• Delegate Won’t Correct False Accusation About Israel

    Sam Rasoul

    by Scott Dreyer

    On October 17, around noon Virginia time, a missile allegedly hit a Baptist hospital in Gaza. Almost immediately, many US mainstream news outlets blamed Israel for the attack and claimed โ€œover 500โ€ had been killed.

    As reported here, about four hours after the blast, Del. Salam โ€œSamโ€ Rasoul (D-Roanoke) posted to X, formerly known as Twitter, โ€œToday Israel bombed a hospital and a UN school. War crimes it will never be held accountable for. Over 1000 children dead in 10 days. Sickening.โ€

    Within hours, though, as more evidence came in and was examined, it became clear that the blast was not from an Israeli rocket strike, but from a failed Palestinian missile that dropped on Palestinian territory, hitting the hospitalโ€™s parking lot. On October 18, Sen. Mark Warner (D-VA), who has access to classified information as a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, tweeted โ€œwe feel confident that the explosion was the result of a failed rocket launch by militant terrorists and not the result of an Israeli airstrike.โ€ (more…)


  • UVa’s Modern-Day Barbarians

    Image credit: Bing Image Creator

    by James A. Bacon

    The latest round of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has stirred up emotions at the University of Virginia more than any event since the George Floyd riots. Not only are students holding demonstrations and counter-demonstrations; faculty, parents, and alumni are chiming in.

    Eighty University of Virginia professors signed an open letter proclaiming themselves to be “unsettled” by the tone of a statement previously issued by President Jim Ryan concerning events stemming from Hamas’ October 7 terror attacks on Israel. Ryan expressed sorrow for the atrocities inflicted upon Israeli citizens, the writers aver, but did not acknowledge the sufferings of the Palestinian people.

    Meanwhile, more than 15o parents and alumni have signed a letter expressing concern for the safety of Jewish students in an atmosphere of increasing antisemitism nationally. The university, they say, needs to create a task force to eradicate antisemitism within the UVa community.

    The Jefferson Council members with whom I am in contact — and I have heard from many — are unanimously supportive of Israel. The Jewish state is far from perfect when measured against a utopian ideal of pluralistic, democratic, rights-respecting nations, but Hamas, a terrorist organization masquerading as a state, bears no comparison. It is in the same league as the Huns, Vandals, Goths, Vikings and other ancient barbarians who laid waste to the settled societies around them. Council members have chosen to side with the heirs of Western Civilization and against those who seek to destroy it. (more…)


  • Harvard History Professor to Lead Monticello

    Jane Kamensky, new President of Monticello. Courtesy of Harvard Crimson. Photo credit Soumyaa Mazumder

    by James C. Sherlock

    She is certainly qualified.

    On Oct. 17 the Thomas Jefferson Foundation announced that Jane Kamensky, Harvard history professor and director of the Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, will be the next president of Monticello.

    From an interview with Harvard Crimson.

    • โ€œThe combination of celebration, commemoration, and reckoning that takes place at Monticello in 2026 will not only do all those things, but will show America how to do it,โ€ she said.
    • Kamensky said she looks forward to engaging the American public, especially young people, in a โ€œshifted tone of conversation about American ideals and imperfections and possibilities,โ€ she said.

    โ€œShow America how to do it” is an aggressive vision, but we wish her well.

    There is evidence that there are mines in that field. She needs to try to carefully clear them, not set them off. (more…)


  • Court Blocks Pennsylvania from Joining RGGI

    The states currently in the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative tax compact. Pennsylvania will remain conspicuously absent, and Virginia departs in two months.

    by Steve Haner

    A state court in Pennsylvania has ruled that the regulatory decision to enroll that state in the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) exceeded the authority of state regulators. It ruled RGGI is a tax that could only be lawfully imposed by the legislature.

    It was the Republican majority in one of the stateโ€™s legislative chambers that brought the legal challenge, so unless or until the political balance changes in that state, a vote to join the interstate carbon dioxide capping program is unlikely.

    Adding Pennsylvania would have been a major expansion of the 11-state RGGI compact. Its many fossil fuel power plants would need to buy $400 million or more worth of CO2 allowance credits per year, a third or more than Virginiaโ€™s power plants are being taxed.

