• About Being Virginia’s Lieutenant Governor

    Patrick Herrity

    by Gordon C. Morse

    Earlier this week, Patrick Herrity dropped out of the June 17 primary for the Republican nomination for lieutenant governor, and itโ€™s too bad. The son of Jack Herrity had not fallen far from the tree and that alone promised to make his race both fun and useful.

    About his old man: born in Arlington, Jack Herrity opened his political career by winning a spot on the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors in 1971. Five years later, he was elected chairman and remained so for the next 12 years.

    Herrity favored economic growth in the 1970s and 80s when โ€œgrowthโ€ invariably inspired a protracted fight. Herrity stayed the course, and in the process, earned lasting respect.

    It earned him growing opposition, too. In 1987, the slow-growth forces in Fairfax handily defeated him, though his legacy remains undiminished.

    Son Patrick likewise embraced a โ€œletโ€™s-get-things-doneโ€ mentality. His business background stood him out in a part of the state now celebrated for its ideological blather. You didnโ€™t always have to agree with Pat Herrity to see that his knowledge of local government would have benefited him in state office.

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  • The Opportunity-for-All Candidate

    by James A. Bacon

    Pundits and politicians are enamored with the idea that Virginia will “make history” in its gubernatorial elections this fall. No matter who wins the election — Republican Lieutenant Governor Winsome Earle-Sears or Democrat Abigail Spanberger — she will be the first woman to serve as Governor.

    The making-history observation applies to Earle-Sears in triplicate. She’d be the first woman, the first immigrant, and the second African-American to become governor — an undisputed winner of identity-politics sweepstakes. But it’s not a distinction she’s looking for.

    “I acknowledge that [the election] is historical, but I don’t stand on that,” Earle-Sears told an audience of roughly 200 at the University of Virginia yesterday in an event sponsored by The Jefferson Council and Center for Politics. The luster of being a historical first wears off quickly, she said. People quickly adopt the attitude, “Now what? What have you done for us?”

    Earle-Sears did not delve into detailed policy proposals. Rather, she sounded broad themes. She believes in equal opportunity, not equal outcomes. The keys to achieving equal opportunity in Virginia are freedom of choice in education, an all-of-the-above energy policy, safe communities and a robust economy.

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  • More Bizarro Logic from the Intelligentsia

    by James A. Bacon

    Image credit: Bing Image Creator

    Governor Glenn Youngkin issued a press release yesterday highlighting the success of the Virginia Homeland Security Task Force, which, in cooperation with federal authorities, has made 521 arrests since February 25, including 132 individuals affiliated with MS-13, Tren de Aragua, and other transnational criminal gangs.

    Markus Schmidt with the Virginia Mercury covered the story with an article that quoted extensively from the press release without distortions or cherry-picking of data (which means he’s not yet ready to work for The Washington Post). So, kudos to Schmidt for that.

    Sadly, however, he chose to assault readers with this down-the-rabbit-hole logic:

    Aย 2024 report funded by the National Institute of Justice (NIJ) found that undocumented immigrants are arrested at significantly lower rates than U.S.-born citizens.The findings challenge an unproven core assumption underlying the rhetoric around initiatives like the VHSTF โ€” that undocumented immigrants pose an outsized threat to public safety.

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  • Some Small Victories for Good Government

    by James A. Bacon

    Image credit: Bing Image Creator

    Virginians can argue all day long about the proper size and scope of state and local government. But we should be able to agree upon one thing: that whatever it does, government needs to do its job as efficiently and cost-effectively as possible.

    So, it’s good news to hear that the state Office of Transportation has generated $105 million in savings, according to Dave Ress with the Richmond Times-Dispatch. It’s not clear from the article whether the savings occurred in fiscal 2024 or the three years since Governor Glenn Youngkin set up the office. Either way, it’s not chump change, even in a General Fund that spends roughly $30 billion a year.

    On the other hand, the savings cited in Ress’ article come from administrative efficiencies that seem in retrospect to be no-brainers: reversals of practices that should never had been allowed in the first place.

    The biggest gains came from changes in procurement policy. For example, as described to Ress by Chief Transformation Officer Rob Ward, state agencies hire professional services, such as consulting services, without knowing (or caring) that other agencies have engaged the same consultants at lower hourly rates. Adjusting payments for all services to the lower rates netted $47 million in savings.

