
See more memes at The Bull Elephant

See more memes at The Bull Elephant

I have deleted a post, based upon a tweet on X, highlighting the teaching of a course on “whiteness” at the University of Virginia based on an article in UVA Today. That article was published in 2014, hence irrelevant to current-day controversies. Thanks to commenter Irrwuz for pointing that out. I am embarrassed by the oversight. My apologies to readers. — JAB

by Srilekha Reddy Palle
This Thanksgiving, I wish to express my heartfelt gratitude to Governor Glenn Youngkin and his administration. My passion for politics and policymaking intensified significantly during his campaign, and I am proud to say I was among those who believed in him even before the primaries. During those early days, I introduced him to the Indian American community and later to the broader Asian American community.
During the height of the TJ Coalition effortsโwhen many parents and community members were closely watching merit-based education issuesโI arranged a meet-and-greet for him at TEJ Restaurant in Herndon. At that event, I asked him directly: If you win the election, will you appoint us to the Asian Advisory Board so that we can continue advocating for these issues?
He gave his word โ and he kept it. I remain deeply grateful that he appointed me to the Board, demonstrating once again that promises made are promises kept, just as we have seen with President Trump.
Hundreds of thousands of parents in Northern Virginia supported Governor Youngkin because he championed a return to merit-based principles in education, jobs, and public institutions. His leadership ensured that race-based divisiveness did not deepen โ and for that, we are thankful.
Despite serving his entire term with a Democrat-controlled General Assembly, he delivered strong, measurable results, including:
(more…)Bernie Sanders isn’t “lying,” as Delegate Nick Freitas, R-Culpeper, says here. The Vermont socialist believes what he says. Rather, he’s confused about what constitutes a “fundamental right.” However, Freitas nails it when he explains that a fundamental right such as free speech, freedom of religion, etc., does not entitle you to the property and labor of others without which government-sponsored healthcare is impossible. — JAB

For years the Virginia State Police has published its annual “Crime in Virginia” report each May detailing the number of violent crimes, non-violent crimes, arrests, hate crimes, officer-involved shootings, and other crime-related data for the commonwealth. Then something strange happened last year: The 2023 report came out late — in August, as I recall.
This year, something even stranger is occurring. Here it is, nearly December, and the 2024 report has yet to be released. What the H-E-double hockey sticks is going on?
I asked Robin Lawson, public relations director for the Virginia State Police, why the report has not been released. Her response:
“It is still under review by Administration.”
I’m sure Lawson is just repeating what she’s been told, but this is totally unacceptable.
(more…)
by David J. Toscano
โUnprecedentedโ and โoutrageousโ were the words most often heard in response to Texas Republicansโ attempted mid-cycle redraw of congressional maps to boost GOP odds of keeping control of the U.S. House after the midterms. Now, a federal district court has concluded that the legislatureโs new plan is an unconstitutional racial gerrymanderโplacing the strategy in jeopardy and leaving Republicans wondering whether this power play was worth the trouble.
Reading Judge Jeffrey Brownโs opinion brought back memories of my time in the Virginia General Assembly, including my years as House Democratic leader. Brown, a Trump appointee, cited the Virginia case that overturned the Virginia GOPโs 2011 redistricting plan to underscore his conclusion that Texas Republicans relied on race in drawing their maps. The parallels between the two states are striking.
The Virginia Precedent
When Virginia Republicans drew the 2011 maps, they controlled the governorship and both legislative chambersโconditions like those in Texas today. Unlike Texas, however, Democrats in Virginia regularly won statewide races, including those for Governor and every presidential contest since 2008. Despite this statewide success, Republicans maintained large majorities in the Virginia House for years, aided by a partisan and racially discriminatory gerrymander. Much of this can be traced to the GOPโs national strategy after Barack Obamaโs 2008 victory. Republicans invested heavily in winning state legislatures so they could shape congressional redistricting. And they succeeded. In Virginia, the 2011, 2013, and 2015 House elections were conducted using maps designed to entrench GOP control. In 2016, the GOP held a 66-34 majority in the Virginia House.
(more…)by Steve Haner

Citing the high cost, the Virginia State Corporation Commission on Friday denied a request to add a battery project to the Appalachian Power Company grid. In the same decision, anย out-of-state wind project forย Appalachianย was approved, but only if it qualifies for major federal tax creditsย to keep down the cost.ย ย ย
Without those tax credits, set to expire under legislation signed by President Donald Trump, the 261-megawatt wind project in Illinois that Appalachian plans to buy will also be too expensive to justify, the SCC ruled. Any cost overrun on the $1 billion plus construction cost will also void the Commissionโs permission for Appalachian to buy the turbines, being built by another company.ย
The rulings were part of Appalachianโs annual proposal for adding non-carbon emitting energy projects to comply with the Virginia Clean Economy Act (VCEA). The Commissionโs order, and a more extensive discussionย inย the September 26ย reportย from its hearing examiner, D. Mathias Roussy, highlight the growing costsย ofย VCEAย compliance.ย ย ย
Appalachian serves about 550,000 customers in Western Virginia, and most of its power generation is done out of state. Under the VCEA, it must move toward ending its use of coal, natural gas, or oil to make electricity.ย ย
The application also updated the ongoing costs of previously approved VCEA-compliant Appalachian facilities mandated by the Virginia Clean Economy Act, and one small solar addition. Those portions of the application were approved, and Appalachian customer bills will rise on March 1, 2026, to pay for them.ย