Powerful message from Virginia labor leader— “Elections have consequences.”
Will November be a FAFO moment for Republicans? This Virginia labor leader thinks so.
Will November be a FAFO moment for Republicans? This Virginia labor leader thinks so.
Did you know that a big tech-backed data center group called the Data Center Coalition—whose members include Amazon, Meta, Microsoft, and Google—formed a political action committee last year, then donated $165,500 to a bipartisan group of Virginia lawmakers... ahead of a legislative session focused on regulation? Yeah.
If this rubs you the wrong way, here are two things you can do about it:
-Use the Virginia Register of Regulations or the Virginia Regulatory Town Hall website to track proposed regulations and submit public comments.
-Use the Virginia Public Access Project and Transparency USA to see which lawmakers receive donations from tech companies and related PACs.
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Manassas resident Jenny Higginbotham shares which candidate she feels supports her (and most Virginians’) views on reproductive rights.
If you're taking notes to be ready for the Nov. 4 election this year, here's what to know about the two candidates for governor when it comes to repro rights.
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Is it time to upgrade? Thanks to the Inflation Reduction Act, certain energy-efficient updates could put thousands of dollars back in Virginia homeowners’ pockets.
Five Richmond Public Schools bus drivers are fighting to get their jobs back after they were fired for allegedly going on strike.
One thing a lot of Virginians seem to agree on is that there’s nothing beautiful about President Trump’s ‘Big Beautiful Bill.’ 🙄
Virginian and disability advocate Linda Aase expresses her own concern for what will happen to her 37-year-old daughter with Down syndrome when Medicaid is cut.
After 20 FBI and DOJ officials were fired, some call it a purge—raising serious concerns about national security, cybercrime, and drug enforcement.
Former Virginia Governor L. Douglas Wilder says if we're still studying England's monarchy and World War II, then surely we should still be studying slavery and Jim Crow.
Abigail Spanberger's backstory may surprise you.