Home Blog Page 107

Rep. Jen Kiggans (R-VA02) Signs Onto “Pro-IVF” Measure That Does Nothing To…*Checks Notes*…Protect IVF

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From the DCCC:

Jen Kiggans Signs Onto “Pro-IVF” Measure That Does Nothing To…*Checks Notes*…Protect IVF

In her latest move to hide her record of threatening access to reproductive care, Jen Kiggans is signing onto a so-called “pro-IVF” measure that “doesn’t do anything to actually protect the procedure.”

And rather than signing onto a bill that *actually* protects IVF nationwide, Kiggans is putting on a show to gain a few political points.

Kiggans is no stranger to actively working against women’s health care. This is the same person who:

  • Voted to take away resources from active duty servicemembers forced to travel out-of-state to get an abortion
  • Called abortion a “shiny object”
  • Compared having an abortion to getting a “nose job.”

DCCC Spokesperson Lauryn Fanguen: 
“Jen Kiggans is all talk and no action. Instead of standing up for access to reproductive health care, she’s desperately trying to save face by signing onto a do-nothing resolution for a political talking point. Coastal Virginians deserve better and they won’t fall for it.”

Video: VA State Sen. Ghazala Hashmi Discusses Her “Right to Contraception Act” on MSNBC as Bill Heads to Governor Youngkin’s Desk

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Good stuff by VA State Senator Ghazala Hashmi:

ICYMI: Senator Ghazala Hashmi Discusses the Right to Contraception Act on MSNBC as the Bill Heads to Governor Youngkin’s Desk

Watch the full clip here.

RICHMOND, Va. – In case you missed it, Senator Ghazala Hashmi (D-Chesterfield) appeared on MSNBC’s Chris Jansing Reports on Feb. 29 to discuss her Right to Contraception Act. The legislation would codify the right to contraception in Virginia and explicitly prohibit government infringement on that right.

Senator Hashmi told Jansing:

“There has been an overwhelming response here in Virginia in support of this legislation. I have talked to so many voters that feel after the disastrous Dobbs decision we have to take action, and we have to protect the rights that we thought were previously enshrined. And the right to contraception is certainly one of those. We have had a great deal of support, and in fact polling shows that 90% of Americans absolutely support the right to contraceptive care and the right to use contraception. We thought these rights were protected after Griswold in 1965, but Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas has signaled that he is ready to take another look at Griswold.”

 

Delegate Marcia “Cia” Price (D-Newport News) is the patron of the companion bill in the House. Both bills are headed to Governor Youngkin’s desk.

Watch the full clip here.

With Virginia’s Presidential Primaries on Tuesday, Roanoke College Poll Finds Trump Leading Haley by 62 Pts. Among Rs; Haley Up 10 Pts. Among Independents

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A new poll from Roanoke College is out this morning, and it has a few interesting findings (although, of course, the usual caveats to polling apply…and in this case, the “likely voter” model seems questionable at best, as do some of the other numbers in here):

  • Among self-reported Republicans, Donald Trump has a huge lead of 75% as their first choice to be the Republican nominee for president in November, followed by 15% for Nikki Haley and 8% for someone else. Support for both candidates has increased since November as other candidates have dropped out of the race; Trump is up 24% and Haley is up 5%. When asked about their second choice for the nominee, 6% chose Trump, 25% picked Haley and 56% would prefer someone else.”
  • We asked Virginians about their intention to vote in the Republican primary on Super Tuesday (March 5, 2024) and 56% of Virginians indicated that they were very or somewhat likely to vote. Of those likely voters, Trump holds an 8-point lead over Haley (51% to 43%). Among likely voters on Tuesday, Democrats prefer Haley (87%) over Trump (10%), Republicans choose Trump (80%) over Haley (18%) and the closeness of the race comes from independents who prefer Haley (54%) over Trump (44%). Of the entire sample, 40% of Democrats, 84% of Republicans and 55% of independents self-identified into the “likely voter” category.
  • Trump has a 62-point lead among Republicans and Haley has a 10-point lead among independents, so while a Trump victory is the likely outcome, Haley will capture several of Virginia’s 48 delegates up for grabs.”
  • “Looking ahead to the general election in November and likely matchups for the presidency, President Joe Biden maintains a four-point lead over Trump (47% to 43%).”
  • Despite Virginia Republicans’ strong desire for Trump to be the party’s candidate in this November’s general election, the Roanoke College Poll found that Trump trails Biden by four points in November’s race but Haley would lead Biden by nine points if she were the nominee.”  (This is very unlikely to be true, by the way)
  • “Virginians’ approval of Gov. Glenn Youngkin remains approximately the same as our polls from May 2023, with 53% of Virginians approving of the way Youngkin is handling his job as governor.” (Very mediocre by historic standards, by the way)
  • Approximately 48% of Virginians report a favorable impression of Youngkin (down two points), while 41% report an unfavorable impression (up two points).”
  • We found that 63% of Virginians strongly or somewhat support laws that would help small businesses compete with pharmaceutical companies and existing medical cannabis dispensaries while only 15% somewhat or strongly oppose. A similar proportion (60%) strongly or somewhat support laws that would regulate education needs for dispensary workers in Virginia with only 12% indicating any level of opposition. Responses were largely non-partisan, with majority support among Democrats (68% and 62% for the two questions), Republicans (56% and 53%) and independents (70% and 55%).