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  • About That $660 Million

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Sample of damage to Virginia Creeper Trail by flooding following Hurricane Helene.
    Photo Credit: Cardinal News

    Earlier this year, I had an article in Baconโ€™s Rebellion discussing the concerns of U.S. Senator Mark Warner about a possible hold-up of federal disaster funds meant for the repair of the damage to the Virginia Creeper Trail caused by Hurricane Helene. Several readers expressed their consternation, and rightly so, at the cost estimate of $660 million for the trailโ€™s repair.

    It is a lot of money and seems an unreasonable amount to repair a walking trail, even if those repairs include replacing numerous trestles and relocating the trail in some areas. It was with some chagrin that I had to admit that I had not focused on the cost. Subsequently, I decided to find out the basis for that cost estimate.

    It has sometimes been a frustrating search but a fascinating one overall. Before going any further, some background might be helpful.

    Virginia Creeper Trail background

    The Virginia Creeper Trail is an example of the โ€œRail to Trailโ€ movement in which abandoned railroad rights-of-way have been converted to trailsโ€”walking, biking, horseback riding, etc. The right-of-way was originally purchased and cleared in the 1880โ€™s by a company hoping to build a rail line to haul iron ore out of the mountains east of Abingdon. That effort was abandoned.

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  • Solving the Greatest Mystery in History

    by James A. Bacon

    Easter, the holiest day of the Christian calendar, marks the resurrection of Jesus Christ. The historic underpinnings of Christian doctrine have long fascinated me, and I have spent many years of amateur study of Jesus’ life and times in an effort to achieve a greater understanding of this seminal moment in human history.

    The result is my new novel, The Mystery of the Empty Tomb, which tells the story of Jesus’ entry into Jerusalem in the year 33 C.E. (Common Era), his arrest by the temple priests, his trial and crucifixion by Pontius Pilate, his burial, and the disappearance of his body from the tomb. The story is narrated by Nicolaus, a Greek by culture, native of Caesarea, and aide to Pilate. Grave robbery was endemic in the ancient world and the purloining of corpses was forbidden by imperial decree, so Roman authorities would have immediately assumed that the body had been stolen. The conceit of the novel is that Pilate puts Nicolaus in charge of identifying the culprits and tracking them down.

    Nicolaus’ investigations take him from the palace of Herod the Great to the Temple of Jerusalem (the greatest of the ancient world), into the mansions of the high priests, through the streets and marketplaces of Jerusalem, and to the cities and villages of Galilee and Samaria. Through Nicolaus, the reader learns about the power struggle between Pilate and the priests, the rivalries between Sadducees and Pharisees (and among factions of Pharisees), the ethnic tensions between Jews, Greeks and Samaritans, and the revolutionary aspirations of the anti-Roman zealots. As Nicolaus probes deeper into the sects and doctrines of the Jews, he introduces readers to the mysteries of throne mysticism and arcane practices of sorcery.

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  • Jeanine’s Memes

    From The Bull Elephant


  • Who Should Lead Virginia?

    by Gordon C. Morse

    In roughly six months, Virginia will elect a new governor, and her name is Abigail Spanberger.

    That appears to be the consensus view and, based on the circumstances (money, history, money, Trump, and money), the logic favoring Spanberger, a Democrat, appears convincing.

    So where does that leave Spanbergerโ€™s GOP opponent, current Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears? In need of a compelling, un-risk-averse message. She will have to take some chances. A formulaic, by-the-numbers campaign will likely not get it done for Earle-Sears.

    Let me first attempt a description of the overall situation.

    โ€œVirginia does presidential reactions,โ€ a seasoned, wise and experienced chum said on Thursday, while we sat eating lunch in bucolic Charles City County. Itโ€™s less and less about Virginia, per se, in other words.

    My friend pegs the shift to year 2016, when Donald Trump first ascended to the White House. America suddenly and urgently needed to channel its response โ€“ as felt by those, of course, who did not care for Trump โ€“ and Virginia promptly offered an electoral opportunity to do so the following year.

    The theory behind Virginiaโ€™s offset elections, so weโ€™re told, once sat in the notion that the commonwealth should avoid entanglements. No one in Virginia (if it was to remain Virginia) would benefit from state politics getting too tied up in national politics. Keep the two separate.

    Well, so much for that.

