• Dems Will Likely Raise Taxes If They Win Tomorrow

    A distressed businessman in a suit pumping air into an oversized balloon labeled 'TAXES', symbolizing the pressure of rising taxes.

    by Hans Bader

    Last May, Virginiaโ€™s Republican Governor, Glenn Youngkin, vetoed a bill to allow all counties to raise the sales tax by 1%. Virginiaโ€™s Democratic legislature tried to override his veto, but fell short of the two-thirds vote needed to do so, in a 25-to-15 vote in the state senate.

    Analysts said most local governments would have raised their sales tax had the bill become law. Thatโ€™s because local sales taxes are paid partly by non-residents, giving municipalities an incentive to tax each otherโ€™s citizens by raising the sales tax. If a municipality raises its local sales tax, it keeps all of the revenue, but its residents donโ€™t pay all of the cost โ€” people from outside the municipality who canโ€™t vote against the tax do.

    If the bill had become law, taxes would have risen further in Virginia, a state that already had higher-than-average tax rates, according to the Tax Foundation.

    Now, Democrats are favored to win the governorโ€™s race in Virginia, although there is a very close race for state attorney general, and several state legislative races will be very close. The Real Clear Politics polling average shows the Democratic candidate for governor leading by a comfortable 9%, while Republican attorney general Jason Miyares is barely ahead of his Democratic challenger, leading Democrat Jay Jones by a razor-thin 1.6% margin. The Democratsโ€™ lead in the governorโ€™s race is fueled by the deep unpopularity in Virginia of Donald Trump.

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  • Hidin’ Hashmi — Virginia’s Mamdani

    by Joseph D. Elie

    A woman in a white blazer speaks passionately into a microphone at a political event.
    State Sen. Ghazala Hashmi, Democratic nominee for Lt. Governor Photo credit: AP

    As we approach the culmination of the 2025 election season this Tuesday, political prognosticators in Virginia perceive the races for governor and lieutenant governor to be tightening. Both contests are remarkable for the stark contrast of style and substance between the candidates, especially those vying to lead the state senate as lieutenant governor.

    John Reid has a broad background in business and politics while Ghazala Hashmi is a former academic elected to the state senate in 2019. Reid has been itinerant and tireless on the hustings, canvassing the entirety of the Commonwealth since relinquishing his popular talk radio show in January. Hashmi, reclusive in comparison to Reid, has perhaps been trying to find her muse while she dodges debates and holds press conferences by invitation only.

    Recently, the Islam-promoting political action committee Emgage Action and its website Defend & Advance proclaimed Zohran Mamdani, New York City mayoral front-runner, and Ghazala Hashmi to be their โ€œStar Candidates.โ€ย The PAC, which mobilizes Muslims for โ€œcollective action,โ€ has been linked to the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), which is considered by many to be associated with advocating for Islamic supremacy.

    Questions now naturally arise for these two Muslim candidates as they cultivate their disparate electorates. How similar are they on the issues? Does Hashmi think Mamdaniโ€™s views are shared by the majority of Virginians? Do Mamdani and Hashmi agree with Virginia attorney general candidate Jay Jones that โ€œonly when people feel pain personally do they then move on to policy?โ€

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  • Look Who’s Endorsing Ghazala Hashmi

    Promotional graphic supporting Zohran Mamdan and Ghazala Hashmi as candidates, emphasizing their commitment to justice, human rights, and democracy.

    by David Greenberg

    The graphic above appears on the website of Defend & Advance, a national organization “advocating for Muslim voices.” States the website (my bold):

    Our Priorities:

    • To back incumbent allies who have walked shoulder-to-shoulder with us in this struggle.
    • To identify and support candidates in key competitive seats who share our vision for human rights and justice โ€“ those who have not just spoken out, but have acted on behalf of those who have been marginalized and oppressed.

    We have long fought for compassionate advocates for Muslims to be heard in mainstream discourse, and the time has come for us to protect and support these voices more than ever.

    Question: What is lieutenant governor-candidate Ghazala Hashmi’s “vision for human rights and justice”? Does she believe that Muslims have been “marginalized and oppressed” in Virginia?

    Question: To what extent does “star-candidate” Hashmi share the critique of New York mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani, a self-proclaimed Democratic Socialist, of capitalism, American society and the Israel-Palestine conflict?

    No one knows because she has steadfastly refused to debate her opponent John Reid.

    David Greenberg lives in the Richmond area.


  • Redistricting: Risky for Spanberger but Win-Win for Scott

    By Paul Goldman

    We finally smoked out the truth about redistricting. As I have written, Democrat Abigail Spanberger, the presumptive Governor-elect, could win or lose depending upon how the politics play out. But House Speaker Don Scott wins no matter what. I didn’t think he had the cajones to do it. My bad. Not going to make that mistake again.

    Scott’s plan would scrap Virginia’s nonpartisan redistricting process and, contingent upon Republican redistricting initiatives in other states, replace it with gerrymandered congressional districts. Spanberger has pretended not to be part of Scott’s plan. But it requires her to sign a bill allowing for a redistricting referendum — risking her reputation and the success of her four-year term in the process.

