
I have no idea who started that circulating around the Capitol, but boy that is effective. Showed up in my inbox yesterday. That bill officially has a fever.ย — SDH

I have no idea who started that circulating around the Capitol, but boy that is effective. Showed up in my inbox yesterday. That bill officially has a fever.ย — SDH
From LoudounNow:
“Legislation by Del. Marty Martinez (D-29) that would add air conditioning to the list of services labeled โessentialโ when supplied by landlords has received approval from a House committee.ย
“Essential services for rental units are regulated by the Virginia Residential Landlord and Tenant Act and must be maintained by the landlord. Currently, the list includes heat, cold and hot running water,ย electricityย and gas.ย
“During a House subcommittee review of the bill last week, Martinez said air conditioning is no longer a luxury, but a necessity.” Continue reading.
by Derrick Max

— Virginiaโs restaurant and lodging sector is still in a fragile post-COVID recovery, yet local governments across the Commonwealth are piling on new and higher taxes that make affordability worse for families and survival harder for small businesses.
A new statewide analysis of meals, lodging, and related sales taxes across all 133 Virginia localities by the Virginia Restaurant, Lodging & Travel Association (VRLTA) shows just how uneven and burdensome these taxes have become. The findings should serve as a warning to policymakers who claim to prioritize affordability while repeatedly targeting the same vulnerable industries.
According to the 2025 Meals & Lodging Tax Study, Virginiaโs hospitality tax landscape is now โhighly fragmented,โ with wide variation by region and governance structure (cities tax more than counties). There is also a clear trend to increase rates — putting concentrated pressure on restaurants and hotels. According to the study, meals taxes reach as high as 10 percent in some jurisdictions, effective lodging taxes climb to 15 percent, and nearly one-third of localities exceed the statewide 5.3 percent sales tax rate through these tax add-ons. Just as concerning, roughly 43 percent of Virginia localities have raised at least one of these taxes since 2016.
That is not affordability, it is instability.
(more…)Governor Abigail Spanberger today released the following statement after signing legislation to set referendums on proposed amendments to the Virginia Constitution (my bold, JAB):
โVirginia voters deserve the opportunity to respond to the nationwide attacks on our rights, freedoms, and elections. Everyone deserves the freedom to marry who they love โ and Virginiaโs Constitution should affirm that all families are welcome in our Commonwealth. Women in Virginia deserve the freedom to make their own reproductive healthcare decisions without politicians dictating their choices. When Virginians have paid their debt to society, they deserve to regain their right to vote. And when other states take extreme measures, I trust Virginia voters to respond.โย
by Kerry Dougherty

You can always count on Democrats to engage in vacuous virtue signaling, especially during Black History Month.
This year itโs Sen. Tim Kaine offering proof that attending Harvard Law School doesnโt automatically confer knowledge on students.
As our country struggles with immigration, election integrity and budget matters, Kaine is consumed with something else: He wants to strip Robert E. Leeโs name from the house the Civil War general owned with his wife until the Civil War.
If youโve visited Arlington National Cemetery youโve seen Arlington House, The Robert E. Lee Memorial. The stately mansion with the massive columns rests on a bluff overlooking the Potomac River. It was built between 1802 and 1818 for George Washington Parke Custis, grandson of Martha Washington. He built it as a family home and a memorial to honor his step-grandfather, George Washington. Continue reading.
by Dick Hall-Sizemore

The redistricting map presented by Democrats is outrageous, embarrassing, and just plain outlandish. I canโt think of other words to describe it. It certainly violates the state constitutionโs requirement that districts be compact.ย The traditional ideas of respecting communities of interest and jurisdictional boundary lines to the extent possible were thrown out the window.
The most outrageous examples:
First District:ย From King William County, east of Richmond in the Middle Peninsula, the district snakes northward all the way to Alexandria. For most of its journey, it is only one county, part of one county, wide.
Fourth DistrictโFrom Prince George and Surry Counties south of Petersburg, it goes southwest and then west all the way to Pittsylvania County.
Seventh DistrictโFrom Powhatan County, just west of Richmond, this district goes north to Orange County, then splits.ย One branch continues west and includes parts of Rockingham and Augusta Counties in the Shenandoah Valley.ย The other branch heads northeast, picking up parts of several counties all the way to Arlington.ย Whoever represents this district will have constituents from the Richmond suburbs to the Shenandoah Valley to Northern Virginia.
Of the state’s 11 members of Congress, five would would have a portion of Fairfax County in their districts.
I could support the proposal to have a mid-census redistricting to tweak some districts to pick up a couple of Democrat seats as an answer to Trumpโs manipulating the redistricting in Texas and other states to gain Republican seats.ย However, Virginia Democrats have gone too far.