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  • Bacon Meme of the Week


  • Talking Out of Both Sides of Their Mouths

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    U.S. Rep. Jen Kiggans, (R-2)

    Two members of Virginiaโ€™s Congressional delegation, Rep. Jen Kiggans (R-2nd District) and Rep. Rob Wittman (R-1st District) seem to be in a bind over how to handle budget decisions coming up later this year in Congress.

    As reported by the Richmond Times-Dispatch, they joined ten other Republican members of the House of Representatives in a letter to the Republican House leadership stating their strong support for Medicaid and warning, โ€œWe cannot and will not support a final reconciliation bill
    that includes any reduction in Medicaid coverage for vulnerable populations.โ€ They did say that they supported โ€œtargeted reforms to improve program integrity, reduce improper payments, and modernize delivery systems to fix flaws in the program that divert resources away from children, seniors, individuals with disabilities, and pregnant women โ€“ those who the program was intended to help.โ€

    U.S. Rep. Rob Wittman (R-1)

    However, earlier in the spring both Wittman and Kiggans supported the House budget resolution that would have required an $880 billion cut over 10 years in federal programs under the House Energy and Commerce Committee. As demonstrated in a letter issued by the Congressional Budget Office, it would be impossible to cut that much out of the programs under the jurisdiction of the Energy and Commerce Committee without substantially cutting Medicaid benefits. The targeted reforms they referred to are not going to produce $880 billion in savings.

    It would seem that Wittman and Kiggans first supported legislation that would have resulted in significant Medicaid cuts, but then sent a letter to the House leadership saying that they could not support a final bill that included cuts to Medicaid.


  • Where’s the Local Media on This National Story?

    Norfolk house at the center of a national controversy. Image credit: The New York Post

    by James A. Bacon

    A big national story has landed in Virginia, and state media, which could help the public sift through conflicting charges and countercharges, have been totally silent.

    In a 2022 trial heard around the world, New York Attorney General Letitia James famously secured a $354 million judgment against Donald Trump and the Trump Organization for submitting inflated property valuations to secure favorable loans. Trump and his defenders claimed that the valuations were subjective, the loans were repaid, and the prosecution was purely political.

    Now Trump is president, and he’s retaliating against his tormenters. In a letter to Attorney General Pam Bondi, Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) Director William Pulte accused James of playing fast and loose in a real estate transaction of her own. It appears that in a 2023 application for a $220,000 mortgage, James declared that she intended to occupy a Norfolk, Va., house as her “primary residence.” But she lives in New York, and she has conceded that her niece lives in the modest, single-family dwelling. Read the details in this New York Post account.

    Most recently, a report of irregularities has surfaced of James’ involvement in a 2008 real estate transaction in Martinsville, Va. Documents show her as a co-purchaser of a single-family home on a “final foreclosure accounting” (her name was misspelled as Lititua) but her name did not appear on the deed as it should have. The report could not identify a connection between James and the other buyers but noted that her mother resides in Martinsville.

    So, James stands accused of submitting inaccurate information in real estate-related legal documents — just as she charged Trump of doing, though on a much smaller scale. As with Trump, there is no evidence that anyone was harmed from the alleged (though heavily documented) misstatement.

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  • A Quiz

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Can you identify the following:

    1. The company whose LinkedIn description is “________Company has been providing commercial and residential work on appliance repair and installation, plumbing, and electrical services for over 34 years. We give you quality work at reasonable prices, and the best service! Work is performed for businesses, private individuals, warranty companies, and in subcontractor capacity. As a female-, veteran-, and minority-owned company, we are able to help federal contractors meet their diversity requirements.”
    2. The young business executive who, upon assuming co-leadership of a major national firm lamented the lack of racial and gender diversity in his industry and lauded the efforts of his firm to to address those disparities. “The second we stepped into this role, we emphasized that this approach was not only going to continue, but it was going to be one of our key priorities.”

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  • Case Study: How to Slant a Routine News Story

    Image credit: ChatGPT

    by James A. Bacon

    The Virginia Military Institute Board of Visitors yesterday named Thomas “Teddy” Gottwald as interim president of the school’s governing body, succeeding former president John Adams who resigned for personal reasons last week.

    Gottwald disclaimed any desire to continue serving as president beyond June. Although VMI has been embroiled in controversy — most recently the board declined to renew the contract for Superintendent Cedric T. Wins — the appointment does not signal a change in direction for VMI.

