State and National Government

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — Virginia House Speaker Eileen Filler-Corn is announcing three public hearings on criminal justice matters ahead of a special session set for later this summer.

Filler-Corn, announced the special hearings Friday, saying they would take place in July and August.

Gov. Ralph Northam is expected to call a special legislative session in August. The initial purpose of the session was to focus on the economic impact of the coronavirus pandemic, but it has grown to include a focus on criminal justice reform following the widespread civil unrest following the death of George Floyd. Floyd, a Black man in handcuffs, died after a white police officer in Minneapolis pressed a knee on his neck.

The Virginia Legislative Black Caucus has said it plans to pursue a broad criminal justice-related agenda at the special session that includes legalizing marijuana and reinstating parole.

Virginian’s made their way to the polls yesterday to cast ballots for candidates in US House and Senate races.Republican voters chose Daniel Gade, a retired Army officer who advised former President George W Bush, as their candidate to challenge incumbent Democratic US Senator Mark Warner this fall. Gade says he is up to the challenge of defeating Warner and becoming the first Republican elected to Senate since 2002. In Virginia’s 5th District, Democratic voters selected Cameron Webb, a doctor, lawyer and educator at UVA, to take on Republican nominee Bob Good in November. Webb says he wants to reach out to Democrats who voted for other candidates as well Independent and Republican voters. Both Gade and Webb mentioned healthcare as one of the top issues they hope to work on should they get elected to Congress.

Virginia Lottery sales took a hit when the coronavirus first arrived, but lottery officials say it did not take long for the numbers to rebound — May sales were 9% higher than the year before — and the lottery expects to meet its budgeted goal of providing more than $600 million to Virginia K-12 education in the fiscal year that ends next week. More from WFIR’s Evan Jones:

 

This is primary day in Virginia for U.S. Senate and Congressional Democratic and Republican party nominations. The one statewide race is the for the Republican party’s U.S. Senate nomination. The candidates are Alissa Baldwin, Daniel Gade, and Thomas Speciale, and as WFIR’s Evan Jones reports,our political analyst Bob Denton says their campaigns have been virtually invisible:

The primary winner faces Democratic incumbent Mark Warner in November.

Click here for Alissa Baldwin’s campaign website.

Click here for Daniel Gade’s campaign website.

Click here for Thomas Speciale’s campaign website.

 

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — For the second time in two years, no big-name Republicans in Virginia are bothering to try and win a seat in the U.S. Senate.

Once a hotly contested swing state where Senate elections were decided by small margins, Virginia has swung solidly blue in the Trump era as voters in the state’s growing suburbs reject the president’s agenda. U.S. Sen. Tim Kaine won re-election against an underfunded opponent by more than 15 percentage points two years ago.

This year, three relatively unknown Republicans are competing to take on incumbent U.S. Sen. Mark Warner, a Democrat who is seeking his third term in the Senate. The primary will take place Tuesday.

“Mark Warner gets, essentially, a pass this time,” said Quentin Kidd, a political science professor at Christopher Newport University.

Warner barely won six years ago against former Republican National Committee Chairman Ed Gillespie, but no experienced Republicans want to take Warner on this time around. Former Congressman Scott Taylor initially announced a bid before changing his mind and running for his old, much more competitive, Virginia Beach-area U.S. House seat instead.

That leaves three political newcomers — Daniel Gade, Thomas Speciale, and Alissa Baldwin — vying to be the GOP Senate nominee.

Gade has raised by far the most money and has the highest profile of the three. He is a retired Army officer who was seriously injured in Iraq in 2005, losing a leg after his Humvee was hit by a roadside bomb. Gade advised President George W. Bush on military and disability issues and was Trump’s appointee to serve on the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, but withdrew his nomination after a lengthy delay in the Senate over his confirmation. Gade previously taught at West Point and now teaches at American University.

He said he’s undeterred by Warner’s advantages.

“Even if this is a blue year, even if Virginia is a blue state, so what? Our values are worth fighting for,” Gade said.

If elected, Gade pledged not to be a “rubber stamp” for the president but said Trump is “good on the policies that I care about,” like religious liberty.

Speciale is a defense contractor and Army reservist who has largely self-funded his campaign. He said he’d be a “junk yard dog” in debates against Warner and said Republicans are looking for his type of pro-Trump conservatism.

“They want people who are real. They want people who love America,” he said.

Baldwin is a public school teacher in Nottoway County who has barely raised any money.

Warner is running unopposed for the Democratic nomination.

Other notable races Tuesday include Virginia 2nd Congressional District GOP primary between Taylor, Ben Loyola Jr. and Jarome Bell. Taylor, a former Navy Seal, narrowly lost to U.S. Rep. Elaine Luria in 2018 in one of the most competitive congressional district in the country. Like Taylor, both Loyola and Bell are Navy veterans. The district includes the Norfolk Naval Base, the largest navy base in the world.

Four Democrats are vying to take on Bob Good in the Virginia 5th District, which stretches along the western part of the state from northern Virginia to the North Carolina border. Democrats think the Trump-leaning district could flip after Good defeated incumbent U.S. Rep. Denver Riggleman in a GOP convention earlier this month. Riggleman angered social conservatives in his district when he officiated a gay wedding.

The Democrats running are R. D. Huffstetler Jr., B. Cameron Webb, Claire C. Russo and John D. Lesinski.

Republicans will pick a candidate in Virginia’s other closely watched district — currently held by U.S. Rep. Abigail Spanberger — next month in a convention. State House Del. Nick Freitas is among the favorites to win, but failed to submit his campaign paperwork on time for the second straight election in a row.

Last year, Freitas had to mount a pricey write-in campaign to keep his state House seat. The state elections board will likely meet next month to hear his request for an extension to file this year’s paperwork.

A Virginia state senator is launching a bid to be the state’s next governor, which if successful would make her the nation’s first African-American woman to ever lead a state. Sen. Jennifer McClellan announced Thursday that she’s running for governor next year. She says she has the right skill set and track record to rebuild Virginia’s economy, safety nets and communities mid a coronavirus pandemic and civil unrest over police violence and systematic racism. In an interview with The Associated Press ahead of her formal announcement, she said she’s a proven problem solver and a “compassionate listener” who will work to build a more inclusive state.

Governor Northam is proposing that Virginia officially adopt Juneteenth as a paid state holiday. Juneteenth celebrates the end of slavery in the United States. Support expressed Tuesday ranged from the senior House of Delegates leader to music start Pharrell Williams. Juneteenth celebrates the end of slavery in the United States; it is observed each year on June 19th, and like many states, Virginia marks it with a proclamation. Governor Northam says it should become an official holiday, as WFIR’s Evan Jones reports: