• Revisiting the Intellectual Foundations of Conservatism — One Book at a Time

    by Suzanne Munson

    From time to time, members of every great movement such as American Conservatism need to stop, take a breath, and see where the movement is going. Great movements, founded by great individuals, can sometimes be hijacked by lesser minds.

    Many of the founders of modern conservatism were intellectuals. William F. Buckley was able to criticize liberalism articulately from the foundation of a fine education, intellectual curiosity, and deep reading.

    While there are knowledgeable thought-leaders in todayโ€™s conservative movement, there are others who call themselves conservatives who may be giving the movement an unfortunate image.

    The Merriam-Webster Dictionary defines conservatism as โ€œa political philosophy based on tradition and social stability, stressing established institutions, and preferring gradual development to abrupt change.โ€ Much more can be added to this definition, such as limited government, fiscal responsibility, and a belief in traditional, wholesome values.

    It is interesting to examine a recent incident in Florida to see where some who term themselves โ€œconservativesโ€ have created an embarrassing situation. Members of a book club, reported to consist of conservative members, rescinded an invitation to a respected author to speak to their group.

    The program was a book and author event at $100 a plate, so one would assume some level of education and sophistication. Rachel Beanland, a well-regarded Richmond, Virginia author and teacher, was invited to speak about her new novel, The House Is on Fire.

    She had spent hundreds of hours researching the tragic theater fire of 1811 in which some of Virginiaโ€™s most prominent citizens perished. The book features individuals, real and imagined, who resided in Richmond at that time–tradesmen, theater workers, politicians, slaves, doctors, widows.

    Yes, there are slaves in the book and yes, their lives were difficult, and yes, some white characters in the book treated them poorly. What else is new? There were white characters in the story who also had poor treatment at the hands of other whites. There is always plenty of trouble to go around in an interesting novel. (more…)


  • New Bad SOL Data Bring A New Youngkin Administration Plan for Mitigating Learning Losses in Virginia Public Schools

    by James C. Sherlock

    The Governor announced today that he and the General Assembly came together on a bipartisan basis to invest $418 million to tackle student learning loss.

    The Virginia Department of Education recommends school divisions allocate the $418 million “to proven programs that will achieve the greatest student impactโ€”approximately 70% for high-dose tutoring, 20% for Virginia Literacy Act acceleration, and 10% for chronic absenteeism response.”

    Press releases today from both from the Governorโ€™s Office and the Virginia Department of Education provide both a lot of data and a plan to assess.

    From VDOEโ€™s2022-2023 Test Results Show Virginia Students Continue to Struggle with COVID-Related Learning Loss in Reading and Math”

    Today the Virginia Department of Education released the 2022-23 Virginia Assessment Results, demonstrating significant and persistent learning loss in reading and math for Virginia students in grades 3-8. More than half of 3rd-8th graders either failed or are at risk of failing their reading SOL exam, and nearly two-thirds of 3rd-8th graders either failed, or are at risk of failing, their math SOL exam….

    In 2022-2023, the number of chronically absent students doubled from 2018-2019.

    VDOE has also posted the school quality profiles to present the 2022-23 data. ย So you can look at your local school division or school. (more…)


  • When Did the RTD Become TMZ?

    by Shaun Kenney

    The Richmond Times-Dispatch was given a clip of David Owen โ€” Republican candidate for House of Delegates โ€” where he tells an audience of like-minded souls that he is, indeed, pro-life.

    Charlotte Rene Woods over at the RTD decides to do the work of Democratic campaign operatives in what could only be viewed as an in-kind donation.

    โ€ฆ and did we mention that this video was taken five months ago, in March?

    So, for the sin of stating that he values life and is willing to protect the basic human right to exist, what does this earn Owen? A blistering TMZ-style article where such an admission is caged as if Owen had gone on a drunken tirade motivated by the Dead Milkmen rather than any sort of gravitas. (more…)


  • Youngkin’s Partial Tax Wins are Still Impressive

    Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R)

    By Steve Haner

    First published this morning by the Thomas Jefferson Institute for Public Policy.

    Governor Glenn Youngkin (R) and the legislators of both parties who have given him at least some of the tax reforms he asked for need to stop being shy and take a real victory lap.ย  He has been in office less than two years and has diverted $5 billion from tax coffers back to Virginiaโ€™s citizens so far, with more to come in 2024 and beyond.

    Most of that was approved by the 2022 General Assembly and is now in effect for a second full tax year, but the 2023 General Assembly just sweetened the pot.ย  The long-delayed budget compromise approved September 6 added more than $1 billion in single-shot refunds and long-term tax cuts. (more…)


  • Another List of Best Colleges

    Washington and Lee University.

