By Steve Haner,
Predicting how Democrats will transform Virginia should they gain full control of state government in Novemberโs election is easy. Just look through the list of 400 plus bills vetoed by Republican Governor Glenn Youngkin, most of them from 2024 and 2025.ย ย ย
The progressive bills which reached Youngkinโs desk with unanimous or near unanimous Democratic votes and then died will stand a much greater chance of survival under Democrat Abigail Spanberger, if she wins. Sadly, few of these issues have received much attention during the long campaign season and were ignored in the single, one-hour debate, held after weeks of early voting.ย ย
At a meeting last week of the legislative Commission on Electric Utility Regulation, several of the vetoed bills were reviewed with the open intent to push them though again in 2026. On top of the list were the companion bills that would amend the Virginia Clean Economy Act to include a huge amount of utility-owned long-term battery storage facilities, adding $18 to $29 billion dollars of capital costs upon utility ratepayers. ย
Youngkin also vetoed a bill requiring electric utilities to pay a federal prevailing wage for their own employees and contracted workers constructing or repairing electrical generation facilities. If the bill wasnโt likely to produce higher pay and thus higher project costs for ratepayers, unions wouldnโt be pushing it.ย ย















