In Prince William County, the story of the PW Digital Gateway has become a master class in legal hypocrisy. After a complete examination of the evidence, Judge Kimberly A. Irving ruled that the Board of County Supervisorsโ vote approving the massive data center corridor was void ab initio because the County failed to provide the public with legally required notice, the developers cried foul. Now, before the Virginia Court of Appeals, they are wringing their hands and lamenting โirreparable harm.โ
Letโs be clear: the only irreparable harm at stake here is the damage these developers are trying to inflict on the rule of law, public trust, and the integrity of Prince William Countyโs zoning process.
The Oak Valley Homeowners Association motion to the Appeals Court to reconsider their stay granted to the defendants provides a complete view of Judge Irvingโs decision, and what the defendants buried in their briefs to the Appeals Court.
No one on SNAP should be getting their brows, lashes or nails done. If they can afford those luxuries they can feed their own families.
by Kerry Dougherty
Looks like the Democrats caved. Finally.
Or at least 9 of them came to their senses regarding the damaging government shutdown that is in its 40th day.
They got nothing. The shutdown was for nothing. Yet it did ensure that a seething bloc of Virginia federal workers headed to the polls last Tuesday to elect the most left-wing slate in the commonwealthโs history.
Itโs no coincidence that five days after federal workers stormed the polls and sent a radical band of wokesters to Richmond, the shutdown was grinding to a halt.
Late Sunday night the vote was taken and arms were twisted as a handful of Democrat Senators decided to reopen the federal government.
Among them was Sen. Tim Kaine.
Kaine claimed that heโd been โtoo focusedโ on the Virginia elections to end the shutdown earlier.
Someone tell the senator that he isnโt paid to campaign in state elections. Heโs in Washington to do a job in Congress.
Prior to Sunday Dems said theyโd support reopening the government only if Republicans would agree to keep subsidies on Obamacare premiums for one more year.
Gov-elect Spanberger seems on the verge of repeating a mistake that then Gov.-elect Youngkin made four years ago โ surrounding herself with advisers from her former world rather than from Virginia government and politics.ย
Youngkin, a complete neophyte in politics and Virginia government, brought in people from the investment banking world and agency heads, several from out of state.ย The investment banking world is totally different from Virginia government and politics.ย Based on reports from long-time state employees, there was a steep learning curve.ย Youngkin is now on his third Superintendent of Public Schools.
Spanberger is in danger of going down the same path. Granted, she has more experience with Virginia and government than Youngkin had, but her experience has been in Congress, a whole different world. Also, she spent a year or so going around the state preparing to run for governor.ย That gave her some exposure to different areas of the state and to members of the General Assembly.ย But those efforts are not a substitute for years-long familiarity with Virginia government. Here is who she has announced as her chief of staff, deputy chief of staff, and transition team:
Chief of staff โ Bonnie Krenz-Schnurman.ย Background:ย Served as Spanbergerโs chief of staff for five years in Congress and since she has been a candidate; previously, senior policy adviser at the White House Domestic Council under Obama; before that, managed a national malaria program in Tanzania for the Clinton Health Access Initiative.
Director of transition team and deputy chief of staff โ Karen Mask.ย Worked as field director in Spanbergerโs Congressional campaigns.ย Before that, was a senior policy analyst at the Virginia Dept. of Health and a special projects coordinator with the Virginia Dept. of Education.
Overlooked in all the news around the election was some sobering budget news for the next governor.
As reported by the Richmond Times-Dispatch, the Virginia Dept. of Medical Assistance Services (DMAS) has forecast that Virginiaโs Medicaid costs will increase by $3.2 billion over the next three years.ย That increase consists of an additional $410 million in the current fiscal year and $2.8 billion in the next two-year budget that Governor Youngkin will present next month.
In addition to the big increase in Medicaid costs, the state is projecting an increase of $964 million needed to support local K-12 education programs.ย This is the biennial โre-benchmarkingโ that takes place, which projects what it will cost to continue existing programs at their current levels.
In addition to the additional $3.8 billion that will be needed for the next biennial budget right from the beginning will be the costs and revenue reductions stemming from Trumpโs spending and taxing legislation passed this year.ย Based on past experience, it is safe to say that the analysts in the Dept. of Planning and Budget are working overtime these days to develop the two budget bills, the โcabooseโ for the current fiscal year and the โbig budget billโ for the 2006-2008 biennium, that Youngkin must present to the General Assembly by December 20.
