votes and Kamala Harris would have received zero.

    Despite their anger, they are not seeking a constitutional amendment to change the system. Instead theyโ€™re trying a sleazy work-around, which will be tied up in litigation and hopefully overturned by the Supreme Court.

    Apparently the radical Democrats running Virginia are confident that no Republican will ever win the popular vote again. Continue reading.


  • Evidence of Intent

    Evidence of Intent

    by James C. Sherlock

    Evidence of intentional wrongdoing by specific nursing home chains operating in Virginia is hiding in plain sight. The huge gaps and consistent trends in each exhibit below cannot be attributed to happenstance. It reflects business models rigorously applied.

    The numbered exhibits draw entirely on a single Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) file, Provider Information.

    Medicare Compare rankings, patient acuity and occupancy

    Exhibit One:

    • Progressively lower-staffed facilities have residents with progressively higher average needs (nursing case-mix-index (CMI) ratio) for medical and activities-of-daily-living support. The national average CMI is 0.99; the two worst chains’ facilities have a CMI of 1.17, 18% higher. CMI ratios are directly proportional to Medicare and Medicaid reimbursements. They are derived from self-reported resident assessment results. That combination in evidence is unquestionably dangerous and amazingly profitable.
    • Those facilities with the worst staffing and health inspection results have the highest occupancy. Hospitals can refer to Medicare Compare as easily as anyone else. It should influence hospitals’ selection of skilled nursing facilities with which they contract to transfer discharged patients who still need skilled nursing. A good regulator would review those contracts.  
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  • Spanberger in Full

    Now we’re getting somewhere.

    A confident woman in a black suit points while holding a blueprint labeled 'Virginia's Future,' addressing a diverse group of children and adults outside a government building.

    by Gordon C. Morse

    Turns out Virginia may have a governor, after all.

    You always wonder how long it will take before they get mad. Being inundated with poorly thought-through legislation โ€” much of it portentous and progressive (abundantly so) โ€” may have tested, with telling effect, Gov. Abigail Spanbergerโ€™s patience.

    She realized that she was being had by her own Democratic Party lawmakers. They were taking her for granted. In such circumstances, even when youโ€™re dealing with members of your own party, you either act like governor or you do not.

    Spanberger has not cut the Democrats loose. Far from it. But they will now have to reckon with a new reality. Spanberger thinks for herself and that, frankly, is very good news for Virginia. Weโ€™ll see where it goes from here.

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  • Guv’s Paid-Leave “Fix” Doesn’t Touch Biggest Problems

    A woman in business attire poses next to a large, industrial machine spewing smoke and sparks, with an American flag in the background. The machine has gauges and features a sign that reads "higher taxes, lost jobs, disrupted classrooms." The woman is holding a cloth and appears to be cleaning part of the machine.
    AI-generated image credit: Grok

    by Derrick A. Max

    Earlier this year I warned that Virginiaโ€™s proposed Paid Family and Medical Leave Act would create one of the most expansive and expensive paid leave programs in the country.

    I had hoped the Governorโ€™s new amendments issued just before midnight last night would fix those concerns.

    They donโ€™t.

    The legislation still would establish a statewide insurance system funded by mandatory payroll contributions from workers and employers while offering unusually generous benefits — up to 12 weeks of paid leave replacing about 80 percent of wages.

    The Governorโ€™s substitute trims some provisions and clarifies others, but it does not address most of the concerns raised in my earlier analysis. In short, the Governorโ€™s substitute polishes the edges but leaves the underlying policy unchanged.

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  • April 21: District Madness

    Artistic illustration of a government building with grand steps and a dome, showcasing classical architecture under a blue and golden sky.

    by Gordon C. Morse

    The โ€œYesโ€ and โ€œNoโ€ signs on the April 21 referendum to amend Virginiaโ€™s Constitution are getting mixed up with the โ€œYesโ€ and โ€œNoโ€ signs on the data centers. Itโ€™s all very confusing.

    And not.

    The answer on overhauling Virginiaโ€™s congressional districts is โ€œNo.โ€ Just go in there and vote โ€œNoโ€ and stop thinking about it. Doing so doesnโ€™t send a love note to Donald Trump.

    Look at all these crazy people announcing campaign bids for districts that yet do not exist.

    My argument for the day: Jesus (heโ€™s been in the news lately and you know why) wants you to vote โ€œNo.โ€ I tried this argument on my brother, who voted โ€œYes.โ€

    In historic and mainstream Christian teaching, you do not do evil on the proposition of doing good. A good end cannot morally justify sinful means.

    That is essentially the way that Democrats justify this effort to upend Virginiaโ€™s congressional districts. It will stop Trump, they say. We must fight fire with fire. We must meet him in the road and whack his wagon, because thatโ€™s the Chicago Way.

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  • Ending Data Center Exemption – Wrong Policy, Wrong Time

    by Chris Saxman

    Wise words from former Virginia Congressman Bob Goodlatte”

    In politics, timing is everything.

    Timing also matters when it comes to the economy. Virginiaย is approaching aย pivotal momentย in itsย economic strategyโ€”and it is happening at exactly theย wrong time.

