• Thoughts on the Primary Election

    State Sen. Ghazala Hashmi, Democratic nominee for Lt. Governor Photo credit: AP

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    The biggest story from the Democratic Primary contest for Lieutenant Governor was that the folks that know Levar Stoney the best, the citizens of Richmond where he was mayor for eight years, are the ones who kept him from winning the nomination for Lieutenant Governor.

    State Sen. Ghazala Hashmi (Chesterfield) won the nomination in a six-candidate race with 27.39 percent of the vote.  Stoney was close behind with 26.64 per cent.  (The source of all election data is the website of the Virginia Dept. of Elections.)  Looking at the actual votes, Hashmi beat Stoney by 3,600 votes statewide.  Her margin in Richmond over Stoney was 10,509 votes.  Without that margin in Richmond, Hashmi would have lost.  

    There is anecdotal evidence that Richmond voters blamed Stoney for the water problems that occurred shortly after he left the mayoral office and left the city without water for a week and made national news.  There were other controversies, as well.

    Taken together, the list of statewide office candidates is remarkable, strong proof of how far Virginia has come in 50 years.  Consider:

    • Both gubernatorial candidates are women (Spanberger; Earle-Sears)
    • Half of the combined tickets are women (Spanberger; Earle-Sears; Hashmi)
    • Two came to America as children (Earle-Sears (Jamaica); Hashmi (India))
    • One is the son of immigrants (Miyares (Cuba))
    • Only two are non-Hispanic whites (Spanberger; Reid)
    • Two are Black (Earle-Sears, Jones)
    • One is Hispanic (Miyares)
    • One is Asian (Hashmi)
    • One is openly gay (Reid)
    • One Muslim (Hashmi)
    • Only two lawyers (Jones; Miyares)
    • None from Northern Virginia

  • Report From the Front Lines

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    I served as an officer of election yesterday in my home precinct. 

    It was a quiet day.  There were periods lasting ten minutes or more when there were absolutely no voters in the polling place.  Then several people would come in and then there would be another quiet period.  Between 4:30 and 6:00, there was a steady stream of voters, but no one had to wait more than two or three minutes.

    In all, 305 people submitted ballots in the machine and there were a couple of provisional voters.  There are a little over 4,100 registered voters in the precinct.

    The precinct, Lakeside, is one of the larger ones in the county.  It is a traditional middle class community.  Lots of relatively small housesโ€”ranchers and Cape Codsโ€”built in the 1950s and 60s.  There are a couple of older, well kept-up apartment complexes.  The precinct borders the city of Richmond on the Northside and lies between the subsidized housing areas of eastern Henrico and the newer, larger, expensive subdivisions of the West End, Glen Allen, and Short Pump areas.

    (more…)

  • Well, That Policy Change Didn’t Last Long

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/immigration/2025/06/16/trump-farms-hotels-immigration-raids


  • Politicians Are Not Punching Bags, Gun Range Targets

    By Ken Reid

    “Political violence” reared its ugly head in the Saturday shooting deaths of Minnesota State Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband, and the wounding of state Sen. John Hoffman and his wife โ€“ all of them shot at their respective homes outside Minneapolis.

    Shooting any human being and killing them is heinous, but being a former elected office holder myself, who got a few death threats in my 10 years serving Loudoun County, VA, these shooting incensed me because I understand what office holders have to deal with in their daily lives โ€“ which the news media and social media never seem to care about until there is a tragedy.

    As of this writing, we don’t know the motive of the suspect Vance Boelter, who was captured late Sunday. I already see social media posts from conservatives saying he must have been a liberal because there were โ€œNo Kingsโ€ fliers in his car, and that he was appointed to a state commission by two Democrat governors. Liberal media are reporting he had materials in the car he ditched indicating he was a right winger โ€“ another example of how we need to โ€œtone down the rhetoricโ€ โ€“ as if the Left is not guilty of this.

    Both views miss the point. This is just another continuing pattern of political violence in this nation and itโ€™s broader and bigger than the recent killings of Israeli embassy staffers in DC, or attempted burning of 15 Jewish marchers for the hostages in Boulder, CO.

    Professor Robert Pape, who studies political violence at the University of Chicago, told CNNโ€™s Michael Smerconish on a podcast June 2: โ€œWe have become a tinderbox of a nation and we find volatile individuals motivated by events that happen in the world, and their attack will be supported by the community, but also motivated by the feeling there is no peaceful way to express their outrage.โ€

    (more…)


  • Trump Backs Off from Deporting Some Undocumented Immigrants

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Immigrants who work in certain sectors of Virginiaโ€™s economy, and their employers, can rest a little easier now.  The Wall Street Journal reports that the Trump administration has ordered immigration agents to cease their sweep operations at agriculture and hospitality industry worksites.