 

Biden-Harris 2024 Response to Another Trump “Interview” on Fox

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From the Biden-Harris campaign:

Biden-Harris 2024 Response to Another Trump “Interview” on Fox

In response to yet another hard-hitting “interview” by Sean Hannity of Donald Trump on Fox News, Biden-Harris 2024 Communications Director Michael Tyler released the following statement:

“Nothing new. No solutions. Still racist.

“Still the guy who killed the bipartisan deal that would’ve actually secured the border. Also, violent crime was worse when he was president — and he’s clearly in his feelings about it.

“Oh by the way, still the guy banning abortion.”

Here are the facts:

Under Trump, crime SKYROCKETED while crime rates have come down under President Biden.

Associated Press: “FBI: 2020 homicides up nearly 30%, largest 1-year jump ever’

NBC News: “Crime in almost every category went down across U.S. in 2023, FBI reports”

Synthetic opioid overdose deaths soared under Trump’s leadership.

Forbes: “Overdose deaths from synthetic opioids soared during the time Donald Trump was president, raising questions about efforts to blame the Biden administration’s border policies for drug overdose deaths.”

Forbes: “Between 2016 and 2020, annual drug overdose deaths from synthetic opioids (excluding methadone) increased by 192% (from 19,500 to 56,894), according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The average annual growth rate of drug overdose deaths from synthetic opioids was 31% while Donald Trump was president. Between 2019 and 2020, the last year of Trump’s presidency, the increase in drug overdose deaths from synthetic opioids was 55%.”

Fact checkers repeatedly debunked Republicans’ lies blaming President Biden’s border policies for fentanyl trafficking and overdose deaths.

PolitiFact: “Are Biden’s border policies to blame for fentanyl deaths? Experts say no”

FactCheck.org: “More important, if stopping large amounts of fentanyl from being distributed to Americans is indicative of a ‘crisis’ at the southwest border, as those tweets imply, it’s a problem that Biden largely inherited from his predecessor.”

Trump and his allies have horrifying plans for America’s immigration system if he’s reelected: family separation, detention camps, mass deportations, and ending birthright citizenship.

Semafor: “‘When you hear that you’re going to be separated from your family you don’t come,’ Trump said. ‘When you think you’re going to come into the United States with your family, you come.’”

Trump Spokesperson: “Americans can expect that immediately upon President Trump’s return to the Oval Office, he will restore all of his prior policies, implement brand new crackdowns that will send shock waves to all the world’s criminal smugglers, and marshal every federal and state power necessary to institute the largest deportation operation in American history.”

New York Times: “Former President Donald J. Trump is planning an extreme expansion of his first-term crackdown on immigration if he returns to power in 2025 — including preparing to round up undocumented people already in the United States on a vast scale and detain them in sprawling camps while they wait to be expelled. The plans would sharply restrict both legal and illegal immigration in a multitude of ways.

“Mr. Trump wants to revive his first-term border policies, including banning entry by people from certain Muslim-majority nations and reimposing a Covid 19-era policy of refusing asylum claims — though this time he would base that refusal on assertions that migrants carry other infectious diseases like tuberculosis.”

NBC News: “Former President Trump said in a campaign video Tuesday that he would ban birthright citizenship through an executive order if elected president again.”