    Two successive legislatures must adopt a resolution to put before the voters. Time is tight — the 2026 elections are just one year away — and extraordinary political measures will be called for. To reverse the electorate’s vote in 2020 to create a nonpartisan process, Spanberger (assuming she gets elected) will have to go full-bore super-partisan.

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  • Jeanine’s Memes

    A man in a blue shirt stands next to a flip chart, presenting two statements about government shutdown and dependency on tax dollars.

    View more memes at The Bull Elephant


  • Under Youngkin, Virginia Cut Permitting Times, Attracted $125 Billion in Investment

    A futuristic robot wielding a sword is cutting through red ribbons, symbolizing the removal of bureaucratic barriers or regulations.

    by Hans Bader

    โ€œUnder Governor Glenn Youngkin, Virginia created a new permitting dashboard, and cut permit processing times by 72%. The stateโ€™s attracted $125 billion in capital investment since 2022. Conservative abundance at work,โ€ notes Russ Greene of Stand Together.

    The National Review adds that under Youngkin, Virginia โ€œoccupational license approval times declined from 33 days to 5 days. Stormwater permitting reforms saved $124 million.โ€ And โ€œDepartment of Environmental Quality permit processing times declined by 70%.โ€

    When people donโ€™t have an occupational license due to bureaucratic delays, they canโ€™t work or support their families. Their lack of employment reduces the income tax revenue that pays for schools, roads, and law enforcement. So speeding up licensing and permitting, as Youngkin has done, is very important.

    Governor Youngkinโ€™s regulatory reforms have saved Virginians $1.2 billion per year, and cut the cost of building a home by $24,000 on average, by eliminating obsolete regulations not required by Virginia law.

    โ€œSince 2022, Virginia has reduced the number of requirements in its regulatory code by 26.8 percent, exceeding Youngkinโ€™s goal of 25 percent. He says his administration is on pace to reach a 33 percent reduction by the end of his term early next year. The reduction in regulatory word count is even greater: 11.5 million words were struck, nearly half of the total found in state guidance documents,โ€ the National Review says.

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  • Spanberger is the Antithesis of Standing with Women

    A close-up of a fountain pen poised over handwritten notes on aged paper.

    by Ashley Varner-Thielan

    As a Virginia woman, I am no stranger to the continued struggle over protecting women’s spaces and girls’ sports. We have fought tirelessly for the idea that privacy, fairness, and safety matter, and that acknowledging biological reality is not intolerance, but common sense.

    For decades, Democrats have claimed to be champions for women. But where are those so-called champions when women are the ones being harmed? In Congress, Abigail Spanberger has had every chance to stand for women, defend equality, and protect the spaces that belong to us. Instead, she has doubled down on supporting policies that have eroded womenโ€™s privacy and dignity by letting men into womenโ€™s spaces. 

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  • Bacon Meme of the Week

    Text graphic humorously stating 'Daylight Savings just means the bacon comes an hour earlier,' with an image of a strip of bacon.

  • Outfoxed

    The GOP had an opportunity to force Abigail Spanberger into a no-win position on redistricting. They blew it.

    by Paul Goldman

    General Assembly Democrats hope to speed a measure through the legislature that would allow voters to approve a constitutional amendment providing for redistricting in time for the 2026 congressional election. Democratic nominee for Governor Abigail Spanberger has said she does not oppose those efforts. However, with the campaign still underway, she says, “I will let the General Assembly take this step, and then weโ€™ll talk calendar issues later.โ€

    Two successive legislatures must adopt a resolution to put before the voters. Time is tight — the 2026 elections are just one year away — and extraordinary measures are called for. If Dems have any chance to make redistricting a reality, Spanberger will have to get actively involved, assuming she gets elected.

    Here is the key provision in the VA Constitution:ย 

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  • Virginiaโ€™s Dreadful Nursing Homes – Part Four – Recommendations For 2026 Legislation

    Virginiaโ€™s Dreadful Nursing Homes – Part Four – Recommendations For 2026 Legislation

    by James C. Sherlock

    This series is being constructed specifically to support legislation in the 2026 General Assembly. To reiterate the legislative recommendations from Part 3:

    Recommended legislation

    Consumer protection. Right now, citizens in Virginia Beach and in other communities have no defense against poor and badly staffed nursing homes that charge too much. The good ones simply do not have nearly enough beds to support demand.

    Hospitals and insurance care managers can helpfully provide more information to patients about to transfer or to their caregivers. That should include useful information on local nursing homes, such as:

    • the latest inspection ratings and staffing ratings,
    • average nursing CMI as a proxy for cost,
    • number of beds, and
    • average occupancy.

    That does not happen broadly in Virginia. 

    Those service providers can be required by law to provide to patients facing a nursing home stay a written handout including:

    • specified CMS data tailored to hospital service areas, and
    • a written explanation of the meanings of the information.

    The law would not challenge those required to take the actions because the data do not change very often. It would provide a very necessary service to citizens.

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  • Sanctuary Politics

    Here’s the kicker: “@EROWashington previously lodged two immigration detainers against Melendez-Gonzalez with Fairfax County. Fairfax County officials REFUSED to honor the detainers, releasing Melendez-Gonzalez back into the community.