    On June 12, a senior ICE official sent an e-mail to ICE regional directors saying, โ€œEffective today, please hold on all work site enforcement investigations/operations on agriculture (including aquaculture and meat packing plants), restaurants and operating hotels.โ€  The e-mail went on to say that investigations involving โ€œhuman trafficking, money laundering, drug smuggling into these industries are OK.โ€ However, it stipulated that agents were not to arrest โ€œnoncriminal collaterals,โ€ i.e., undocumented immigrants who were not known to have committed any crime.

    (more…)

  • More Eye-Popping Late Donations from Dominion, Clean Virginia

    By Steve Haner

    Dominion Energy Virginia has contributed another $1 million plus to Virginia state-level politicians in large, late pre-primary donations, with the largest amounts given to Shannon Taylorโ€™s run for Attorney General and Levar Stoneyโ€™s campaign for lieutenant governor.  This close to the vote, state law requires rapid reporting on late large checks. 

    According to the activist group Clean Virginia, no slouch in the campaign dollar department itself, the regulated utilityโ€™s total support to Taylor has reached $800,000, which it claims is โ€œthe largest amount ever directly contributed by an electric utility to a candidate in a competitive race in U.S. history.โ€  Taylor faces fellow Democrat Jay Jones in the primary which closes out Tuesday. 

    Is it the largest amount ever?  Who can prove that?  It is quite a sum of money, clearly reaching the level it has because of the role the Attorney General of Virginia plays in cases before the State Corporation Commission.  But on this list of late Dominion donations, former Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney received $193,000, even more than Shannon.   His total from Dominion is approaching $700,000. That much for a lieutenant governor candidate is also amazing. 

    Dominion has been equally or even more generous with a host of other Virginia legislators in this campaign cycle. Perhaps the qualifier to watch in Clean Virginia’s release is โ€œcompetitive race,โ€ because most Virginia legislative heavy weights are in safe districts. Dominion gave six figure donations in the last couple of weeks to two state senators in pure blue districts not even on the 2025 ballot.  

    (more…)

  • Bacon Meme of the Week


  • Storm’s Coming. Where’s FEMA?

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Sinking fire truck in Damascus, Va. following Hurricane Helene. Photo credit: Va. Dept. of Emergency Management

    At his press conference in the Virginia Emergency Operation Center last fall in the aftermath of Hurricane Helen, Gov. Glenn Youngkin introduced โ€œmy newest best friendโ€โ€”the representative from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).  (The โ€œbest friendโ€ comment can be found at the 13:15 mark in the video.)  When a major disaster occurs in the state this year, it is not certain that the governorโ€™s โ€œbest friendโ€ will be around, of if he is, what his role will be.

    In January, President Trump declared that he wanted to eliminate FEMA.  He issued an executive order establishing the โ€œFederal Emergency Management Review Council.โ€  The function of the Council was โ€œto advise the Presidentโ€ฆon the existing ability of FEMA to capably and impartially address disasters occurring within the United States andโ€ฆon all recommended changes related to FEMA to best serve the national interest.โ€  He directed the Council to submit its report within 180 days of its first public meeting.  Virginiaโ€™s Gov. Youngkin was appointed to be a member of the Council.

    The Council had its first meeting on May 20.  At that meeting, Secretary of Homeland Security, Kristi Noem seemed modify Trumpโ€™s declared wish to eliminate FEMA.  As she put it, โ€œThe President has said to me many times that he believes FEMA should be eliminated as it exists.โ€ (Emphasis added)  She went on to declare โ€œour goal is that states should manage their emergencies and we come in and support them and weโ€™re there in a time of financial crisis.โ€

    (more…)

  • Are Virginia’s Historic Landscapes the Next Frontier for Big Tech?

    Data centers continue to bolster communities in Virginia, but without proper regulation, Virginians on the ground will be the biggest losers.

    by Bronson Winslow

    Data centers, driven by Big Tech’s eastward expansion, have popped up like 7-Elevens across Virgini aโ€” reshaping rolling hills and historic communities in the name of progress.

    The aggressive transformation, primarily established over the last 15 years, leaves Virginians with a question: Who stands to benefit the most? Recent political contributions only further exacerbate the need to answer that question, as LinkedIn co-founder and “progressive” mega-donor Reid Hoffman and Microsoft’s Director of AI, Kevin Scott (and his wife), have funneled over $600,000 into Democrat Abigail Spanberger’s 2025 gubernatorial campaign.

