by Derrick A. Max
Governor Glenn Youngkinโs final State of the Commonwealth address last night offered more than a farewell. It served as an empirical rebuttal to the claim that conservative, pro-growth governance, like those supported by the Thomas Jefferson Institute, cannot deliver tangible results. By every meaningful metric — jobs, investment, education outcomes, revenue growth, and regulatory efficiency โ we agree with Governor Youngkin that Virginia today stands much stronger than it did four years ago.ย
Business Development and Job Creationย
Youngkinโs speech underscoredย what isย probably hisย administrationโsย defining achievement: restoring Virginiaโs reputation as a place where businesses can invest, expand, and hire. Since declaring Virginia โOpen for Businessโ on Day One, the Commonwealth has:ย
- Secured more thanย $157 billionย in business investmentย (more than theย previousย six administrations combined);ย ย
- Increased employment byย nearlyย 270,000;ย
- Createdย 255,000 newย job openings, with 80,000 new jobs expected from existing commitments,ย includingย 40,000 construction jobs.ย
These areย real,ย high payingย positions in manufacturing, life sciences,ย andย advanced technologyย —ย all acrossย the Commonwealth.ย
Governorย Youngkinย warned the incoming administration and theย newย General Assembly that this growth requires policy certainty,ย right-to-workย protections,ย lowerย taxesย and a government that competes rather than obstructs. Hisย passionateย warning against altering Virginiaโs right-to-work law was notย ideological,ย it was empirical, rooted inย observedย capital flight from high-tax, high-regulation states.ย











