• 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.

  • Family Exodus

    Line graph showing net migration of married families with children from Blue states to Red states from 2008 to 2024, indicating a cumulative increase from approximately 85,000 in 2008 to 713,000 by 2024.

    From Brad Wilcox and Grant Bailey with the Institute for Family Studies:

    The 2026 Family Structure Indexย spotlights red statesโ€™ growing dominance on the family front. Take family migration.ย From 2019 to 2024,ย there has been a steady exodus of families from Blue to Red Americaโ€”370,000 families from blue to red states. In fact, going back to 2008, a net total of 713 thousand married families with children left blue states for red states over 16 years.

    Here are the specifics for Virginia:

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  • Good News for Virginia Republicans

    Governor Spanberger’s repudiation of the political center combines with national trends to give redistricting opponents a massive boost in Virginia.

    A stylized depiction of turbulent waves resembling The Great Wave off Kanagawa, featuring bold red and purple colors with distant mountains and small boats in the foreground.

    by Shaun Kenney

    Former Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin (R) emerges from the mists and announces that he has more to give in the political arena, which is welcome news to Virginians who are staring down the immediate threat of the looming redistricting amendment on April 21st as well as a bevy of state amendments in November.

    A late entry into the redistricting fight, Youngkin has hoovered in a solid six-figure donation to Virginians for Fair Maps, one of the three efforts to turn back the $50 million left-wing dark money campaign to rig the lines from non-partisan redistricting to a 10-1 Democratic gerrymander.

    Meanwhile, Brian Cannon โ€” architect of the Virginia 2021 non-partisan redistricting effort which carried the day by 2-1 margins โ€” writes in the pages of Cardinal News how the rigged gerrymandering effort by the self-styled defenders of democracy is ill-placed and off-center:

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  • The General Assembly is Looking for Experts

    The General Assembly is Looking for Experts

    by James C. Sherlock

    This is yet another story of state-sanctioned corruption by elected politicians serving the interests of the nursing home industry. New players, same play.

    That industry, led this time by out-of-state chains, has once again found it cheaper to buy the votes and influence of senior members of the General Assembly with laundered Medicare and Medicaid funds than to spend that money to care for residents.

    The Saga of General Assembly House Bill 605

    An article by this author, published two months ago, drew attention to House of Delegates Bill 605 (HB605). The patrons were Delegates Rodney Willett, D-Henrico, and Vivian Watts, D-Fairfax. As introduced, HB605 set a minimum staffing standard.

    It therefore had no chance of passage and may never have been expected to do so.

    Rep. Willett introduced his bill on January 13, 2026. On that same day, he and Del. Luke Torian (Appropriations Committee Chair) received $10,000 each from Organizing for Virginia Seniors. Gov. Spanbergerโ€™s name, at $100,000, tops that list.ย Organizing for Virginia Seniorsย is funded by out-of-state nursing home chains.

    Willett now says he will โ€œdefer to the greater expertsโ€ on determining standards.

    As sent to the Governor, HB 605 directs the Joint Commission on Health Care to conduct a study. The only directed reference is to that Commissionโ€™s own 2021 study, not the wealth of national work on that subject. The nursing home lobby is confident that it controls the outcomes from that Commission.ย It always has. Money well spent.

    That sequence of events is, unfortunately, legal in Virginia.

    Weโ€™ll examine the industry positions on both regulations and sanctions, and some history. Then we will look at the General Assembly’s โ€œgreater experts,โ€ who sit on and staff that Commission, including Willett, who chairs it.

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  • FCPS Legal Spending Soars

    Fairfax County Schools’ legal bills: $12 million and counting

    by Stephanie Lundquist-Arora

    A chaotic scene outside a school, with people in business attire collecting a large flow of dollar bills spilling from the school entrance. Some are using nets and bags labeled 'LAWYER,' while others are frantically grabbing money. In the background, playground equipment and a bright blue sky are visible.
    Image credit: Chat GPT

    On March 23, Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS) Superintendent Michelle Reid announced that she is enlisting the services of yet another law firm, McGuireWoods, to โ€œinvestigateโ€ the districtโ€™s latest scandal โ€” allegations that an 18-year-old illegal immigrant fondled the genitals of several female students in Fairfax High School. The districtโ€™s legal bills are mounting. 