  • Virginia Dems: So Classy

    by Kerry Dougherty

    You could respect Virginia Democrats if they would just be honest.

    Alas, itโ€™s not in their nature and so we must endure endless gaslighting from the left as they breathlessly work to undo the constitutional amendment that the vast majority of Virginians voted for five years ago. You know, the measure that ended political gerrymandering and handed the responsibility of drawing congressional districts to a bipartisan commission.

    Virginia has 11 congressional districts. Six are Democrat and five are Republican, an indication that in this closely divided commonwealth, the districts are fair.

    As other states – without similar constitutional restrictions – rush to redraw congressional maps along political lines, Virginiaโ€™s Democratic leadership is frantically working to join in the gerrymandering frenzy while they control both chambers of the General Assembly.

    All while pretending this is simply an exercise in democracy.

    Continue reading.


  • Virginia’s Dreadful Nursing Home Choices Part 3 – Nursing Home Costs and Alternatives

    Virginia’s Dreadful Nursing Home Choices Part 3 – Nursing Home Costs and Alternatives

    by James C. Sherlock

    Nursing home costs and payments are complex subjects not often explained.

    Patients need a place for round-the-clock skilled nursing care to continue to heal from surgeries after hospital discharge. For some, their care is too complex to get at home, or their homes are not suitable for such care. They need skilled nursing facility (SNF) beds.

    The patientโ€™s skilled nursing insurance, including but not limited to Medicare and Medicaid, pays the bill. Those with insurance co-pays pay their percentage either through a Medicare Advantage plan or something similar. The payers include the poor and middle class alike. The wealthy may or may not have other options.

    Those needing institutional long-term care (LTC) and who do not have long-term care insurance have two options: Medicaid or out-of-pocket. ย It is very expensive care. Most (80%) use Medicaid even if they have to pay down assets to qualify.

    Nursing homes get the bulk of their money from those two government insurance programs. Some are demonstrably not earning what they are paid, but the government does not effectively assess value in Medicare and Medicaid payments.

    Market forces are diminished by failures of government. Not enough hospitals assist patients in understanding their limited choices.

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  • Readers, Divine the Election Outcome

    An elderly woman with a headscarf gazes intently at a glowing crystal ball, surrounded by tarot cards and decorative items.
    Image credit: Grok

    Virginia’s elections are down to the wire. The election is Tuesday.

    The latest poll, by Roanoke College based on responses from 1,041 likely voters, shows Democrat Abigail Spanberger with a 10-point lead (51% to 41%) over Republican Winsome Earle-Sears in the gubernatorial race.

    Democrat Ghazali Hashmi leads Republican John Reid in the race for lieutenant governor by two points (42% to 40%).

    And Republican Jason Miyares is ahead of Jay Jones in the bid for Attorney General by 8 points (46% to 38%).

    But, hey, what do pollsters know? How many ever get it right? Compare them to the all-wise, all-knowing readers and commenters who frequent Bacon’s Rebellion. This is your chance to prove how much more you know than everybody else! Post a comment and tell us who you think will win Virginia’s statewide races, and why.

    (For readers who have never commented before, click on the headline above and scroll to the bottom of the page. You need to register with the Disqus commenting platform in order to post a comment.)

    To read more about fortune telling through the reading of pig entrails, read on…

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  • Democrat Racism and the Delusion of Moral Superiority

    by Stephanie Lundquist-Arora

    A smiling woman wearing a cream-colored suit stands in a legislative chamber, with an American flag in the background.

    Last week, MSNBCโ€™s โ€œMorning Joeโ€ panelists argued thatย Abigail Spanberger wasn’t dominating the Virginia gubernatorial race because of sexism. The gaffeย promptedย her opponent,ย Winsome Earle-Sears, to post on X, โ€œWho wants to tell them?โ€ย 

    Had the shoe been on the other foot, if these political commentators overlooked a Democrat black woman running against a Republican white woman, mainstream media outlets would be conjuring up Sojourner Truthโ€™s โ€œAinโ€™t I a Woman?โ€ speech for weeks. 

    Given the incessant lip service liberals have paid to โ€œracial justiceโ€ and โ€œequity,โ€ such an oversight seems like blasphemy for Democrats. In truth, though, they only care about race when itโ€™s politically expedient. 

    Case and pointโ€”four years ago, another liberal commentator on MSNBC who makes his living off racial commentary, Michael Eric Dyson, called Earle-Sears a โ€œblack mouthโ€ for โ€œwhite supremacist practices.โ€

    Like other black conservatives,ย Earle-Sears is targeted with verbal abuse from the sanctimonious โ€œHate has no home hereโ€ political party. Last month, Democrat Virginiaย state Sen.ย Louise Lucas, D-Portsmouth, went on a racist rant aboutย Earle-Sears. Sheย said, โ€œAll skin folksย ainโ€™tย kinfolk! Weย donโ€™tย need somebody who looks like me in the Governorโ€™s mansionย โ€ฆย Donโ€™tย be fooled!โ€ย 

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