• Youngkin-led VDOE Backed Limits on Undocumented Studentsโ€™ Program Access

    Trump pressured states to limit undocumented high school studentsโ€™ access to career education programs

    By Matt Barnum and Lily Altavena, Chalkbeat

    This story was originally published by Chalkbeat. Sign up for their newsletters at ckbe.at/newsletters

    Photo credit: Hannah Beier for Chalkbeat

    At least three states have taken steps to restrict undocumented high school studentsโ€™ access to dual enrollment and career-technical education programs, according to documents reviewed by Chalkbeat. In one state, the policy was reversed following Chalkbeat inquiries.

    These moves come asย efforts to limit educational fundingย forย undocumented immigrants ramp up nationwide. They build on controversial guidance from the Trump administration that restricted federally funded preschool and adult education programs to citizens and legal residents.

    But these state actions are particularly striking because they chip away at protections based on the U.S. Supreme Courtโ€™s Plyler v. Doe decision, which requires public schools to serve all students, including those who lack legal permission to be in the country. They suggest the Trump administration has made more progress than previously reported in eroding the protections enshrined in the ruling, long a conservative target.

    In Virginia, nearly every school district quietly agreed to exclude undocumented students from participating in certain federally funded career-and-technical education programs, according to records obtained by Chalkbeat.

    It is not clear how many undocumented students actually lost access to programming. But at least one school district in Virginia was denied $150,000 in federal funding because it didnโ€™t agree to exclude those students. 

    On Thursday, after repeated Chalkbeat questions, the state education department said it was abandoning the policy. School districts will no longer be required to restrict undocumented studentsโ€™ access. The original policy came under the stateโ€™s previous Republican administration. The department is now led by a Democratic appointee.

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  • Jeanine’s Memes

    Split image featuring two individuals discussing economics, with the text asking how much money one would pay to see them debate.

    See more memes at the Bull Elephant.


  • Radical UVA GROUP Attempts to Sabotage Miyares Speech

    A stylized illustration of a man in a suit with a shocked expression, his mouth covered with red tape, symbolizing silencing or censorship.
    Image credit: Chat GPT

    by The Jefferson Council

    Yesterday, UVA Dissenters, a self proclaimed โ€œcollective of anti-imperialist organizersโ€ brazenly and publicly urged its members to “spam” register for a Center for Politics event featuring former Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares with no intention of actually attending. The stated goal was to “screw up their numbers,” flooding the registration system with fake sign-ups in order to block real attendees from securing a spot.ย 

    Let’s be clear about what this is: it’s not a protest. It’s sabotage โ€” and it absolutely runs afoul of a number of UVA’s fundamental principles.

    It conflicts with UVA’s Statement on Free Expression and Free Inquiry: That policy states that “all views, beliefs, and perspectives deserve to be articulated and heard free from interference” and that the University must not allow others to “obstruct or shut down” protected expression. Coordinating fake registrations to undermine a speaker event is textbook obstruction.

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  • Bacon Meme of the Week

    A heart shape made of woven strips of bacon with a humorous caption about love.

  • Is Virginia Ready for a Recession?

    by Chris Saxman

    Q – Is Virginia ready for a recession?

    Letโ€™s look at some macro level stuff first.

    US government debt at 9am this morning:

    Infographic showing US national debt statistics, including total debt, debt per citizen and taxpayer, federal spending, budget deficit, tariff revenue, and revenue per taxpayer, with historical debt-to-GDP ratios from 1960, 1980, and 2000.

    About 1/3 of which is maturing soon:

    $10 trillion of US government debt is set to mature over the next year, accounting for 33% of all outstanding debt. The graph displays the amount of marketable interest-bearing debt maturing within one year or less alongside the percentage of such debt over time, from 2000 to 2026.

    Thatโ€™s $10trn of US government debt, right?

    That will be refinanced at HIGHER rates.

    Add in $2trn more from this yearโ€™s deficit. Thatโ€™s $12trn.

    Plus another $2trn in corporate debt. Thatโ€™s $14trn.

    $14trn this year.

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  • Redistricting Unfairness Started in Democrat- Controlled New York, Not Texas

    A stylized graphic of the state of Texas in blue, overlaid with an outline of iconic New York City landmarks, including the Statue of Liberty and skyscrapers, set against a red background.

    The problem isnโ€™t Republican states, but Democratic states where unfairness has prevailed for so long that Democrats cannot recognize the wordย fairย anymore.

    by Shaun Kenney

    Tension between Virginia Governor Abigail Spanberger and the renegades in the Democratic-controlled General Assembly is flaring up yet again, only this time it isnโ€™t taxing data centers to death but taxing Virginiaโ€™s patience:

    With less than one month to go, nearly a dozen Democratic state lawmakers, strategists and candidates say Spanberger โ€” Virginiaโ€™s popular Democratic governor who cruised to victory by double-digits last November โ€” needs to step up more assertively to sell the referendum to voters. And theyโ€™re warning that sheโ€™ll bear the brunt of the blame if the effort fails.