    In her announcement, Reid said she retained โ€œan independent outside law firm to conduct a comprehensive review of this matter.โ€ The districtโ€™s contract with McGuireWoods, however โ€” authorizing attorneysโ€™ fees of up to $1,850 per hour โ€” suggests a role less โ€œindependentโ€ than described. 

    โ€œMcGuireWoods was retained by Client on March 19, 2026, to conduct a confidential, attorney-client privileged investigation concerning allegations of sexual harassment and/or assault of students at Fairfax High School,โ€ the contract states. โ€œThe investigation has been undertaken for the purpose of providing legal advice to Client.โ€

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  • Dem Bill Would Discriminate Against White Men in Government Contracts

    Will Governor Spanberger sign it?

    A woman with long hair wearing a blazer, standing in front of a graphic background featuring a courthouse and the Virginia state flag.
    Image credit: Restoration News

    by Drew DiMeglio

    Democrat Abigail Spanberger won Virginia’s gubernatorial election last November by a large margin by campaigning as a moderate dealmaker. Five months later, she faces an impasse: A bill on her desk allowing state agencies to discriminate against businesses owned by white men when dishing out certain government contracts. Spanberger has a choice to makeโ€”either bend the knee to the far-left faction in the legislature or live up to the moderate mandate which put her in office. 

    HB 61, the “Small SWaM Business Procurement Enhancement Program Act,” passed both houses of the legislature along party lines and directs state agencies to take the race and sex of business owners into consideration when awarding contracts. The act establishes a statewide goal of 42% of SWaMโ€”that’s Small, Women, and Minority owned businessesโ€”utilization in all discretionary spending by executive branch agencies. The act requires agencies to increase their SWaM utilization by 3% each year until the 42% goal is reached. Lastly, the act allows state agencies to exclude non-SWaM businesses, presumably those owned by white men, from certain government contracts under $200,000.

    HB61 is not an anomaly; many other states have similar pieces of legislation. A look into those states can show Virginians what example their legislature is following.

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  • The Governor Flexes Her Muscles

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Governor Abigail Spanberger

    Governor Spanberger has issued her first veto.ย To add some drama, it was of a high-priority bill sponsored by one of the top Democrats in the Senate.

    Sen. Scott Surovell (D-Fairfax), the Senate Majority Leader, introduced legislation that would have authorized a referendum in Fairfax County on the establishment of a casino at Tysons.ย The bill passed by comfortable margins in both the House and the Senate and was supported by both Democrats and Republicans.

    Although the bill was a high priority of one of the leaders of her party in the General Assembly, the Governor has some cover.ย Unlike casino legislation in the past, which the city councils of the cities authorized to have casino referendums were strongly in favor of, the governing body of Fairfax County is opposed to establishing a casino at Tysons.ย As a result of such opposition, a majority of the General Assembly delegation from Fairfax County opposed the legislation. Spanberger cited these factors in explaining her veto, โ€œLocal governing boards should lead on proposed casino development,โ€ฏas has happened in every locality that now has a casino.ย But in Fairfax County, the Board of Supervisors has explicitly opposed this legislation, and an overwhelming majority of the General Assembly members whoโ€ฏrepresentโ€ฏFairfax voted against it.โ€

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  • Bargaining Bill Would Trample Public Employee Rights

    by Chris Braunlich

    Political cartoon depicting a wealthy union boss in a top hat and suit, with phrases on his clothing that highlight corruption and exploitation, overshadowing workers marching beneath him. The scene conveys a critique of labor practices and the disparity between management and workers.
    Image credit: Grok

    Tuesday’s columnย discussed some of the reasons Governor Spanberger should amend or veto the public employee collective bargaining bill headed to her desk:ย the local and state taxpayer costs, the creation of new bureaucracies, the opposition of local Democrats and a majority of local government and school board leaders and, perhaps most persuasively, the use of a โ€œdues skimmingโ€ scheme that would put the union between family members providing help to their relatives.