    Are these contributions simply based on political identity, or are they another strategy used by California elites who stand to gain the most from data center expansion?

    It’s worth noting that Virginia currently grants generous tax incentives to data center developersโ€”saving companies nearly $1 billion in 2023 aloneโ€”but things are destined to change. Those incentives are set to expire in 2035, and the Virginia legislature is still kicking the can on how data centers should be properly regulated.

    Electing a friendly governor could be a very sound investment for Big Tech as policy debates continue. But will out-of-state tech moguls put Virginians above profit margins?

    (more…)

  • White Children Deserve Equity, Too

    by Paul Goldman

    Did you know the Constitution of Virginia denies white children the right to equal educational opportunities? Indeed, not just denied: but intentionally denied by the drafters of Article VIII, the Educational Clause. The denial is particularly damaging to white children in the Western and rural parts of the state.

    Thatโ€™s right: Trump country, conservative country. And yes: Governor Youngkin knows all about this. As does the Republican Party. As do Democratic leaders. To his credit, Senator Bill Stanley, R-Moneta, led the fight to stop this discrimination. Joined by my State Senator at the time. But the liberal leaders from NOVA in the House of Representatives killed it.

    NOW, I KNOW WHAT YOUโ€™RE THINKING: โ€œ Come on Paul we wouldโ€™ve heard about it. Jim Bacon and the Bacon Rebellion wouldโ€™ve discussed it.โ€:ย 

    My answer: I believe I actually first wrote about the basic issue years ago in this space. Jim was the only one willing to print it. Many years later, the Virginian-Pilot published a discussion of the matter, written by myself and Professor Rozell from George Mason University. Governor Wilder and I talked ย about the constitutional issue over 30 years ago. We both were determined to try to do something to fix it but got sidetracked by the customs of the General Assembly and the insistence of an otherwise brilliant attorney to pursue what he had to know would be a losing appealย to the Virginia Supreme Court.ย 

    (more…)

  • Lawsuit Alleges Principal Made False Racism Claims

    Elected officials fanned the flames about an alleged racist incident at Kellam High Schoolโ€”creating community scorn for the students and families.

    Image credit: Restoration News

    by Victoria Manning

    Three Virginia Beach parents filed a $10 million defamation lawsuit on June 2nd against Kellam High School principal Ryan Schubart contending Schubart wrongly accused their children of racism. The families claim the principal and a school board member made public statements alleging students’ guilt before conducting an investigation, per school district rules.

    The students were suspended from school and, the families say, prosecuted in the court of public opinion. They now have a stain on their permanent record of bullying based on race, ethnicity or color and harassment/ discrimination.

    The plaintiff’s perspective

    The defamation lawsuit details the events of March 12th. A group of boys at Kellam High School, three of whom are the plaintiffs and one the alleged victim, are a part of a “close friend group.” The students met up at their usual location prior to the start of school. The alleged victim, who is Black, previously requested his friends bring him fried chicken for his birthday. The friends granted his wish for fried chicken and gave it to him that morning along with a birthday card and candy. Video evidence shows the students laughing, hugging, and “engaging in friendly behavior,” per the lawsuit.

    According to the lawsuit, “Teachers and staff members were present in the vicinity, observing from a distance, but no intervention occurred by any adult, as the interaction did not appear to be inappropriate or hostile. The entire encounter was 2-3 minutes before all students had to go to class.”

    (more…)

  • A New Outbreak of Covid-19 Hysteria

    by Carol J. Bova

    The Covid-19 pandemic may have faded from public consciousness, but controversy over how best to fight the virus rages unabated.

    For the week ending, June 7, 2025, The Virginia Department of Health (VDH) reported Covid-19 was responsible for 0.3 percent of emergency room visits — compared to 0.2 percent for influenza visits. In the previous six weeks, there were 16 deaths from Covid-19. In the same report, VDH urges: โ€œEveryone 6 months of age and older is recommended to receive an updated COVID-19 and flu vaccine.โ€

    VDH also reports 1,275,918 doses of vaccine were administered during 2024-2025. But the state agency reports no research showing the efficacy of the vaccines.

    To say that the research is in flux would be an understatement.

    Recently, conflicting Covid-19 vaccination advice has been flying between the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and CDCโ€™s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP).