    Inspired by the U.S. News & World Reportโ€™s ranking of colleges, everyone is getting into the game, each with its own criteria.

    The Wall Street Journal has just released its list of โ€œBest 400 Colleges in America.โ€ Its rankings are based on student experiences, social mobility, and salary impact. Its greatest emphasis was on the following questions:

    1. How much will the college improve its studentsโ€™ chances of graduating on time?
    2. How much will it improve the salaries they earn after receiving their diplomas?

    The top school in the ranking was Princeton, followed by M.I.T, Yale, Stanford, and Columbia. Nine Virginia schools were ranked among the top 400, with four landing in the top 100. They were:

    44โ€”Washington and Lee
    76โ€”Virginia Tech
    84โ€”UVa
    95โ€”George Mason
    152โ€”James Madison
    212โ€”W&M
    243โ€”Old Dominion
    318โ€”VCU
    326–Christopher Newport


  • It Was Bound to Happen Sometime

    Click on the images for the full views.ย  Correlation is still not causation, but the standard industry, utility and Biden Administration line “there is no evidence” is getting thin.ย  Virginia Beach, here it comes.


  • “School’s Closed Today! It’s the Law”

    Photo credit: Your Teen Magazine

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Now that two of my grandchildren are in public school, rather than being home-schooled, I am more attuned to what is going on in public school.

    Last Friday, I was in Northern Virginia visiting them because they were off from school. Although I was happy to get the extra time with them, I was ranting about the absurdity of a school holiday only two weeks after school had opened and in face of the impending Labor Day holiday. My grandson informed me it was the law. I protested that it couldnโ€™t be, but he showed me that it was. (more…)


  • POLLS: Inflation Top Issue; Virginians Reject Democrats’ Position on Abortion

    by Shaun Kenney

    New polling data from Founders Insight reveal that 24% of Virginians are putting inflation as their top concern heading into the November elections, with abortion coming in at 15% and split between Democrats and Republicans.

    To make matters worse for Virginia Democrats, a summer spent pushing abortion rights has backfired spectacularly, as the Planned Parenthood life of 40 weeks (and beyond) is wildly unpopular with most Virginians.

    Making matters worse, Planned Parenthoodโ€™s so-called โ€œreproductive rightsโ€ state constitutional amendments such as the one in Ohio this year go even further, allowing not only for abortion up to the moment of birth, but even permitting gender reassignment surgeries alongside a repeal of parental notification and parental consent.

    Virginia Democrats are not hiding the football on their abortion-up-to-birth ambitions, as they continue to bring the bill before the Virginia General Assembly whenever they get the chance. (more…)


  • How to Save Loudoun County Public Schools from the Injustice of DEI

    by A.L. Schuhart

    To Loudon Parents:

    Here is the legal strategy to stop Diversity, Equity and Inclusion regimes in your schools.

    DEI violates the principle of in loco parentis, which is the legal foundation of public education in Virginia and America. It is by this principle that schools and educators receive their mandates from the citizens of Virginia to teach children. The Supreme Court has consistently affirmed this legal principle since the beginning of public education. (more…)


  • Legislature Moves To Fill Power Vacuum It Created

    State Sen. Scott Surovell, D-Fairfax, new Chairman of the Commission on Electric Utility Regulation (Image: Virginia Star)

    By Steve Haner

    State Senator Scott Surovell, D-Mount Vernon, showed today that he had something which the State Corporation Commission now lacks โ€“ a quorum. ย Surovell and the other legislators will gather in Richmond tomorrow to address the state budget but are expected once again to fail to fill the two vacancies on that vital regulatory body.

    Surovell, however, was chosen this afternoon to chair the newly reconstituted Commission on Electric Utility Regulation (CEUR), a legislative oversight panel that has not met since December 2017 despite several tumultuous years of change in Virginiaโ€™s energy sector. The meeting lasted just a few minutes beyond one hour and never discussed the huge problem the legislators have created by refusing to elect new SCC regulators. (more…)


  • Virginia Deserves a Parole Board that Puts Public Safety First

    Patricia West

    by Kerry Dougherty

    When Terry McAuliffe was governor he found a loyal Democrat lawyer to appoint to head Virginiaโ€™s parole board.

    That was Adrianne Bennett, a failed candidate for the House of Delegates in 2011 and undoubtedly the most controversial parole board chair in Virginia history. She was a success if you believe, as McAuliffe apparently did, that the job of that board is to spring murderers and make Virginians less safe. (more…)


  • TJI To SCC: Keep Dominion Gas Plants

    The following has been submitted to the State Corporation Commission via the public comment portal it has established for Dominion Energy Virginiaโ€™s pending 2023 Integrated Resource Plan.ย  It was drafted by Thomas Jefferson Institute for Public Policy Senior Fellow Stephen D. Haner.