    It is also one of the larger states in the PJM Interconnect regional power marketplace (it is the P) where the power plants do not pay into RGGI, lowering the relative cost of its power when it flows into other PJM states. Virginia electric customers are often using electrons from elsewhere in PJM.

    That the money the utilities must pay for operating their fossil fuel plants is a tax is something most RGGI proponents, including those in Virginia, vehemently deny. That was one of the key disputes in the challenge in Pennsylvania, where joining RGGI was a regulatory step initiated by its then-Governor Tom Wolf (D). (more…)


  • The Latest Campaign Finance Reports for State Senate Races

    by Jeanine Martin

    October finance reports are available at VPAP.org.

    Below is the amount of money raised in the most competitive Senate districts from October 1st to the 26th. Once again, Democrats, the party of the rich, have raised more money than Republicans in almost every race. But the energy weโ€™re seeing around the commonwealth for Republican candidates has been impressive. (more…)


  • Virginia Set to Help Taxpayers for a Change

    from The Republican Standard

    Good news for Virginia taxpayers.

    In the coming weeks, several hundred dollars are heading back into the pockets of eligible Virginians. Up to $400 per household will be heading to mailboxes and bank accounts across the Commonwealth thanks to a surplus in the state budget recently signed by Governor Glenn Youngkin.

    In a media release issued by his office last week, Governor Youngkin stated.

    โ€œAs Virginians continue to face inflation and high prices as a direct result of policies out of Washington, D.C., these rebates are an important step going into the holiday season to help Virginians keep more of their hard-earned money for gas, groceries, and essentials.โ€

    NBC4Washington also noted that โ€œthe taxation department has an online lookup tool where taxpayers can go to see if theyโ€™ll receive a rebate.โ€

    If you enjoy having more control over your own dollars, donโ€™t forget to think about the benefits of having leaders in the state that value the taxpayers as you head to cast your ballot in the state and local elections this year.

    Republished with permission from The Republican Standard.ย 


  • Democratic General Assembly Would Be Much Softer on Crime

    from Liberty Unyieldingย 

    Democrats are slightly favored to win control of Virginia’s legislature in this year’s election, although the election will be very close. If they take over, the legislature will become much softer on crime than it is now, because incoming Democratic leaders are more left-wing than their mainstream liberal predecessors. For example, if Democrats win control of the House of Delegates, the speaker of the House will be Democratic leader Don Scott, a convicted felon, not his mainstream liberal predecessor, Eileen Filler-Corn.

    Back in 2020, Don Scott proposed radical legislation that would release dangerous criminals from prison, even if prison and parole officials had proof of their continuing danger to society. It failed to pass back then, because Scott was a junior legislator, and Democrats were more mainstream liberal, and less left-wing, than they are now. The only moderate Democrats in the Virginia legislature are either retiring — such as state Senator Lynwood Lewis — or were defeated in the Spring 2023 Democratic primary. Some mainstream liberals are also leaving the legislature. George Barker was defeated in a primary by a candidate to his left, and Senate Majority Leader Richard Saslaw is retiring.

    Scott’s legislation in 2020 was very bad, and at odds with public safety. If he becomes House Speaker, he might be able to use his power to get his fellow Democrats to pass it. Then, he could hold Republican Governor Youngkin’s priorities hostage unless Youngkin allows such legislation to become law. For example, Scott could get Democrats to block the governor’s appointments. The Virginia Senate only approved Governor Youngkin’s appointment of Bert Ellis to the University of Virginia Board of Visitors because the Senate’s two moderate Democrats voted along with Republicans to confirm him. Both of those Democrats are leaving the legislature after this year. The House of Delegates can also block appointments to many posts in Virginia. (more…)


  • Governor Youngkin Steps to Curb Anti-Semitic Activities – How about Law Enforcement?

    by James C. Sherlock

    Governor Glenn Youngkin took action today with an Executive Directive to โ€œCombat Antisemitism and Anti-Religious Bigotry in the Commonwealth and on Campuses.โ€

    It is excellent, and we look forward to immediate steps by other actors in the Commonwealth. (more…)


  • Dominion’s Wind Project Wins Federal Approval

    Norfolk Virginian-Pilot photo of the first eight monopiles for Dominion’s offshore wind project, celebrated at a ceremony last Thursday upon their delivery.