Will Abigail Spanberger fight for DEI or for intellectual diversity in her dealings with UVA?
by Joel Gardner
Governor-elect Abigail Spanberger states that she wants to have an administration that reflects pragmatism rather than partisanship. But her Democrat colleagues in the state senate have already exhibited a degree of partisanship vis-ร -vis the University of Virginia and other state universities unparalleled in the history of the Commonwealth.
A standing committee of the state senate has rejected the last five appointees to the UVA Board of Visitors solely because they were chosen by a Republican governor. While the ability of a committee to act on behalf of the entire General Assembly is now in front of the Virginia Supreme Court, it really doesn’t matter because the Democrat leadership of the state senate has stated that they will flat out reject any appointee made by Governor Youngkin.
By contrast, for decades when Republicans held either one or both houses of the General Assembly they never once rejected a Democrat governor’s choice for the UVA Board.
Under the past two Democrat governors, UVA had become a highly politicized institution. This was done under the rubric of so called “Diversity, Equity and Inclusion” which as Anthony Kronman, the former Dean of the Yale Law School, has said is “a political campaign masquerading as an educational ideal.”
“This nursing home information is confusing, mindbending, and scary. Please draw us a picture to clarify.” Well, readers are right. It is all three of those things. It is meant to be so by some people in the system.
Virginia has some excellent nursing homes and chains, but those are not the subject of this article.
I offer below a chart of a fictional 12-facility chain whose structure permits bad things to happen, often by design. It shows a commercial real estate structure on which some nursing home chains are modeled. Indeed, many of them have been founded by people with their roots in real estate, partnered with others licensed as nursing home administrators and with an accountant. The structure was designed by the real estate industry to generate fees and to protect assets in court.
It is used by the worst of nursing home chain owners to bleed money from the operating companies, leaving little for staffing, building repairs, and other necessities. Annual profits have been seen to exceed 20%. That beats anything else in real estate.
Virginia GOP Governor Glenn Youngkin is vowing to finish โstrong.โ With all due respect, it might have been better if he had started โstrong.โ His party just suffered its worse defeat in Virginiaโs two-party era. If thatโs finishing strong, Iโd like to know what he thinks finishing weak looks like.
Fact: No Republican connected to Trumpโs MAGA has ever or will ever be elected Governor of Virginia. Or U.S. Senator. I wrote months ago on these pages — in my column saying John Reid won the short straw not primary gold — that the historical numbers pointed to Spanberger likely breaking the all-time percentage record for any Dem gubernatorial in the two-party era. I also thought a ticket sweep seemed likely based on my analysis of historical voting statistics.
Next prediction: Will the Virginia Democratic Party try to wipe out the Virginia Republican Party if the super partisan redistricting amendment is approved by the voters this spring? My answer: 100% for sure. The path to such destruction is foreseeable.
The GOP was crushed in the recent Virginia elections because Donald Trump is terribly unpopular in Virginia. Before Trump was president, the GOP easily controlled the Virginia state legislature, and held 66 of the 100 seats in the Virginia House of Delegates. After Tuesdayโs election, it will hold only 34 seats in the House and control neither house of the state legislature.
Former Richmond mayor Levar Stoney pointed this out:
Trump fans claimed the GOP lost Tuesdayโs election because Virginia is a staunchly Democratic state. But it has long been a purple state where Republicans used to control the legislature handily, because suburban voters leaned Republican. Now, the suburbanites in Virginia heavily lean Democratic, and every single legislator representing northern Virginia is a Democrat.
Virginia isnโt a deep blue state by nature. It is only Trump who makes it so.
In the classic film, Network, Howard Beale delivered one of the most remembered lines in movie history: โIโm mad as hell, and I am not going to take it anymoreโ. Many voters, from Virginia to California and Maine to Georgia, seemed to feel that way. Frustrated by chaos, corruption, and exhaustion, they turned out in record numbers to deliver sweeping victories for Democrats, winning most every significant contest on the ballot.
Virginia, Virginia, Virginia, Virginia
Virginia has again shown itself as a bellwetherof change. Abigail Spanberger won by the largest margin since Bob McDonnellโs 2009 victory, as Democrats swept all statewide races in an election with turnout higher than four years ago โ a clear sign of Democratic energy.
