by Steve Haner,
The State Corporation Commission (SCC) was able to approve Dominion Energy Virginiaโs application for a needed natural gas generation facility because the Virginia Clean Economy Act (VCEA) includes a safety valve. If energy reliability is threatened, the prohibitions on natural gas at the heart of that law can be waived.ย
One of the largest donors to the new Democratic political trifecta soon to take power in Richmond quickly threatened to seek that provisionโs removal from the law. In responseย to the SCCโsย November 25ย final orderย in favor of the Chesterfield County plant, the activist and lobbying group Clean Virginiaย wrote:ย โIf this is the decision the Commission came to under existing rules, then it is upon Virginiaโs elected leaders to better align these rules with the interests of all Virginians.โย
Clean Virginia gave more thanย $5 million to Democratic candidates in the November 4 election, half of that total to the newly elected governor, lieutenantย governorย and attorney general. Lieutenant Governor-elect Gazala Hashmi ($300,000 from Clean Virginia) quickly put out her own statement complaining the Commission was โignoring the Commonwealthโs policy on environmental justice, endangering the public health and safetyโฆโ Governor-elect Abigail Spanberger ($1.2 million from Clean Virginia) did not issue a statement.ย ย ย
An even larger donor responsible for helping Democrats take complete political control will be on the other side of any effort to skuttle that part of the VCEA. Dominion gave $8.7 million to the partyโs candidates, with the money targeted to members of the legislature. Speaker of the House Don Scott of Portsmouth and his political committee received $2.35 million from Dominion.ย ย