    Itโ€™s not that sheโ€™s doing nothing: Spanberger has endorsed the referendum and launched an ad supporting it this week, her first of the campaign, as POLITICO first reported. But critics say itโ€™s the bare minimum for an effort that is supposed to be a top Democratic priority as the party works to counter GOP-led states that are redrawing their own maps.

    Of course, this shibboleth of blame shifting โ€” Republicans did it first, Democrats are responding โ€” just isnโ€™t playing out for the precise reason that it just ainโ€™t true.

    If the question around redistricting is who is playing with the lines, or more precisely whether playing with the lines is a reaction to bad form on the opposite side, then the answer โ€” and indeed, the blame โ€” lies with New York Democrats, whose effort to gerrymander their congressional seats so as to remove a lone Republican in Staten Island was blocked by the U.S. Supreme Court this March.

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  • Stacking the Deck for Dems and Incumbents

    The mechanics of Virginia’s proposed mid-decade redistricting create obstacles for underdogs running for Congress.

    Virginia Petition of Qualified Voters form, including sections for candidate information, note to circulator, petition signer statement, and office to be filled. Contains instructions for completion and signatures required for candidate nomination.

    by Ken Reid

    There are various reasons for defeating the April 21 referendum to allow the Democrat-controlled General Assembly to redraw Virginiaโ€™s 11 U.S. house districts to give them a 10-1 advantage vs. 6-5 in the Nov. 3 congressional midterm elections.

    One issue, which has gotten scant attention, is the confusion caused for candidates who want to run for House of Representatives.

    Under Virginia law, to qualify to run for U.S. House, a candidate must, in part, secure the signatures of 1,000 qualified voters of that district on double-sided paper petition forms.

    Well, who knows what the districts will be?

    Democrats think they solved that with a provision inserted into House Bill 29, a budget bill, which extended the June primary to August 4, and petition and filing forms deadline to May 26. Governor Abigail Spanberger signed it into law.

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  • Bipartisan Praise Greets New Superintendent at Board of Ed

    by Todd Truitt

    State Superintendent Jenna Conway
    Photo credit: VDOE

    The Virginia Board of Education convened this week for its first meeting under the new administration of Governor Abigail Spanberger. The meeting represented a milestone for State Superintendent Jenna Conway, who presided over the Board for the first time in her new role. Rather than a reset, her first Board meeting as Superintendent signaled a steady, cohesive transition into the role.

    Conway had already spent seven years at the Virginia Department of Education (VDOE), most recently serving as a deputy superintendent overseeing early childhood care and education initiatives and receiving national recognition for those efforts.  

    Before arriving at the VDOE, Conway worked in early childhood at the Louisiana Department of Education during a period of sweeping, high-impact reformsโ€”alongside neighboring states, like Mississippiโ€”in which those states began implementing literacy reforms and raising academic standards to drive significant academic gains as part of the so-called โ€œSouthern Surge.โ€ Some have credited those statesโ€™ improvements in early childhood programs as having been also crucial to their subsequent K-12 success.

    Gov. Spanbergerโ€™s promotion of Conway as the VDOEโ€™s chief executive elevated a leader from within the VDOEโ€™s ranks rather than bringing in an outsider. Her continuity is especially significant given the leadership turnover under former Governor Glenn Youngkin, during which Virginia had three state superintendents in four years (all of whom were outside hires).

    At this weekโ€™s Board meeting, Conway was already well known to the incumbent Board members appointed by former Gov. Youngkin. Several offered glowing praise for Conway.

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  • Sever the New Severance Policy

    A businessman in a suit walking across a street carrying large bags of money, with a modern building in the background.

    by Jon Baliles

    With all of the issues facing Richmond on a daily, monthly, and annual basis and limited funds to address them, Mayor Danny Avula has decided as City Council debates his new proposed budget, he also wants to update the cityโ€™s pay plan with a five-pound bag of sugar to sweeten and fatten any future severance packages for selected positions.

    Avulaโ€™s new proposal redefines the hyphenated word โ€œtone-deafโ€ and it would create a new top tier of โ€œsenior executivesโ€ who would be eligible for a yearโ€™s severance pay (52 weeks) no matter how long they work for the city. Current city policy offers a severance package for top officials up to 36 weeks (nine months) of pay if they have at least 15 years of service (with some exceptions for those with decades-long service).

