We have reached sine die of the 2024 General Assembly legislative session.ย During this session, over a thousand individual bills and a nearly 500-page biennial budget were sent to the Governor.ย All of this must be reviewed and acted upon by Governor Glenn Youngkin (R) before the April 17ย reconvened session.
There may be hundreds of bills on the Governorโs desk worthy of his veto. Additionally, Democrats inserted partisan policy decisions within the budget in such a way that the Governor may need to veto it in its entirety. As Senator Creigh Deeds (D-Charlottesville) noted in his end-of-session constituent letter: โThe budget includes items the Governor does not support, and some of those may be difficult for the Governor to veto because they are woven into the fabric of the budget itself. Speculation is rampant that he may opt to veto the budget, which would set us up for another prolonged budget debate.โ
Governor Youngkin should not hesitate to use his veto pen liberally, including on the budget. As former Governor Terry McAuliffe (D) said, โThe veto is not a decision I take lightly, but it is a necessary tool to prevent harmful legislation from becoming law. I will continue to stand up for the values and priorities of the people of Virginia by exercising this authority judiciously.โ Governor McAuliffe had the highest number of vetoes in recent years when he faced Republican majorities in both chambers, vetoing 49 bills in 2017 alone and 120 during his entire term. (more…)




by Todd Truittย 
by Jon Baliles



by Ken Reid
by Hans Bader

