Nikki Haley thanks Virginia campaign chair Susan Allen for her introduction this afternoon.
By Steve Haner
Weโve already voted, but my wife and I were in the Henrico County crowd today to hear Nikki Haley make her case for support in Tuesdayโs Virginia GOP primary. Early voting continues through Saturday, but if you wait until Tuesday and come to Henricoโs Maybeury Elementary, Iโll be there asking which ballot you want. Identify yourself as a reader and I may sneak you twoโฆ.
Remember, it is an open primary. No party registration is required, a fact that clearly irritates former President Donald Trump. He whined about it on WRVA this morning as he was interviewed by adoring host John Reid. But isnโt the point picking a candidate who can win in the general election, not just a party primary? Independents decide elections. (more…)
There was an exchange at the Virginia Capitol between Lt. Gov. Winsome Sears, who presides over the State Senate, and Sen. Danica Roem of Prince William County.
Roem identifies as a woman, although Roem was born a man. The politically correct crowd insists that failing to use feminine pronouns for someone like Roem is โmisgendering.โ A sin invented by the left.
Roem stormed out of the Senate chamber after Sears addressed her as โsir.โ Several other senators with their panties in a twist followed. Eventually Sears apologized.
Sheesh.
Look, my main problem with the trans movement is when children are involved. And the trans movement is actively recruiting kids. It needs to stop.
Beyond that, children shouldnโt be chemically castrated, sterilized with hormone blockers or have their body parts carved up because theyโre confused. And no child should be allowed to pretend to be a member of the opposite sex in school without the permission of their parents.
Biological males should be banned from playing sports with biological females and they need to be forbidden to enter traditional girlsโ safe spaces such as bathrooms and locker rooms.
That said, adults may do what they want. If a man wants to put on lipstick and wear a dress, fine.
What they cannot do is force the rest of us to play along. (more…)
I then asked her why none of my calls to that office had been answered by a human being for quite some time. I told her, โI havenโt been marking my calendar, but I guess itโs been at least one year, maybe two, since Iโve called this office and gotten a human voice. For a long time, all my calls went to voicemail.โ
She tried to assure me, โwe listen to all the calls that go to voicemail and pass them along to the senator.โ
I then replied: โThatโs nice, but from a human point of view, itโs better to call and get a human voice than just voicemail. Besides, almost every time I call the offices for Sen. Warner or Congressman Cline, a real human answers the phone.โ (more…)
On February 27, Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares sent a letter to Virginia state legislators about a Democratic proposal to allow some violent offenders to receive sentence reductions previously available only to non-violent offenders.
Miyares asked legislators to prevent the proposal, passed by the House of Delegates on February 22, from going into effect, by adopting Gov. Glenn Youngkinโs proposed budget item 390(R)(2).
โCutting sentences for violent crime, especially in cases identified as a high risk for recidivism, is having a detrimental impact on public safety throughout Virginia,โ Miyares wrote in the letter. โAggressive sentence reductions for violent criminals and those with high risk for recidivism disregards past and future victims. Allowing such a practice is not justice, and itโs not safe.โ (more…)
Occasionally, a member of the House of Delegates will stand up, speak to a matter of public interest and do so coherently.ย
Del. Mark L. Earley Jr., R-Chesterfield, achieved this feat on Friday afternoon, Feb. 23, 2024, when he offered his thoughts on state Sen. Bill 212 — legislation that would sanction skill games, described by the Richmond Times-Dispatch as โelectronic slot machine-like devices the General Assembly tried to ban in 2020.โย
While the measure cleared the House of Delegates on a 57-38 vote, Del. Earley spoke to a broader concern: ย
Mr. Speaker, ladies and gentlemen of the House, I don’t want to take a lot of your time today. I know it’s Friday. But I just feel compelled to comment on this briefly.ย
As we all know, in the last few years, really about a five-year time frame, we’ve have had a serious expansion, in a very short amount of time, in gaming and gambling here in Virginia. At this point, we got the lottery, we got casinos, we got sports betting, we got all sorts of things.