    (more…)

  • Bob Blue’s Big Opportunity

    Data center as energy hog. Image credit: Chat GPT

    by Paul Goldman

    America needs to win the Artificial Intelligence battle.ย 

    Winning apparently requires building hundreds and hundreds more data centers. At least say the experts right now. Do I have the intelligence artificial or otherwise to know if this is true? No, I donโ€™t. Neither, I suspect, do more than a few hundred Americans. But winning the race regarding such a impactful new technology certainly isnโ€™t a bad idea.ย 

    However, the entry fee will be costly. These data center complexes often require over 600 acres. The new one being built by Amazon inย Louisa County coverage 1,400 acres. These complexes of thousands of super-fast computer chip infrastructure requires incomprehensible amounts of electric power. But even Bob Dylan had to go full-in electric eventually.

    For example, META Is building five of these complexes in a community roughly 30 miles from Manhattan. How much energy do they require? Not much: Only the equivalent of all the electric power annually consumed on the Island of Manhattan.

    Truth is, Virginia has more of these data centers than any state in the union. Indeed, Loudoun County has more than any locality on the planet. Their importance to localities is not the jobs created but the astounding amount of local taxes produced. Over 160 million in Prince William County.

    A 622-acre complex was recently promised the Surry County. This project has suffered certain financial reversal recently. The proposal was controversial and only passed by 3 to 2 vote of the Board of Supervisors. Apparently, the winning argument revolves around the projected 70+ million dollars in annual local taxes to be generated when fully operational. This amount is greater than the entire current county tax revenue from all other sources.

    Assuming Virginia localities want these local ATM tax machines to keep coming, we must resolve the following: How Is our power grid across the Commonwealth, indeed America going to power Generate and then transmit this enormous electric power to the data center site?ย 

    (more…)

  • In Struggle for Autonomy, UVA Board Eyes Role of Board Secretary

    by James A. Bacon

    The process for selecting the Board of Visitors secretary at the University of Virginia might seem arcane to outsiders, but it consumed the attention of board members briefly Friday before everyone agreed to table discussion until the regularly scheduled meeting in September.

    According to the Board manual, the secretary preserves documents, prepares the minutes, keeps the official Seal of the University in safe custody, and assists the Board in “the discharge of its official duties.” The secretary has little formal power but plays a key role in communicating information to board members.

    And therein lies the problem. The secretary (currently Susan Harris) reports to the president (Jim Ryan). Several members of the Board are frustrated by their inability to get answers from the Ryan administration. Requests for information are frequently blown off as too troublesome and time-consuming for overworked administrators to waste their time on.

    Generally speaking, one way in which university presidents control their boards is to manipulate the information presented to them. Such is certainly the case with UVA. Thus, the disagreement over who picks the secretary for their four-year terms is at heart a struggle over access to information.

    Rector Robert Hardie brought the issue to the Board’s attention, referring to a proposal by an unnamed board member to change the existing selection process — the president and rector nominate an individual “in concurrence,” and the Board votes its approval — to one in which any board member could nominate someone. The Executive Committee had discussed the idea, Hardie said, and the seven members unanimously opposed it in a straw poll.

    (more…)

  • University Board Politics Got Even Nastier Yesterday

    by James A. Bacon

    Blaming the toxic politics in Washington, D.C., the state Senate Privileges & Elections Subcommittee just made Virginia politics more toxic by voting down eight university Board of Visitors members nominated by Governor Glenn Youngkin in an 8-to-4 party line vote.

    โ€œWhat we see in our political climate today, especially coming out of Washington, trying to make its way to our commonwealth โ€” itโ€™s our job to stand up,โ€ said Committee Chair Sen. Aaron Rouse, D-Virginia Beach, the committee chair…. who happens to be running for lieutenant governor.

    A new battleground has emerged in Virginia politics — the appointment of board members to the governing bodies of Virginia’s public universities. Traditionally, the legislature defers to the overwhelming majority of a governor’s nominees. And when lawmakers don’t like someone, they wait until the regular General Assembly session in January-February to reject him or her.

    The process allows nominees to serve six or more months before getting the axe. It’s not clear from the Richmond Times-Dispatch report what immediate impact the Subcommittee vote will have.

    โ€œJust days before a contentious Democrat primary, Virginians see todayโ€™s antics for what they are โ€” an obvious political sideshow,โ€ said Youngkin spokesman Rob Damschen.ย โ€œThis sloppy attempt … is not only completely out of order with General Assembly procedures, it also costs Virginians thousands of dollars. Make no mistake, these highly qualified appointees will continue to serve in their posts as the Constitution of Virginia affords.โ€

    But Senate Majority Leader Scott Surovell, D-Fairfax, defended the vote. โ€œWhen weโ€™ve done this before, governors have said this is valid,โ€ he said. According to the RTD, Surovell was referring to subcommittee votes when Republicans were in control that did not confirm some of Democratic Governor Ralph Northamโ€™s appointees.

    (more…)