On Wednesday, Tazewell County Circuit Court Judge Jack Hurley issued an injunction against the yes/noย gerrymandering electionย that concluded April 21, thus blocking the state from certifying the results.
Attorney General Jay Jones (D), who gained notoriety in October 2025 when his texts surfaced where he had fantasized about the murder of a Republican lawmaker and his two sons, announced they would immediately appeal Judge Hurleyโs ruling. On Twitter/X, Jones posted: โVirginia voters have spoken, and an activist judge should not have veto power over the Peopleโs vote.โ
In his injunction, Judge Hurley cited the State Constitution and numerous laws that were broken in order to put the wording on the ballot and rush it to the voters.
The case Judge Hurley heard was RNC v. Steven Koski.
The Republican National Committee (RNC), as plaintiff, went to court since a Yes win would result in a new gerrymander designed to flip four of Virginiaโs five GOP districts to Democrat.
Steven Koski represents the State as Commissioner of the Department of Elections. The Democrat Spanberger administration has promoted the election and new maps. The vulgar State Senate Leader Louise Lucas (D-Portsmouth) promised and boasted about creating โ10 [expletive] 1โ maps.
News flash: Apparently saying โItโs that time of the year againโ is not enough for a Virginia city to close down businesses and order people off the street.
Who knew?
Certainly not feckless city officials in Virginia Beach, who were unceremoniously smacked down by a circuit court judge yesterday.
The mayor of Virginia Beach says he is disappointed. So sad. Next time follow the law.
The court ruling came in time to salvage the last weekend in April for local businesses and visitors.
The mayor and most members of the city council wanted to close the resort area for a second weekend in a row, a sign that they are not good at their jobs.
Thanks to a lawsuit filed by several resort area businesses and argued in court by attorney Kevin Martingayle, the former no-go zone from Rudee Loop to 31st Street will be open Friday and Saturday night by court order.
It should never have been closed.
In a seven-hour court hearing, the city was unable to show evidence of ANY actual threat of civil disturbance that presented a clear and present danger to the public. The city argued that historically warm weekends in the spring are when fights break out that can lead to gunfire. Continue reading.
This session, the General Assembly sent over 1,000 bills to Governor Spanberger for her signature. She signed 852 into law, vetoed 8 and proposed amendments to 180. Even though some of her amendments were little more than window dressing (see article on Paid Family and Medical Leave) and a few were substantive, the General Assembly during its reconvened session on Wednesday ignored her amendments on over two dozen bills.
The Senate even took 12 of the amended bills, lumped them into a bloc, and voted 21 to 18 to โpass them by for the day.โย In other words, they didnโt even give the Governor the courtesy of a debate on many of her ideas.ย This dismissive tactic may or may not be unprecedented, but it was clearly a power move that tells the Governor that the General Assembly believes it is in charge.ย
On one bill,ย SB342, dealing with eminent domain, the Governor sought to do a reenactment clause as her amendment.ย In that one case, a motion was made that the bill become law regardless of the objections of the governor.ย That takes the same supermajority vote as overriding a veto, and legislators from both parties passed it in both the House and Senate.ย That motion to jam a bill past the governor has happened successfully before but is very unusual when the majority is the same party as the governor.ย ย
In short, Governor Abigail Spanberger identified real problems in major legislation — and the General Assembly ignored her almost entirely, and in some cases, rudely so.
The Rich Men north of Richmond may have won for a day, but they cashed out every ounce of public goodwill they had to do it.
by Shaun Kenney
First and foremost, letโs knock down all the pretended olive branches from those who voted โyesโ on Tuesday to impose some sort of federal anti-gerrymandering law. They know damn good and well that the federal government cannot impose such regulations (which is why the present lawsuit stops at the Supreme Court of Virginia and not the U.S. Supreme Court) because redistricting is a reserved power of the statesโ not the federal government.
If they truly wanted non-partisan redistricting, they would have pushed the Virginia Model to the other 49 states. So spare me โ not interested.
Lucy can keep her football this time.
Bob Lewis and I had a good talk about the present state of affairs which made its way into the pages of the Virginia Mercury:
Kenney is a former Republican Party of Virginia top official and committed conservative who lives in rural Virginia and often differs with Trump. On Wednesday, he posted on Facebook: โ51-49 for Virginia to have 91-9 representation.โ
Seven words that say it all.
The last slender string of hope for nonpartisan redistricting is needling its way through the courts โ first in Tazewell and eventually to the Supreme Court of Virginia โ where the unfair language of the amendment undoubtedly cost the โnoโ campaign votes. Yet one is reticent to believe that SCOVA will undo the public will, even if the language itself and the process by which the voters were dragged to this point was and remains patently unconstitutional (and most assuredly unfair).