And now we have these gray games, skill games, whatever you want to call them, that have really sort of come here imposed upon us in a certain way, and now we’re dealing with it.ย
Now,ย don’t get me wrong, I certainly understand the arguments about how small business can potentially benefit from this, and I appreciate that. I am very sympathetic to it.ย
But I do think that we have a different obligation, and perhaps a higher obligation, to consider what this means for our neighborhoods and our families.ย
Iโm concerned about turning every neighborhood store and every gas station into a mini casino.ย (more…)
In 2022, the General Assembly disregarded two long-standing principles of funding transportation projects in the Commonwealth.ย Republican Gov. Youngkin followed down that path this year.
The General Assembly has dedicated sources of revenue to be used for transportation, with general government functions being financed by general income and sales taxes and other special funds. The revenue sources for transportation include taxes on gasoline and other fuels, motor vehicle licensing and titling taxes, operating licenses fees, and 0.5 percent of the 4.3 percent state sales tax. Localities in specified regions of the state are authorized to levy an additional 0.7 percent sales tax to be used for transportation. The concept of having funding for transportation and general government separated was so ingrained in the legislature that there have been attempts in the past to create a โlockboxโ for transportation funds to avoid their being used for other general government purposes. The latest such attempt was in 2018.
By statute the legislature has stipulated broadly how transportation funding will be distributed: by system, by highway district, etc.ย It has also authorized the issuance of bonds by the Commonwealth Transportation Board and other entities. However, with few exceptions, the main one being the widening of U.S. Rt. 58, the legislature has stayed away from designating the specific projects to be funded. It has left that function to the Board, relying on guidance from the Virginia Department of Transportation. It was a prudent choice. Otherwise, the funding of specific projects would be largely based on politics, rather than need. (more…)
A Virginia Senate committee voted Monday to approve a House of Delegates bill designed to finance a small modular nuclear reactor in Southwest Virginia, contradicting its own earlier vote for a much broader bill that had statewide application.
Two different bills on the same topic might now pass the Virginia Senate.ย If the House does the same thing with the Senate bill, now alive in front of its Labor and Commerce Committee, Governor Glenn Youngkin (R) could have two very different bills to choose from. (more…)
On February 22, Virginiaโs progressive House of Delegates removed language from the stateโs proposed budget that limited early releases of inmates who committed both violent and non-violent offenses. It removed that language in a 53-to-44 vote, then passed the Houseโs version of the state budget by a 75-to-24 vote.
If the final state budget also lacks this language, it will be argued that the affected inmates are entitled to be released earlier, including at least 500 of them this year, and thousands more in the years to come. In 2023, the Virginia Mercury reported that 8,000 offenders in Virginia prisons are there for a combination of violent and non-violent offenses, and thus would be affected by this sort of provision.
This provision would allow the affected inmates to benefit from a 2020 law passed by Democrats that released many non-violent inmates earlier by dramatically expanding time off inmatesโ sentences for avoiding major prison infractions and participating in prison programs. This time off is known as โearned sentence credits.โ Affected inmates who previously received 4.5 days off their sentence for every 30 days they largely complied with prison rules instead got 15 days off . Effectively, this shrank their period of incarceration by nearly a quarter from what they otherwise would have served. Prisons have been emptied as a result: Virginia recently announced plans to close four state prisons in 2024.
Virginia sales tax rates: Light blue, 5.3%, green, 6%, dark blue, 6.3% and yellow 7%. All but the localities in dark blue would be allowed to add another 1% under this pending legislation. Click for larger view.
By Steve Haner
A bill likely to produce $1.6 billion or more in local sales tax increases is moving through the General Assembly with enough bipartisan votes to block any veto from the Governor, but differences remain between the House of Delegates and Senate versions. (more…)
Because the focus of this blog is on Virginia politics and public policy, I am loath to venture beyond those boundaries. However, I have recently become concerned about an issue (nonpartisan, I hope) that has ramifications beyond the Commonwealth. I am interested in the opinions of those on this blog who may have much more expertise in the issue than I have.
An American private company recently succeeded in landing a payload on the moon. This was the first American moon landing in 51 years. This feat highlights a change in space policy by the United States: the government has turned much of space activity over to the private sector.