by James C. Sherlock
Delegate Rodney Willet, D-Henrico, is trying to do the right thing for the right reasons.
He has introduced HB 605 to amendย ยง 32.1-127. (Effective January 1, 2026) Regulations. ย He added a new section B. 35 to establish staffing standards for Virginia nursing homes. Del. Willett is joined by many members of the General Assembly of both parties who were stunned by the Colonial Heights Rehabilitation and Nursing Center scandal of a year ago. Discussions are underway to determine the exact staffing figures.
Whatever those staffing figures may turn out to be will prove irrelevant.
The nursing home lobby is on the other side of the negotiating table. But the author suspects that, after the negotiations, they are laughing over drinks at the bar. They know that, if passed, the bill would refer to the sanctions set forth in ยง 32.1-27.2. Administrative sanctions.
To the question of what sanctions a nursing home will face for failing to comply with the new staffing law, the answer is, as a practical matter, none. ย
Chains, which are by far the biggest issue in nursing home performance, are not even in the conversation, much less addressed in Virginia law.
That will remain the case even if Del. Willettโs bill passes.
by Kerry Dougherty
When did legacy journalists and the politicians who love them become such a squawking bunch of overwrought socialists?
When news broke yesterday of a bloodbath at The Washington Post – 300 employees were laid off – a chorus of imbeciles rose up to demand that owner Jeff Bezos prop up the losing enterprise with his own pocket money.
The Washington Post has been unprofitable for decades. The newspaper was losing $49 million in the first half of 2013 when Jeff Bezos rescued the paper by buying it for $250 million in cash.

This year The Post is on track to lose $100 million.
“We are losing large amounts of money. Your audience has halved in recent years. People are not reading your stuff. I canโt sugarcoat it anymore,โ WaPo CEO and publisher Will Lewis told staff on Monday.
Their reaction? Not shame that their product is poor, but a general sense of entitlement to their ownerโs personal funds. Continue reading.
***** Sponsored Content *****
The Thomas Jefferson Institute for Public Policy announced the following two appointments today:
Ali Ahmad, Senior Visiting Fellow

A lifelong Virginian and a graduate of the University of Virginia, Ali is a Senior Managing Director at PLUS Communications, located in Richmond, Virginia. He brings more than 20 years of experience in strategic communications, public policy, and legislative affairs across federal, state, and local government, including the U.S. House, the Virginia Senate, and U.S. Census Bureau.
Most recently, he served as Deputy Chief of Staff to former Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin, where he oversaw policy development, legislative affairs, and a wide range of communications functions, including speechwriting, digital content, events, and media relations. He first joined the Youngkin team in 2021 as a senior policy advisor during the Governor’s successful campaign.
Ali will be writing on public policy issues, including those related to job growth, business investment, government efficiency, and workforce development. We are honored to have him join the team.
LJ Brouillette, Associate Director of Development and Communications
LJ Brouillette has joined the Thomas Jefferson Institute for Public Policy as the Associate Director of Development and Communications.
(more…)by Stephanie Lundquist-Arora
Republished with permission from IWFeatures