    The Biden Administrationโ€™s Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) has issued final approval for the construction of Dominion Energy Virginiaโ€™s Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project. Here is the release. A few more steps remain and should be completed by late January, according to BOEM.

    The announcement, fully expected since all previous U.S. projects have been similarly approved, followed by a few days the arrival of the first set of gigantic monopiles, the first eight of the 176 structures Dominion will build about 27 miles or more off Virginia Beach.

    The only coverage of their arrival was provided by The Virginian-Pilot. Governor Glenn Youngkin (R) attended and has praised the project all along. The paper provided only an indirect quote from his remarks:

    The project is also at the heart of Virginiaโ€™s all-of-the-above approach to energy production, which aims to make energy cheap and plentiful by employing fossil fuels, nuclear and growing green energy, said Gov. Glenn Youngkin, who attended the event.

    (more…)


  • Conservative Boycotts Work

    by Kerry Dougherty

    In the first month after Dylan Mulvaney began promoting the Anheuser-Busch beer, sales of Americaโ€™s most popular beer dropped 26.5% while Modeloโ€™s were up 13.5%. The Mexican beer quickly toppled Bud Light as Americaโ€™s best-selling beer.

    Likewise, the June โ€œPride Monthโ€ boycott of Target resulted in a 5.4% drop in that companyโ€™s second quarter profits and caused Target to revise down its yearly numbers.

    These are cautionary tales. Pay attention, Eventbrite.

    The online platform that allows event organizers to distribute and sell tickets was targeted yesterday by Virginiaโ€™s Gov. Glenn Youngkin after he learned that Eventbrite unceremoniously dumped a โ€œProtecting Womenโ€™s Sports with Riley Gainesโ€ event at the University of California at Davis.

    Riley Gaines, the champion collegiate swimmer who was forced to compete against Lia Thomas, a biological male, is on a mission to keep men out of girls sports. (more…)


  • Will the Left Repudiate this Evil?

    (This column was published earlier today by The Thomas Jefferson Institute for Public Policy)

    by Chris Braunlich

    โ€œYou dance with the one who brung yaโ€ goes one of the oldest sayings in politics.

    It means that when elected officials get into public office, they vote with those who helped put them there.

    The deadly Hamas attack on Israel, an event slaughtering 1,400 Israelis that Hamas political bureau member Ghazi Hamad called โ€œour message to the world,โ€ has exposed divisions up and down the Biden liberal-left coalition โ€“ and sent a warning signal about those who power that coalition.

    Polling data demonstrate the split among Democrats, fueled largely by the young and the left. ย ย It has already caused President Biden to shift his tone, and a recent Reuters report noted that โ€œBiden, 80, has evolved in the face of a challenging 2024 reelection bid, (and) threats by some would-beย supporters to withhold their votes over his lack of backing for Palestinians .โ€ฆโ€

    Four hundred congressional staffers have signed a letter to their bosses opposing the Administrationโ€™s current approach.ย Two-hundred each among the former volunteers of presidential candidates Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren have done the same.ย Groups supporting Biden are disbanding. (more…)


  • To Graduate or Not

    by John Butcher

    The 2023 4-year cohort graduation rates are up on the Virginia Department of Educationย Web site.

    VDOE likes to report its โ€œOn-Time Graduation Rateโ€ because it inflates the numbers by counting the nonstandard diplomas. The data below are the โ€œFederal Graduation Indicatorโ€ that counts only the Standard, Advanced, and IB diplomas.

    On average, Virginiaโ€™s economically disadvantaged students (ED) (mostly students who qualify for the free/reduced price lunch program) graduate at rates ca. 9% lower than their more affluent peers (Not ED). The handy VDOE database provides data for both groups.

    To start, here are the division average federal ED rates plotted v. the Not ED.

    The gold square is Richmond. The orange diamonds are the peer cities, from the left Norfolk, Newport News, and Hampton. The green diamonds are the Richmond โ€˜burbs, from the left Charles City, Chesterfield, Henrico, and Hanover. The aqua circle is the state average (average over all students, the averages of the division averages are slightly different, see below).