This year, 13 brave girls at Fairfax High School stepped forward to tell administrators that Israel Flores Ortiz, an adult illegal immigrant from El Salvador who was enrolled as a junior at the school, sexually assaulted them during school hours. The girls accused Ortiz of fondling their genitals while they were transitioning between classes in the hallways.
During his court hearing on April 21, in which he was sentenced to a mere 360 days in jail, Ortiz read a statement in Spanish apologizing to the girls. โI hurt them,โ he admitted, also apologizing to his own mother and father.
A few months in jail seems a light sentence for an adult in the country illegally who sexually assaulted 13 girls in their high school. But the Commonwealthโs Attorney, Steve Descano, a George Soros-funded prosecutor, notably charged Ortiz with lesser counts of assault, not sexual assault as the case should warrant.
And as IW Features previously reported, there was skepticism surrounding whether school administrators filed the appropriate Title IX complaints with regard to the assaults. Federal law requires that school officials, who are mandatory reporters, file such complaints when a student reports sexual harassment or assault to them.
IW Features sent a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request to the district seeking aggregated school-level data of Fairfax High Schoolโs Title IX referrals from the past three years. With an hour left until the legally mandated FOIA deadline, Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS) FOIA office sent IW Features district-level data detailed in the table below.
Sometimes, when you are winning big in a table stakes poker game, it can be time to put some money in your pocket. That is part of the game many nursing home chains are playing these days.
Everybody wins but the nursing facility residents, Medicare, and Medicaid.
The enterprise architecture of many less ethical chains is familiar to regular readers. In this example, a chain has sold six of its property LLCs to a real estate investment trust (REIT) and kept six.
The business model is as profitable as it is complicated, and for the same reasons. Notice all the places where Medicare and Medicaid money go each day in this example. Not much is left for staff and patient care.
Compared with other states, Virginiaโs nursing home sector has been sparsely penetrated by REITs. We can view this as the owners of the chain-controlled operating companies and property companies that dominate in Virginia being very happy with their profits, the COPN-driven lack of competition, and Virginiaโs history of non-enforcement of regulatory violations. We give them few reasons to sell their property companies.
But some do.ย Weโll look at the players, the deals, and the implications.
In just three months, Virginia’s governor has undermined Second Amendment rights, parental authority, and fiscal responsibility.
by Victoria Manning
Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger ran as a moderate, but her actions after the first legislative session prove otherwise. She has embraced an extreme left-wing agenda, eroding Second Amendment rights and backing laws that will make Virginia an even more expensive place to live. For the first time in five years, the state is now facing a budget deficit.
The Democrat-controlled legislature sent 1,082 bills to the governorโs desk to sign. She vetoed only five bills, amended 111 (which will return to the legislature for consideration), and allowed the rest to become law.
One of the key responsibilities of the General Assembly is to approve a budget. Yet despite holding full control, the Democrats havenโt passed a spending bill. For four years under Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin, the state had $10 billion in surplus revenue and delivered $9 billion in tax relief to Virginians. Now, after just one session under Democrat leadership, Virginia faces a half-billion-dollar deficit because the leftist majority demands bigger government rather than fiscal responsibility.
Democrats prioritize stripping the rights of Virginia citizens over responsible spending and balancing the stateโs checkbook.
For brief time on Election Night it appeared that common sense and fair play had prevailed in Virginia. You could see it in the horror on the faces of the CNN hosts as they were forced to report that a NO vote on the blatantly misleading redistricting referendum was ahead by almost 10 points.
Then came the Fairfax ballot dump. In a period of about six minutes NO went from a comfortable lead to losing by just a little over two points.
The Democrat power grab, which will rig all but one congressional district to favor Dems, was a success.
Career bureaucrats in Fairfax County control Virginia.
It took upwards of $70 million for Democrats to blanket the commonwealth with lies about how gerrymandering was really all about Trump. Or to promote the silly fiction that the new district lines are temporary.
Even after dusting off Barack Obama and getting him to cheer the move to disenfranchise millions of Republicans, the forces of evil prevailed only by a hair, showing that in most parts of Virginia the Democrat party is deeply unpopular.
Consider this: Abigail Spanberger – after she falsely claimed to be a centrist during the campaign – won the gubernatorial race by a whopping margin of 15%. One year earlier, Kamala Harris beat Donald Trump in Virginia by about five points.
The gerrymandering referendum – with all the might and money of the corrupt Democrat Party – squeaked through. Continue reading.
In aย closely watched raceย nationwide, theย โyesโย side eked out a narrow win in Virginia overย โno,โย as of 9:30 p.m. last night by aย 51.3% to 48.6%ย margin.
Polls closed at 7:00, and at one point early in the evening, as many smaller localities had posted their results, the No side was ahead by about 50,000 votes. By 8:20, however, the lead was narrowing, with the No lead only 50.22 (1,070,065) versus the Yes 49.78% (1,060,718).