Less noticed but equally consequential were Democratsโ massive gains in the House of Delegates, where they flipped 13 seats and will hold a 64โ36 margin come January. Speaker of House Don Scott, D-Portsmouth, arguably now the most powerful man in the state and the primary architect of the romp, exclaimed that this โis what a mandate looks like,โ while cautioning that โthe word of the day is restraint. We canโt overreach.โ
Republicans, meanwhile, imploded. Neither Trump nor mainstream conservatives ever embraced Winsome-Sears, whose campaign was derided by a Trump ally as a โdumpster fireโ โ a label made literal when her campaign bus caught fire on the roadside. Late GOP money shifted to Jason Miyares, but even that could not save him. Trump supporters unloaded after her loss. Chris LaCivita, longtime Virginia GOP strategist and Trumpโs 2024 campaign manager, wrote: โA Bad candidate and Bad campaign have consequences โ the Virginia Governorโs race is example number 1.โ
The return of the political trifecta Democrats enjoyed during the 2020 and 2021 General Assembly sessions โ now bolstered with a 64-36 majority in the House of Delegates โ leaves the question of how to deal with Virginiaโs energy issues entirely in their hands.
Only if the Democrats suffer a significant division within their own ranks will the Republican legislators cast votes in committee or on the chamber floor that decide any issue. And with 64 votes in the House (meaning Democrats will also have at least two-thirds of committee seats), it would have to be a deep Democratic split for Republicans to matter.
Most of the new Democratic members including those who ousted sitting incumbent Republicans expressed commitment to the Virginia Clean Economy Act (VCEA) and its goal of ending the use of coal, natural gas and oil. Many in Northern Virginia are also eager to slow down the growth of the data center industry, which is driving up electricity demand across the state.
Incoming Governor Abigail Spanberger has been short on details about efforts to limit data center development and remained vague in this long piece put together by the anti-hydrocarbon advocacy outlet Inside Climate News. As was the case with the pro-solar Clean Virginia rallies described in this earlier report, supporters of maintaining the VCEA mandates and target dates used their interviews to build a defensive line against any in their own caucus who might waver.
Dem voters energized, GOP voters lethargic. Image credit: Grok
by James A. Bacon
Gov. Glenn Youngkin yesterday blamed Tuesday’s shellacking of the Republican Party in Virginia on the government shutdown. โI firmly believe that the government shutdown was a very, very big challenge as we ran into this election,โ he told reporters. โWe have 330,000 government workers here that werenโt getting paid. That is a real challenge heading into an election.โ
Youngkin’s proposition is a not-implausible hypothesis of what happened Tuesday. But does it hold water?
Government workers were never Trump fans to begin with. They have always been true blue. Did the DOGE (the Department of Government Efficiency) layoffs and then the government shutdown change a lot of minds? Perhaps a few. But I suspect other factors were at play.
According to Virginia Public Access Project data, the big change between 2021, in which Republicans swept the statewide offices, and 2025 was a decline in voter turnout among predominantly red localities — not a surge in turnout in government worker-heavy blue districts.
Source: Virginia Public Access Project. Click here to view the interactive graphic that identifies each dot by locality.
Turnout in Democratic-leaning localities trended more or less the same as four years ago. By contrast, enthusiasm in red localities was down across the board — in literally every locality. Whatever was ailing Republicans Tuesday was statewide in nature. It’s hard to imagine that the loss of 300,000 federal jobs in Virginia weighed heavily on the minds of Republican-leaning voters in, say Patrick County in Southside Virginia (turnout down 8%) or Giles County in western Virginia (also down 8%).
Democrats swept the statewide races and flipped 13 House of Delegates seats Tuesday — a watershed in Virginia politics. Any analysis of the Blue Wave must take into account the vast discrepancy in fundraising prowess of Democrats over Republicans, not just in the statewide races but in the House races as well.
Between statewide and House races combined, Democrat candidates reported $149.6 million in contributions as of October 23. Republicans raised $85.9 million.
The relationship between money raised and electoral success is a complicated one. Spending more money on a campaign does not guarantee a win: Attorney General Jason Miyares outspent the scandal-ridden Jay Jones but lost to him anyway. But all other things being equal, more money is better than less money. It helps build a better campaign organization and buys more cable TV and social media advertising.
Abigail Spanberger’s money advantage in the gubernatorial race and Ghazala Hashmi’s money dominance in the contest for lieutenant general have been widely reported.
Donations reported as of October 23. Source: Virginia Public Access Project
According to VPAP data, Democrats’ fundraising advantage was just as lopsided in the House of Delegates races.
The year: 2075. The American colonies on the Moon are getting restless under Washington’s tyrannical rule….
This second edition of “Dust Mites” has a snazzy new cover, includes helpful lunar maps, and is 5,000 words tighter than the original. The sequel, “Trogs,” is scheduled for publication this summer.
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Bacon’s Rebellion is Virginia’s leading politically non-aligned portal for news, opinions and analysis about state, regional and local public policy. Read more about us here.
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