    The fitted line (with the state average removed and Highland not showing because of the suppressed ED datum) confirms what our eyes tell us: The ED rate is only slightly correlated with the Not ED. (more…)


  • Musings on Virginia Politics

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Southwest Virginia electionsโ€”The folks in the Mt. Rogers region take their politics seriously. Along all those mountain roads are numerous assemblages of campaign signs like the one shown above, although this is small in comparison to some. (You gotta love a candidate nicknamed โ€œStingyโ€!) Because the General Assembly seats are, for the most part, uncontested, the action is with the campaigns for local offices.

    Bellwetherโ€”The national columnist, E.J. Dionne, Jr., has picked up on David Toscanoโ€™s theme of Virginia being a bellwether state. In a recent column, he argues that both parties in Virginia are resorting to the familiar tactic of getting their voters to the polls by โ€œscaring the daylights out of them.โ€

    The Democrats are warning ominously that Republicans, โ€œMAGA extremists,โ€ if they take over both houses of the legislature, will abolish abortion. For their part, Republicans are declaring that Democrats want to defund the police and let criminals โ€œwalk easy.โ€ As Joshua Cole, a Democrat running for a House seat in the Fredericksburg area told Dionne, โ€œItโ€™s either abortion or itโ€™s crime.โ€

    Dionne concludes, โ€œBoth parties will be intensely watching Virginia for clues about 2024โ€™s political atmosphere…. The upshot: huge sums of money dropped on a few places are turning Virginia into a laboratory where competing theories about what moves voters are being tested.โ€

    Local elections are the most fun–Speaking of local elections, Dwight Yancey of Cardinal News has a fascinating summary of local elections around the state, albeit mostly in the western part.ย  It includes a description of three indicted Republican candidates on the ballots.


  • A Long Time Ago in a World Far Far Away

    Mafic dike in wall of granite. Roadcut on VA Rt. 16 near Mouth of Wilson Baptist Church

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    This past weekend I went back in Virginiaโ€™s history. Waaaay back. Over a billion years back.

    The occasion was the 2023 Virginia Geological Field Conference. This is an annual event staged by a group of leading geologists in the state. Attending were faculty members from several institutions, including one community college; geologists from the United States Geological Service; staff from several state agencies, such as the Department of Environmental Equality; college students, folks from the private sector; and one or two non-geologists (such as me) who nevertheless are keenly interested in the science.

    We met in the Mt. Rogers area (the site of the conference rotates among Virginiaโ€™s five geographic regions). There we spent a day and a half traveling among sites that have been explored and mapped by USGS geologists over the past few years. We would go to a site, get a briefing from the lead USGS geologist and then go crawl over and around the rocks, with many using their geologistโ€™s hammer to break off chunks for examination. As for me, I would stand in front of a wall of rock or hold a chunk in my hand and ask one of the USGS or other geologists, โ€œTell me what I am looking at.โ€ (more…)


  • List of Wrongly Purged Voter Registrations Gets Larger

    Susan Beals, Commissioner,
    Va. Dept. of Elections

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Remember my earlier report on the Youngkin administration cancelling the registrations of voters eligible to vote? These were felons whose voting rights had been restored who had committed a parole violation, which shows up as a felony in the State Policeโ€™s official crime database.

    In mid-October, the state Department of Elections reported that there are only about 275 individuals affected. Now, it is up to 3,400.

    When VPM, Richmondโ€™s public radio station, first reported the errors, the administration was dismissive of the reports. Later, it minimized the extent of the problem. Now, it is trying to shift the blame. Jeff Goettman, the Governorโ€™s chief of staff, says the administration suspects the errors โ€œare the result of antiquated data systems and insufficient processes maintained over the last 20 plus years.โ€ Anyone who has worked with data knows that, when one grabs a bunch of data that was compiled for one purpose and uses it for an entirely different purpose, one needs to be especially careful and needs to be thoroughly familiar with the dataset that is being relied upon. Anyone except, apparently, the folks at the Department of Elections.

    To cover himself, the Governor has ordered the Office of the Inspector General to investigate the โ€œcircumstances, data systems, and practicesโ€ surrounding this event and, as a counter measure, to prepare a separate report examining whether thousands of residents had been left on the registration rolls despite having been convicted of a new felony.