    Avulaโ€™s spokeswoman Mira Signer said earlier this week, โ€œThe Mayor agreed to revisit and improve the severance policy for some senior employees. The proposed policy is based on best practice standards, and is a recruiting tool that will help attract top talent to very senior roles. All councilmembers were briefed on the proposed policy.โ€

    Chief Administrative Officer Odie Donald II defended the proposal at Mondayโ€™s Council budget hearing and said, โ€œThis is something that occurs in many of your best-run cities around the country.โ€ Of course, most cities that have a similar policy do not have week-long water plant failuresmeals tax fiascos, or almost $100 million in uncollected taxes. Some cities have some of those type of problems but we seem to have ALL of them, despite raising salaries enormously in the last six years and now we are told fat severances are the missing key that will fix all that, but I digress.

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  • The Freedom to Believe — and Live What You Believe

    An image of an ancient parchment document displaying the text 'We The People' prominently at the top, with handwritten cursive and printed text, representing a foundational American political document.

    by Jeff Bayard

    Most Americans have never read the First Amendment religious liberty protections that apply to them โ€” especially here in Virginia. They know the amendment exists. They just donโ€™t know what it says. And even fewer know that Virginia adds a second layer of protection on top of it.

    Here is the federal text:

    โ€œCongress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereofโ€ฆโ€

    โ€” U.S. Constitution, First Amendment

    Now read what Virginia wrote โ€” in 1776, before the federal Bill of Rights even existed:

    โ€œThat religion or the duty which we owe to our Creator, and the manner of discharging it, can be directed only by reason and conviction, not by force or violence; and, therefore, all men are equally entitled to the free exercise of religion, according to the dictates of conscienceโ€ฆโ€

    โ€” Virginia Constitution, Article I, Section 16

    Notice the difference. The federal amendment restrains government: Congress shall not. Virginiaโ€™s constitution gives you an affirmative right: all men are equally entitled. You donโ€™t just have the right to believe privately. You have the right to live your faith โ€” in your home, your business, your counseling office, your daily life.

    That is double-layered protection. It was meant to be ironclad.

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  • Why Virginia’s Radical Redistricting Attempt is Mobilizing Gen Z

    A blatant Democrat gerrymander is causing Zoomers to get active in politics.

    A diverse group of protesters holding signs that read 'Stop Gerrymandering' and 'Fair Redistricting Now' during a rally.
    AI-generated image credit: Grok

    by Drew DiMeglio

    Virginia is the latest in a large line of states pursuing mid-decade redistricting efforts. That’s where the similarities end.

    Unlike states whose state legislatures draw congressional lines, Virginia has a bipartisan redistricting commission formed of 16 citizens and lawmakers whose proposed maps require a supermajority of legislators in the General Assembly. 

    This commission was given the power to draw congressional maps after a 2020 amendment was approved by the vast majority of Virginians. The result of the commission has been clear: Virginia’s current Congressional districts were given an A rating for partisan fairness by the Princeton Gerrymandering Project. 

    The partisan apportionment lines up with recent statewide partisan results. Six out of the eleven districts are held by Democrats (55%), and five out of the eleven districts are held by Republicans (45%). That meshed with 2024 presidential election results, when Kamala Harris won 52% of the commonwealth’s vote, while Donald Trump captured 46%.

    Despite the clear results of this commission to bring fair representation to Virginians, state Democrats are determined to recapture power for themselves with a constitutional amendment transferring power from the commission to the legislature. This special election is slated for April 21st. 

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  • State Sen. Aaron Rouse: Prevaricator or Totally Disabled?

    by Kerry Dougherty

    A smiling man wearing a suit and tie with a yellow and blue patterned tie, standing in front of a blurred background.
    State Sen. Aaron Rouse

    One of two things is true about State Sen. Aaron Rouse of Virginia Beach.

    Heโ€™s either badly disabled and unable to work due to concussions and other injuries sustained during his three seasons as an NFL safety.

    Or heโ€™s a prevaricator.

    Take your pick.

    Either one casts doubts on his fitness to serve.

    Iโ€™ve met Aaron Rouse. In fact,I interviewed and endorsed him for Virginia Beach City Council when he ran against the good ole boy Beach cronies back in 2018. He seemed fine to me. Charming, as a matter of fact.

    Heโ€™s now in the General Assembly and last spring he lost in a crowded Democrat primary for lieutenant governor to Ghazala Hashmi. Clearly, Rouse has his eyes on the Governorโ€™s Mansion. Every aspiring lieutenant governor does.

    At the same time that this ambitious politician is serving in the state senate and planning a future in politics heโ€™s suing the NFL for its most generous disability benefits, claiming he suffers from complete and total permanent disability due to injuries he sustained playing football for the Green Bay Packers and the Giants.

    The Virginian-Pilot found this, in his complaint:

    โ€œThe medical evidence from treating physicians, including Dr. Felix Kirven, Dr. Scott Sautter, and Dr. Alan Wagner, supported Rouseโ€™s claim that he is totally and permanently disabled due to the cumulative effects of multiple concussions and other injuries sustained during his NFL career.โ€

    Wait. What? Continue reading.