    Of greater interest is how The Washington Post treated this routine story. The new reporter covering VMI, Dan Rosenzweig-Ziff is… I can’t bring myself to say he is more “objective,” so I’ll say… less subjective than his odious, agenda-driven predecessor Ian Shapira. But he’s still a creature of the left, with all of its biases and preconceptions.

    Let’s start with the headline: “VMI selects controversial Youngkin donor as new interim board president.” Sub-head: “Teddy Gottwald, who quit the board days ahead of its 2020 vote to remove a Stonewall Jackson statue, was reappointed by Gov. Glenn Youngkin in 2022. He will serve through June.”

    The headline sets the Post’s narrative-driven context right off the bat. Gottwald, whatever his other attributes, is “controversial.” How so? He quit in 2020 days before a board vote to remove the Stonewall Jackson statue from post. Thus, for readers, the five-year-old Stonewall Jackson controversy becomes Gottwald’s defining characteristic — even though he never voted on the issue himself!

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  • Business Needs Certainty. So Do Voters.

    by Chris Braunlich

    Asked nearly 40 years ago what he needed most, less regulation or lower taxes, a small manufacturer of machine tools replied: โ€œWe need both,โ€ he said, โ€œbut the thing we need most is certainty.โ€

    โ€œBusinesses have to plan out months and years,โ€ he said.ย โ€œWe have to plan for employee salaries, tax rates, benefit costs, energy prices, selling cost, and the value of the dollar if we export or import.ย Thereโ€™s a huge risk of failure trying to know what all that will be two years or even two months down the road, and if weโ€™re wrong our businesses and our employees get hurt.ย The worst thing for a business is uncertainty.โ€

    Nothing about that has changed.

    Economists are free to argue about the viability of tariffs, although most conservative and even liberal economists tend to line up with the legendary Thomas Sowell over Paul Navarro.

    But one thing about which there should be no argument: imposing massive tariffs with a heretofore unknown formula that is defective, even on countries with which the U.S. has a trade surplus, on products we cannot make (think:ย  coffee, chocolate, and bananas), and on islands populated only by penguins does not inspire confidence in the process.

    Nor does watching the bottom drop out of the stock and bond markets, and its effect on the 61 percent of American adults holding stocks in personal or retirement accounts.

    It might be comforting if these actions were explained coherently. But they arenโ€™t: those advising the president seem to have tested a variety of themes to justify them, almost as if the evidence was gathered after the decision had been made. Only after a week had passed did the White House even unite on the message that it was all just a masterclass in trade negotiation.

    So, putting a โ€œpauseโ€ on most tariffs (but keeping them on neighbors Mexico and Canada) while making clear the goal is not abandoned and we have to do it again in 90 days creates chaos for American businesses who hire Americans to make or supply products to Americans.

    Which is why your retirement account remains volatile.

    It is no different for Virginia business owners.ย 

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  • Virginia Beach Dems Oppose Ending Discrimination in Schools

    Republicans vote to uphold civil rights laws by committing to end DEI.

    by Victoria Manning

    On April 8th, the Virginia Beach School Board adopted a resolution with a 6-3 vote committing to end discriminatory diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) practices. They must still vote to formally remove DEI policies at a future meeting. The Democrats on the board opposed ending discriminatory equity practices in schools with one member, Alveta Green, doubling down and belittling students of “European descent.”

    Not only is the DEI agenda a violation of civil rights laws, it’s also harmful to academic progress for all students.

    According to the American Civil Liberties Union, it’s illegal discrimination “if a person or a company intentionally treats you differently based on your race, ethnicity, or national origin.” That’s exactly what has been happening in educational institutions across the nation in the name of “equity”โ€”including in Virginia Beach City Public Schools (VBCPS).

    On April 22, the Virginia Beach School Board will hold its next meeting. Far-left activists are already assembling to attend and oppose anti-discrimination laws from being enforced. Those opposed to racist, discriminatory, equity policies can email the school board at [email protected] and show up to the meeting at 6:00pm. Details can be found on the district’s website.

    The Department of Education has taken a firm stand against woke policies, warning districts that a lack of compliance with their updated standards could jeopardize their funding. Just a few examples of discriminatory practices in VBCPS that could cost the school district a loss of $75 million in federal funding:

    Continue reading.