    Line graph showing the decline in valuations of tech stocks from 2006 to 2026, comparing Forward P/E ratios of the S&P 500 and S&P 500 Information Technology sectors.
    A humorous GIF of two men reacting with surprise, with the text 'DAAAAMN!' displayed prominently.

    As global markets reassess the value of technology companies, one thing is becoming clear: the era of easy capital is over.

    Investors are demanding discipline.

    Massive spending on AI infrastructureโ€”data centers, energy, and computing powerโ€”is now under scrutiny. In that environment, where companies choose to invest matters more than ever.

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  • Good News for Medical Research in Virginia

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Remember that edict by the Trump administration capping the indirect costs portion of grants by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) at 15 percent?ย There was vigorous discussion of that announcement on this blog, with many commentators supporting the move.

    Well, the Trump administration has given up on that effort.

    As soon as the new policy was announced, several state attorney generals challenged it in court. A federal district court issued an injunction prohibiting the implementation of that cap. In January, a federal circuit court of appeals agreed with the district court.ย In its opinion, the appeals court pointed out that the action by the administration violatedย regulationsย  of the Dept. of Health and Human Services. It also was in direct violation of a Supplemental Rider to the Appropriation Act that Congress had first passed in 2018, during the first Trump administration, and had adopted in each appropriation act since.ย The appeals court concluded, โ€œIn summary, Congress went to great lengths to ensure that NIH could not displace negotiated indirect cost reimbursement rates with a uniform rate.โ€

    The deadline for the administration to appeal the decision of the appeals court to the U.S. Supreme Court recently passed without action or comment by the administration.

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  • TJI and Yorktown Foundations Combine Forces

    ***** Sponsored Content *****

    Iโ€™m excited to share some important news with you.

    Today, the Thomas Jefferson Institute for Public Policy and the Yorktown Foundation for Public Policy are joining forces to create a new organization: Jefferson Forum.

    This merger brings together the Thomas Jefferson Instituteโ€™s 30-year record of serious policy research with Yorktownโ€™s newer energy and innovation in advancing education freedom and strategic initiatives.

    Simply put, we are combining our strengths to build a bigger, stronger voice for freedom in Virginia.

    The timing could not be more important.

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  • Virginia Slouches Toward State-Sanctioned Euthanasia

    Virginia Democrats push to decriminalize suicide. What could come next?

    A healthcare professional in a mask holds a blue syringe, preparing to administer a vaccine.

    by Bronson Winslow

    Virginia Democrats are working to legalize suicide in the Commonwealth, with a bill already on Gov. Abigail Spanbergerโ€™s (D) deskโ€”but the legislation wonโ€™t stop there.

    If Spanberger signs HB 43 into law, it would open the door to a cultural and legal transformation that Virginia may not have the ability to reverse. The next step: state-sanctioned euthanasia.

    โ€œHB 43 has passed the General Assembly and is waiting for the governor to enact. This is step one of a two-step process to make physician-assisted suicide legal in Virginia next year,โ€ said attorney Tim Anderson. โ€œPart 2 comes next year. If you are oldโ€”and your kids donโ€™t like youโ€”you might want to think about moving out of Virginia before next year.โ€

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  • Fairfax Schools’ Stonewalling of Title IX Data Invites Mistrust

    by Stephanie Lundquist-Arora
    Republished with permission fromย IWFeatures

    Last month, the U.S. Department of Education announced that it is investigating Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS) to determine whether the district discriminated on the basis of sex by failing to respond to multiple reports that Israel Flores Ortiz, an 18-year-old illegal immigrant enrolled as a junior at Fairfax High School, sexually assaulted female students at school this academic year.

    An inside source who works for the district told IW Features it was unlikely that school officials filed Title IX complaints against Ortiz, though they should have, given the allegations against him. The source further claimed that principals are under significant pressure from district leaders to keep their Title IX complaint numbers low.ย 

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  • Hakeem Jeffries Now in for $33 Million to Gerrymander Virginia

    Point of reference: Candidates in hotly contested House races typically spend $8 million to $15 million, according to CoPilot AI.


  • UVA’s New Quarterly Compliance Report

    by the Jefferson Council

    The second quarterly compliance report from the October 22, 2025 agreement between the Department of Justice and UVA is the first certification done by President Scott Beardsley, signed on March 31, 2026. Itโ€™s worth noting whatโ€™s new and whatโ€™s not in this installment. 

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  • Jeanine’s Memes

    NASA pilot Victor Glover speaking about being the first black man to visit the moon, emphasizing the significance of the achievement as part of human history.

    View more memes at The Bull Elephant.


  • Who is Making the Money?

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Source: AAA of Virginia

    President Trump recently declared, โ€œThe United States is the largest Oil Producer in the World, by far, so when oil prices go up, we make a lot of money.โ€ 

    I am not sure who โ€œweโ€ is. I filled up the tank on my pickup a couple of days ago.ย  It has a 26-gallon tank.ย It cost me close to $100.ย I sure did not feel like I was making money.


  • Bacon Meme of the Week

    A comic strip depicting a conversation about existentialism, featuring a cup of coffee, two fried eggs, bacon, and toast. The dialogue includes questions about belief in chicken and statements regarding the simplicity of life.