  • Fairfax’s No-Accountability School Zone

    by Stephanie Lundquist-Arora
    Republished with permission fromย IWFeatures

    Fairfax County Public Schools manages a $4 billion budget, but lacks a thorough audit mechanism. Skepticism has grown as spending has increased while student enrollment has declined. Adding to these concerns, critics point to the school boardโ€™s decision to appoint Kyle McDanielโ€”who has faced embezzlement allegations and remains involved in ongoing litigationโ€”as vice chair of the budget committee.

    Last week, Fairfax County School Board Chair Sandy Anderson introduced a motion at a regular meeting to appoint Kyle McDaniel, a Democrat-endorsed, at-large member currently embroiled in an embezzlement scandal, as vice chair of the boardโ€™s budget committee. The motion passed with a 7-3 vote among its entirely Democrat-endorsed board members.

    Summary of a school board motion regarding additional member assignments for various committees for the school year 2025-2026.

    Melanie Meren, a member who opposed the motion, said, โ€œI will not be able to vote for this motion because the board member who is proposed to be the vice chair of the budget committee is currently involved in a legal matter stating that he stole money from a company.โ€

    The scandal involving McDaniel began in March of last year, when Blue Label Aviation filed a civil complaint in Loudoun County, VA, alleging that McDaniel had embezzled money from the employer. McDaniel was the school boardโ€™s budget committee chair at the time and was forced to step down.

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  • Pax Virginiae: Preparing Virginiaโ€™s Future Leaders for Service in War and Peace

    A promotional image for Pax Virginiae, showcasing preparing Virginia's future leaders for military and civic service. The image includes a backdrop of the Virginia state capitol, military personnel, and a graduation ceremony featuring a diverse group of cadets in formal attire.

    by Kenrick Brown

    The Washington, D.C.โ€“Marylandโ€“Virginia super-region โ€” amusingly known as the โ€œDMVโ€ โ€” is a vital center of American national security and the Free Worldโ€™s global governance. If there is a โ€œPax Americana,โ€ an American-led global order, then the โ€œDMVโ€ is arguably analogous to a modern-day Ancient Rome, but with nice suburban outskirts. How can Virginiaโ€™s universities contribute to American national security? Ut Prosim, โ€œThat I May Serve,โ€ is the school slogan for Virginia Tech and hints at what is needed.ย Top universities in Virginia โ€” not just Virginia Tech, but the University of Virginia, the College of William & Mary, Virginia Military Institute (VMI), Washington & Lee, and others โ€” have a moral obligation to prepare future leaders for service to both the country and the commonwealth.

    To that end, five reforms described below would help ensure Virginiaโ€™s best and brightest schools are strengthening both American national security and the commonwealthโ€™s institutional competence. In practice, that would mean placing greater emphasis in higher education on military, diplomatic, intelligence, and other forms of public service. At present, too many of the most capable and elite graduates enter private-sector paths, such as management consultancies and investment banking.

    Rather than sending our smartest graduates out west to Seattle or the Bay Area or up north to New York City, we should retain them in the โ€œDMVโ€ region to protect and defend the Constitution against enemies foreign and domestic. Think Washington, D.C., over Washington State, Virginia over California, and Arlington over Manhattan.

    Firstly, Virginiaโ€™s university leaders should re-embrace standardized testing for college admissions. During the Tang Dynasty of Imperial China (618โ€“907 A.D.), civil service examinations expanded substantially in both use and political importance. Contemporary China uses the โ€œGaokaoโ€ โ€” the national college entrance examination โ€” as a principal mechanism for determining admission to universities. These include up to the countryโ€™s most elite institutions such as Peking and Tsinghua Universities.

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  • The Virginia Senateโ€™s Louise Lucas Dilemma

    The Virginia Senateโ€™s Louise Lucas Dilemma

    by James C. Sherlock

    Scandals can have real victims. This one certainly does. The victims are poor people with intellectual and developmental disabilities, people who citizens think and hope are cared for by our Medicaid dollars under the Americans with Disabilities Act.

    A politically powerful member of the Virginia Senate has failed them in her private business. ย Medicaid has paid her company to keep them well and safe, and to help them integrate as far as possible into society. ย Instead, the business has a long history of repeatedly violating Virginia laws and allowing serious injuries to the people in its care.

    The same senator has for years sat in a position of direct authority over:

    • the laws under which her business operates,
    • her businessโ€™s regulator, and
    • the funding with which her business gets paid.

    The situation presents a moral and political dilemma for the Senate of Virginia and, indeed, for all of us. It also presents a legal problem for Virginia, as the Commonwealth is already under a federal injunction for failing to properly serve this very population.

    Here is the story. The Senator is poised to make it worse.

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