By 8:27, as Gargantuan Fairfax County began to drop its numbers, Yes pulled ahead to 50.06% to No at 49.94%, and the trend line was established.
Due to expanded religious/cultural holidays,Fairfax County Public Schools classrooms are open for full five-day weeks only half the time. Minorities and the poor pay the price.
In January 2022, Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS) adopted a calendar containing fewer five-day school weeks and more early release days with the explicitly stated goals of โequity and inclusion.โ
At that time, the 12 Democratic-endorsed school board members also voted to decouple spring break from Easterโa terrible idea that lasted only a yearโas part of broader efforts to create a more โequitableโ school calendar.
FCPSโs updated calendar further recognizes several religious and cultural holidays, including Eid al-Adha, Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, Dรญa de los Muertos, Diwali, Bodhi Day, Three Kings Day/Epiphany, Orthodox Christmas, Orthodox Epiphany, Lunar New Year, Ramadan, Good Friday, Theravada, Orthodox Good Friday/Last Night of Passover and Eid al-Fitr.
I learned earlier today of the death of Gordon K. Davies, the former head of the State Council for Higher Education. He was ousted from that post almost 30 years ago, and Virginia was the less for it.
Occasionally, the commonwealth attracts brilliance to its service, and Gordon was brilliant enough to get on peopleโs nerves. As the familiar line goes, he did not suffer fools gladlyโthough in Gordonโs case, he wasnโt going to suffer them silently, either.
The old-guard Democratsโthe ones still holding onto power in the late 1990sโwould have protected Davies, not because he was especially lovable, but because he delivered the goods. He knew his stuff. He understood that Virginiaโs system of higher educationโin its history, ideals, and defining characteristicsโreally amounted to no system at all. It was mostly an idea. Davies understood why that idea required protection, partly because he knew how many times it had come under assault.
The attempts to centralize and homogenize Virginia higher educationโto build a superboard in Richmond, with a โchancellorโ on a throneโwere routine and resolute from the 1920s forward. Formal legislative commissions were formed, consultants were hired, recommendations were hauled before the General Assembly repeatedly, all with one essential goal: efficiency.
Efficiency had carried the day in many other states and, based on Virginiaโs parsimonious inclinations, itโs a wonder that centralization never got done. Virginia adopted that model for its community college system, but every time an opportunity arose to put Richmond in command of the stateโs 15 colleges and universities, the powers responded with a single word: No.
Between 2014 and 2023, the Department of Justice alleged in indictments filed yesterday, the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) funneled more than $3 million in donated funds to individuals associated with violent extremist groups including the Ku Klux Klan, Aryan Nations, and National Socialist Party of America. SPLC, which tracks “hate” groups nationally, allegedly paid an individual to infiltrate organizers of the infamous 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville.
I asked ChatGPT to summarize the material in the indictment pertaining to the Unite the Right rally. Unbidden, ChatGPT questioned the validity of the charges. Here follows the summary. JAB
The document you provided does not appear to be a standard or authentic federal indictment related to the 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville. Instead, it presents highly unusual and widely uncorroborated allegationsโparticularly involving the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC)โthat do not align with known, publicly documented prosecutions tied to that event.
Focusing strictly on what the document itself claims about Charlottesville, hereโs a clear summary:
Key allegations in the document (Charlottesville-related)
The document asserts that a paid informant (โfield sourceโ) connected to the SPLC was involved in online organizing related to the Unite the Right rally (2017).
This individual is described as:
Participating in leadership chat groups planning the rally.
Making racist posts online as part of their role.
Helping coordinate transportation for some attendees traveling to Charlottesville.
It further claims that:
These actions were conducted under the supervision of the SPLC.
The SPLC allegedly used covert financial mechanisms (shell entities and bank accounts) to pay such informants.
The Virginia State Corporation Commission, consisting of three judges all picked by the General Assembly while Democrats were in control, has delivered another stern warning that the Virginia Clean Economy Act is unworkable and will greatly increase electricity costs within Virginia as it reaches failure.
Despite the concerns expressed in its 21-page opinion issued April 15, the Commission did approve another wave of solar projects for Dominion Energy Virginia, along with one of the two new battery projects the utility proposed. However, several other projects the company wanted were turned down as being too costly for the pitiful amounts of energy provided.
The new projects approved and the cost overruns on solar projects previously approved will still combine to cost ratepayers billions of dollars more over time, and will add another $2.38 to the monthly bill of a residential customer using 1,000 kilowatt hours of electricity as of May 1.
The language of the final order mirrors dire staff testimony reported on in Baconโs Rebellion in January. In the weeks in between, the Virginia General Assembly has come and gone and done nothing to address the issues described.ย On the contrary, the bills it passed — most now signed by Governor Abigail Spanberger (D) — doubled down on the Virginia Clean Economyโs mandates or found new and different ways to increase the future price of power.
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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