    Dominion Energy Virginia is acting reasonably and prudently by planning to maintain most of its natural gas generation and perhaps some of its coal generation for the foreseeable future, despite narrow votes in the Virginia General Assembly in favor of eliminating their use.

    That is the only aspect of the pending Integrated Resource Plan review (PUR-2023-00066) on which the Thomas Jefferson Institute for Public Policy is offering an opinion.ย  However, the opinion is strongly reinforced by data put on the case record by the State Corporation Commissionโ€™s own professional staff and cited below. (more…)


  • Labor Day: A New Start

    by Kerry Dougherty

    Labor Day. Americaโ€™s most ambiguous national holiday.

    Think about it. On other special days โ€“ Memorial, Independence, Veterans, Thanksgiving, Presidents, Martin Luther King and Christmas โ€“ we pause, however briefly, to honor a beloved person or a historical event.

    We have parades, visit cemeteries, blast fireworks, give thanks, recite a famous speech or watch Itโ€™s a Wonderful Life.

    Not on Labor Day.

    Take a peek at the festivities scheduled this weekend. Wait. What festivities? The Rock โ€˜nโ€™ Roll Half Marathon has moved on, so thereโ€™s nothing to do today other than hit the beach and cook out.

    Swimming and eating burgers has nothing to do with Labor Dayโ€™s grittier, trade union roots.

    And thatโ€™s a good thing.

    Iโ€™m not sure anyone wants to mark Labor Day by dragging a picket sign to the beach or by joining a national scavenger hunt to look for Jimmy Hoffaโ€™s body.

    Does anyone plan to watch Norma Rae today? Or gather the family together for a few choruses of โ€œThe Ballad of Joe Hillโ€?

    Anyone inviting the repulsive Randi Weingarten to their cookout?

    I didnโ€™t think so.

    On Labor Day, itโ€™s not what we do, itโ€™s what we donโ€™t do โ€“ labor. (more…)


  • Winsome Earle-Sears Makes the Case in Roanoke

    Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears speaks in Vinton. Photo by Scott Dreyer.

    by Scott Dreyer

    On a late summer Thursday evening at the Vinton War Memorial Senior Center, the Roanoke County GOP met for a fundraiser barbecue dinner to support Sen. David Suetterleinโ€™s fall campaign and to fire up the room full of party faithful.

    Following the meal, several people on the ballot this fall introduced themselves and addressed some key issues facing the region and state.

    But the Roanoke star that evening was Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears. (more…)


  • The Virginia State Budget and the Rising Costs of Registered Nurses

    by James C. Sherlock

    I was asked yesterday by a reader about the relationship between nursing homes, rising registered nurse salaries and the new Virginia budget agreement.

    Good questions. Virginia’s workforce includes nearly 70,000 registered nurses.

    The state pays its workers, but it also pays its Medicaid share for private sector nurses. Pay for private sector workers is based upon market conditions. The market wage for registered nurses nationwide increased dramatically during COVID.

    Perhaps the only good thing to come out of that mess was that registered nurses, of whom Virginia has 11% fewer than demand calculated by the federal Health Resources and Services Administration, got very large pay and bonus raises, and the new wage points appear to have stuck.

    If the laws of economics work here, that will over time increase the number of nurses if we can educate and train them in the required numbers.

    The latest figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics for all states show that the median wage for an RN in Virginia was $79,700 a year. In Northern Virginia portion of the D.C. metro area, the median was $92,800. ย The underlying data are a couple of years old.

    Wages and bonuses can vary a lot among Virginia hospitals, nursing homes, home health agencies, nursing school staff and government employees, and are higher or lower depending on specialty. The private sector offers $10,000 toย  $20,000 signing bonuses paid out after the first year.

    Employers of course must pay payroll taxes and other expenses related to employees, and thus their costs will generally exceed $100,000 per RN.

    Virginia RNs are still underpaid compared to national figures. The mean annual wage for Americaโ€™s 3 million registered nurses in May was $89,010 compared to Virginiaโ€™s $79,900.

    The federal Centers for Medicare/Medicaid Services, aware of some of the questionable business models of bad actors in the nursing home industry, published last week a proposed rule to both increase the minimum number of RNs in nursing facilities and to require all nursing facilities to reveal every year how much of the Medicare and Medicaid payouts go to salaries and related expenses.

    So, Medicare and Medicaid costs will go up yet again. (more…)