There rightfully has been a lot of attention paid to radical Virginia Democratsโ day-one blitz as soon as they took back control of the stateโs governorship this year. But those of us who live in the deep blue havens that control Virginia politics know that, for our part of the state at least, it didnโt matter whether our governor was a Democrat or a Republican. Fairfax County, in particular, arguably has remained the same under its local one-party leftist rule.
For example, as the K-12 public school districtโs leaders changed policies to reduce out-of-school suspensions for serious infractions, they suspended my three sons for 39 cumulative days for not wearing masks during the COVID-19 era. This occurred despite former Republican Gov. Youngkinโs Executive Order Two, which allowed parents to opt their children out of mask mandates. Since then, district leaders have refused to expunge those suspensions.
In 2014, leaders of Fairfax County Public SchoolsโVirginiaโs largest districtโchanged the districtโs code of conduct to reduce the number of out-of-school suspensions. At that time, the districtโs leadership focused on the harms of out-of-school suspensions, including lost instructional time and the associated risks of grade retention or dropping out of school.
(more…)
The state of Virginia and its 133 localities have so many taxes that it’s hard to keep track of them all. The Virginia Restaurant, Lodging and Travel Association (VRTLA) has documented the taxes affecting the hospitality sector — meals taxes, transit occupancy taxes, add-on sales taxes, and bed taxes — in a new report, “2025 Meals & Lodging Tax Study.”
As local governments reassess spending in the post-COVID era, the restaurant and hotel industries have often been viewed as convenient targets for tax increases. When layered on top of higher menu prices and room rates, these added taxes have created an increasingly difficult environment for consumers.
Hospitality-related tax increases have been relatively common in recent years. “Based on the most recent tax increase recorded for each locality, ” states the study, “approximately 43 percent of Virginia localities have raised at least one of the examined taxes since 2016.”
While there is little uniformity in tax levels, the VRLTA makes a few generalizations. By form of government, cities tend to have higher taxes than counties. By geography, coastal Virginia and the Shenandoah Valley tend to have higher taxes than other regions. — JAB
The U.S. Department of War has issued a statement regarding a bill in the Virginia legislature that would transfer control of the Virginia Military Institute to the Board of Visitors of Virginia State University.
“The Department of War is monitoring Virginia House Bill 1374, focused on the governance of the Virginia Military Institute (VMI), with significant concern.
“For generations, the unique military environment at VMI has made the Institute a vital source of commissioned officers for the Armed Forces. The stability of this proven leadership pipeline is a matter of direct national security interest and any action that could disrupt the ecosystem requires our full attention.
“DoW reserves the right to take extraordinary measures to protect the integrity of VMI and our commitment to the cadets and midshipmen currently training there remains steadfast. We urge the Virginia General Assembly to consider the broader implications of this bill on military readiness, as well as the federal government’s long-standing investment in this critical institution.”
Comments Cville Bubble:


by Scott Gerber
On June 13, 2017, I published anย op-ed in the Charlottesville Daily Progress nominatingย professor Larry Sabatoย to be the ninth president of the University of Virginia. Jim Ryan was selected instead.
The seemingly never-ending scandals that have unfolded at UVA in recent years demonstrate the Board of Visitors should have picked Sabato. Indeed, Sabato continues to make the university proud with his insightful political commentary, spectacular teaching, prize-winning research and generous financial gifts.
Frankly, UVAโs new board should fire the universityโs new president and replace him with Sabato. I know that sounds mean, but even putting aside that Scott Beardsleyโs appointment is probably void because the old board that appointed him didnโt comply with the membership requirements of the controlling Virginia statute, Beardsley is unfit to lead a university whose Honor System has shaped its identity for nearly two centuries.
I mentioned in a Dec. 31 Richmond Times-Dispatch column that Beardsley implemented Ryanโs DEI vision while dean of UVAโs business school; said he planned to ask Ryan for advice on how to lead the university; issued numerous comments in support of the sort of โdiversityโ that got UVA into trouble with the federal government; and quietly scrubbed his public CV of the list of pro-DEI activities that previously dominated it. Moreover, Beardsleyโs business school was under investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice at the time of the standstill agreement.
(more…)by Jon Baliles
The end of 2025 in Richmond was a rough and painful one as the city lost two of our dearest friends, visionaries, change agents, and just down right kind-hearted people that collectively did more to inspire change and keep it on the front burner to make this city a better place.
I am talking about Bill Martin and Ed Slipek. Slipek passed away on December 15 after a brief illness, and Martin was struck in the crosswalk at Broad and 10th Street on December 27 and died the next day. Itโs hard to put into words what those two men meant to this city because they were both such giants, and both were on a journey to make sure Richmond learned from its past to make sure we have a better future.

Both Bill and Ed were able to affect change in Richmond in ways that politicians and other leaders were not. They committed wholeheartedly to make the city better through ideas, insight, storytelling and their never-ending passion and desire to know more and share all of it. They were human time machines of Richmond history ready to transport anyone within earshot back to a specific neighborhood, year, or historical event and almost instantly convey what happened and what it meant in context of that time and where we are today.
They werenโt afraid of our history, they embraced it. Each worked constantly to share their knowledge and make sure we didnโt fall prey to the famous Santayana line, โThose who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.โ They wanted us to not only NOT forget the past, but also learn about all the things that many of us never knew before or things that werenโt talked about much or taught in classrooms.
They saw it as an adventure to use history and conversation to change peopleโs minds by learning more about the city around them. It wasnโt a personal journey; they welcomed anyone who wanted to come along with them and explore the history and the DNA of this city, even if it was a trip that, for many years, made some people uncomfortable or they didnโt want to join at first, or didnโt want to go on at all.
(more…)