By Steve Haner,
With one exception, Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin (R) has now vetoed the contested energy bills that he sought to amend at the 2025 General Assemblyโs reconvened session last month.ย The rejection of his amendments or substitutes gave him a final opportunity for a full veto of the legislation.ย
Friday night was his deadline for decisions. His overall number of 2025 vetoes reached 196, falling a bit short of the 201 vetoes he applied to the 2024 General Assemblyโs outcome. The media coverage of his active veto pen focuses on the unprecedented number of bills he rejected, never on how liberal, expensive, or unrealistic the vetoed bills were.ย ย
The list of vetoed energy bills from 2025, usually passed with unanimous Democratic votes, is a prediction of Virginiaโs possible future, depending on the November election.ย The Democratic nominee to replace Youngkin would likely have signed all or at least most of them.ย ย ย
Youngkin rejected the two bills that would have mandated a massive expansion of utility-scale battery installations, House Bill 2537 and Senate Bill 1394. His proposed substitute for them basically repealed the 2020 Virginia Clean Economy Act (VCEA), a laudable goal, but the Democrats in the majority in both chambers remain committed to killing hydrocarbon-based electricity.ย ย
From his veto explanation:ย