The director of NASAโs planetary science division summarized this change in space policy this way:
This is a really a significant shift in how we do business. โThe fact that NASA is not actually building or responsible directly for these missions or their launches is an opportunity to invest in the commercial industry to build a new capability. NASA can then purchase the delivery service, and the intent hopefully being that we can increase the frequency of deliveries and reduce the cost to NASA of doing science. (more…)
And when Virginia voted last November to give Democrats a slim majority in the General Assembly they also voted to give almost 8,000 violent criminals a shot at getting back on the streets.
News flash: any inmate whoโs served that many years in prison is a bad dude. A murderer, a rapist or some other sort of vile reptile. These are not petty criminals or marijuana users.
(Deedsโ initial bill wanted to spring felons after 15 years behind bars, but he amended it.) (more…)
When she was hospitalized in September 1998, my brother and I had a somber discussion with her physician. We asked how long our mother – who was clearly failing – would live.
โHow long is a piece of string?โ the doctor shrugged.
This measure – SB280 – would allow doctors to prescribe lethal doses of medication to patients who are determined to be terminally ill with less than six months to live.
Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology
The U.S. Supreme Court today declined to hear the appeal of the Coalition for Thomas Jefferson challenging the decision of the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals that upheld the changes in the admissions policy for the Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology.ย The result is that the changes in the schoolโs admission policy adopted by the Fairfax County School Board in 2020 will stand.ย Justices Thomas and Alito dissented from the decision not to grant certiorari.ย (Their dissents begin on page 30 of the linked document.)
This issue has been discussed extensively on this blog.ย For some background, see here.
Econ 101 Quiz. Virginia Democrats are poised to raise the sales tax 1% in most localities, add digital products to the taxed services, and create a new payroll tax. How will those changes impact that chart? Click for larger view.
By Steve Haner
A piece of Republican Governor Glenn Youngkinโs tax package has survived after all, but only the part that increases the sales tax base to collect about $1 billion or so more per year from citizens. Democrats who recently complained that sales tax increases were unfair to the poor are suddenly embracing them.ย
On Sunday, both the Virginia Senate and the House of Delegates budget committees approved Youngkinโs budget language to impose the sales tax on a host of digital products and services, adding 6% or more to the prices of downloads, streaming services, and online data storage. The full range of newly taxed transactions is not yet clear.ย
The Senate then increased the gain to the treasury by making sure the new taxes will also cover business-to-business transactions, something the governor sought to exempt and something which is just passed along in higher prices. ย
The risk of including that tax policy initiative inside Youngkinโs introduced budget bill was obvious from the start, and General Assembly Democrats have now pounced on the opportunity to capture that revenue. The tax increase is now wrapped in with all the state spending for two years, a hard bill to vote against.ย ย (more…)
How exactly is Virginiaโs General Assembly celebrating Black History Month?
By killing a bill to protect children in public school lavatories, introduced by Del. A.C. Cordoza of Hampton.
Cordoza is an African-American. And a Republican. He was famously denied membership in the Virginia Legislative Black Caucus when he was elected in 2022.
Sadly, to the caucus, heโs not the right kind of Black man. Because his views are on the right.
Cordoza claims his bill that would require school personnel to check bathrooms every 30 minutes would not require added personnel nor would it cost taxpayers a dime.
While the proposed legislation was not expected to impact state spending, Cordoza said his bill was still forwarded from the House Education Committee to the House Appropriations Committee for review. It died in that committee without a hearing.
โItโs sent there to die,โ said Cordoza, โto die quietly because they donโt want the world to know that theyโre killing a bill to protect little girls in the bathroom, but they want to make sure that a Black Republican is not the one who does it.โ said Del. A.C. Cordoza, R-Hampton.
Itโs actually a practical suggestion, given that there have been a number of assaults in several school bathrooms, and perhaps some that have not been reported. Having an adult stick his or her head in the lavatory every 30 minutes would certainly discourage bullies and sex offenders. (more…)
The year: 2075. The American colonies on the Moon are getting restless under Washington’s tyrannical rule….
This second edition of “Dust Mites” has a snazzy new cover, includes helpful lunar maps, and is 5,000 words tighter than the original. The sequel, “Trogs,” is scheduled for publication this summer.
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