    But there are other concerns, as well โ€ฆ starting with the billโ€™s revocation of Virginiaโ€™s Secret Ballot Protection Act, which declares โ€œthe right of an individual employee to vote by secret ballot in such a procedure is a fundamental right that shall be guaranteed from infringement.โ€

    By eliminating that language the legislation ends protections for employees by allowing a new โ€œPublic Employee Relations Boardโ€ to declare a winner on the basis of union claims that more than half of employees have signed up with a union.

    Itโ€™s a conscious effort to avoid the democratic process of elections. As Bruce Raynor, once president of a Service Employees International Union declared โ€œThereโ€™s no reason to subject the workers to an election.โ€ Mike Fishman, when he was president of Local 32BJ of SEIU, echoed the sentiment, saying โ€œwe donโ€™t do elections.โ€

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  • Cloudy Forecast for Richmond City Transparency

    A tall building shrouded in fog, with American and state flags visible at the front.
    Richmond City Hall. Image credit: Grok

    by Jon Baliles

    โ€œA lack of transparency results in distrust and a deep sense of insecurity.โ€
    โ€” Dalai Lama

    Less than three weeks ago, we wrote about transparencyโ€™s obituary in RVA, but few would have ever guessed that City Hall was apparently not only serving as funeral director but also continued to keep throwing dirt on top in hopes that it will never be seen again. That might seem a bit hyperbolic, but consider that while many people welcomed a new administration into City Hall last year anticipating a new attitude and an eagerness to rebuild trust with the people, the public is instead being treated like the dirt.

    Mayor Avula has made it clear in the last 15+ months that transparency is not a priority but merely a political pawn and tactic to prevent the public from getting the impression that anything is wrong and merely keeping a positive effort and attitude will cure all our problems. City Hall has for too long been insecure about sharing whatโ€™s really going on and worried that bad news might lead to discord, a reputation for futility, or political exile. However, when you lead by example and are honest with the hurdles you face, you create trust and buy-in and that engenders goodwill and people are more likely to have patience with city government. Keeping people in the dark only breeds distrust and resentment, but some political actors and those driving the policy are clueless to that reality.

    The Avula administration seems to believe transparency is something to limit (or shut off) because it could lead to unfavorable news that highlights problems that are in need of solutions.

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  • WaPo Calls Spanberger a Spineless Hypocrite

    by Kerry Dougherty

    Itโ€™s worse than we thought.

    Abigail Spanberger is in deep trouble. Sheโ€™s not only squandered almost all of the goodwill that came with her election but thereโ€™s more.

    Sitting down?

    Sheโ€™s lost The Washington Post.

    In a Tuesday editorial that attempted to explain the new governorโ€™s plummeting poll numbers, The Post accused her of being a spineless hypocrite and a tool of the radical elements in her party.

    Worse, they accuse Spanberger of compromising public safety with her executive order that ended cooperation with ICE and of being complicit in a redistricting power grab โ€œshe knew to be wrong.โ€

    The honeymoon ended quickly because Spanberger allowed herself to become the face of a hyper-partisan power grab that she knew to be wrong. The governor signed off on a proposed map that will give her party a 10-1 edge in the stateโ€™s congressional delegation if voters approve an April 21 referendum. There are currently six Democrats and five Republicans, which is fair in a blue-leaning swing state.

    This has turned off independents and repulsed moderate Republicans who helped her win three competitive congressional races. Spanberger has come across as a hypocrite, one of the characteristics voters most dislike about politicians. Commercials and mailers highlight her past support for the 2020 constitutional amendment sheโ€™s now trying to unravel and previous condemnations of the tactics sheโ€™s now employing.

    Ouch. Continue reading.