New York Times: “And Mr. Trump would try to end birthright citizenship for babies born in the United States to undocumented parents — by proclaiming that policy to be the new position of the government and by ordering agencies to cease issuing citizenship-affirming documents like Social Security cards and passports to them. That policy’s legal legitimacy, like nearly all of Mr. Trump’s plans, would be virtually certain to end up before the Supreme Court.”

Donald Trump blew up the bipartisan border deal solely because he thinks it helps his own political prospects.

The Hill: “Trump says ‘blame it on me’ if border bill fails”

CNN: “Trump, who is hoping to make immigration a key plank of his presidential campaign, has suggested on Truth Social that approving additional resources for the border would make Republicans ‘look bad.’”

Vox: “Trump made this clear when he reportedly urged Republicans in Congress to turn against the bipartisan Senate border security bill scheduled for a vote Wednesday so that he could keep the issue alive through the presidential election. His supporters have largely fallen in line.”

The Hill: “Trump on Monday declared on social media that ‘only a fool, or a Radical Left Democrat, would vote for this horrendous Border Bill’ and blasted it as ‘a great gift to the Democrats, and a Death Wish for The Republican Party.’”

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Paid for by Biden for President

Friday News: “Supreme Court aids and abets Trump’s bid for delay”; Yes, Trump’s a Virulent Racist, Xenophobe; In Fact, Immigrants Commit LESS Crime Than Native-Born Americans!; Youngkin Offers $322 million in [Hampton Roads] toll relief for Arena Deal

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by Lowell

Here are a few international, national and Virginia news headlines, political and otherwise, for Friday, March 1.

Video: Sen. Mark Warner Urges Speaker Mike Johnson to Stand Up to “small group of MAGA type, far right” on Funding the Government, Stopping Putin From Winning in Ukraine, etc.

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Sen. Mark Warner’s media availability this afternoon covered a lot of ground. See below for video and highlights, including:

  • “First, we continue to see the residual rollout of effects coming from the Supreme Court’s overturning Roe v Wade, where we continue to see cutbacks on women’s access to reproductive rights all across the country. The most recent example is the Alabama Supreme Court…prohibiting IVF as a methodology for people to grow their families. I know this only adheres at this point to Alabama, but literally thousands of people who spent time, money, effort, planning to try to grow a family through safe IVF techniques are now in doubt whether they’re going to be able to to have that right maintained. And what could happen in Alabama could happen across the nation, unfortunately. That’s why my Democratic colleagues and I said, let’s make sure this right to this medical procedure is enshrined in law. We’ve seen from former President Trump to Republican candidates all rushing to say, oh, no, we want to protect IVF. Well, we put forward a bill this week and unfortunately, that bill was objected to. And again, I think it’s more than a bit of hypocrisy that a Republican Party that claims that it is pro-life doesn’t seem to be pro-family in terms of women being able to have access to the IVF techniques
    that I think, frankly, all of us know some family that has used these tools to, frankly, have children to grow their family. And I think we have to do all we can to protect women’s access to reproductive health care. IVF is part of that. And unfortunately, this is a trend since the Dobbs decision. If you care about women’s health care, if it doesn’t concern you, it should.
    And those of us who stand firmly with women, their family, their doctors in making these health care decisions, we’ll do all we can to protect IVF on a national level, but also protect women’s health care rights, which I’m glad to say, at least in Virginia, has been maintained by the Democratic General Assembly.”
  • “Second matter, and that is a topic that if it feels like this is a rerun of a bad TV show in terms of the threats around  government shutdowns, you’re right, it is. It’s crazy that we are once again on the precipice of another government shutdown. It could come as early is as tomorrow night at least, or about half of the government. It does appear that we will do one more short-term continuing resolution for about half the government until next week. The bills should be then printed over the weekend and then the subsequent portions of the government. The really hard challenges around the border security, around Defense Department will be taken up by March 22nd. I frankly think it’s inexcusable that it’s taking this long. This is not a Democrat Republican problem. Senate Republicans, Senate Democrats, House Democrats, frankly, the majority of House Republicans know we ought to be operating on a budget. We’re literally five or six months, almost six months into our fiscal year. Any other business that operated on that this way would be out of business at this point. And there is no state in the country that is hurt more by these delays in having a predictable federal budget than Virginia – whether it is our federal workers who have to be in question of whether they can go to work; I think about the air traffic controllers who have to go to work oftentimes without pay if we have a government shutdown. Government contractors, we have a ton of them in Virginia. Government workers will at least get paid back after the government reopens,  Contractors don’t. So incredibly important projects that have been worked on, they come to a halt and you may not even get that back pay. We do a lot of ship repair in Virginia. if you finish a ship repair, you can’t start on a new ship that may be coming to that dry dock and causing huge delays because those additional funds are only put in the next two year budget. So this is a story, again, that people should be rightfully upset at. And the notion that a small group of MAGA type, far right – I’m not even sure Republicans are the right name for many more  – are constantly threatening shutdowns is ludicrous. And my hope and prayer is that the Speaker will stand up to this group.he can’t pass anything in the House anyway. He’s got to have Democratic votes. Let’s do it in a bipartisan way. Let’s get this this budget battle behind us. The Senate has done its job. The House needs to do its job. This is not a partizan issue at this point. This is a group of extremists really holding the whole country’s fiscal matters hostage.”
  • “And unfortunately, that brings me to my last issue. I’m thinking at a presentation this morning, I’m 15 years approximately into this job at this point. I can’t think of an issue that is of more importance currently and for the future of our nation and for the future of protection of democracies here and abroad than continuing to support Ukraine in its brave battle against Putin’s vicious Russian invasion of Ukraine. The Senate has done its job. We need to stand by our Ukrainian allies who have been  remarkable at fighting back Russian aggression. If we don’t get the additional funding for Ukraine in a short order, Putin will win. As chairman of the Intelligence Committee, I know that. And it will have such huge  consequences for people. People should be concerned about this because we could see American soldiers in harm’s way in honoring our NATO’s obligations to the Baltic states or Poland or other NATO nations, that Russia will turn its gaze from Ukraine to those other nations as Putin tries to recreate the old world around the Soviet Union. We need to stand up and get it done. This is, again, a case where it’s not Democrat versus Republican. It is a group of far-right isolationists bending the knee to former President Trump that have prevented this bill
    coming to the floor of the House. It will get 300 votes in the House of Representatives. That small group should not be able to preclude America from doing its duty because, candidly, I said this before if we don’t do this, no country should trust us again in terms of future commitments. And what will that mean literally for decades to come?…And what I’d say to Mike Johnson is, I hope you can look yourself in the mirror – not just today, but a year from now, two years from now, five years from now. If you prevent this bill from being voted on the floor of the House and the will of the House being acted, I think you’ll regret it for the rest of your life. You will be the person that will go down in history as having lost Ukraine. You will be the person that will go down in history as having allowed Vladimir Putin and his authoritarian, brutal regime to be victorious. You will go down as someone that also about abets President Xi and China and the Supreme Leader in Iran and those who are authoritarian, dictatorial regimes everywhere. Because if we don’t stand as we promised we would with the Ukrainians, dictators around the world will rejoice. And I’ve only met the Speaker once. He seems like a good man. I just hope he does what is I hope would be in his heart…And he has seemed to have said this many times to people privately. He knows how important that this is. But the time for words has passed. People are literally dying on the battlefield because our inability to get these critical arms to our Ukrainian allies. I hope he realizes what’s at stake.”

Rep. Abigail Spanberger (D-VA07) Statement on Vote to Prevent Government Shutdown, Protect Virginia’s Economy

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As Rep. Abigail Spanberger (D-VA07) says in her statement, below, regarding the US House’s vote this afternoon to do its basic job and keep the government running:

“Today, I voted alongside 319 Democrats and 99 Republicans who understand our fundamental responsibility to keep our government functioning. But we have not given Virginians the peace of mind they deserve. Instead, Speaker Johnson’s leadership has our country yet again one week away from a partial government shutdown and within a month of the whole of the federal government shutting its doors.”

Exactly!

Spanberger Statement on Vote to Prevent Government Shutdown, Protect Virginia’s Economy

WASHINGTON, D.C. — U.S. Representative Abigail Spanberger today released the following statement after voting with a bipartisan majority of the U.S. House to pass a short-term, stopgap funding measure — known as a “continuing resolution” — to avoid a shutdown that would damage Virginia’s economy. The legislation includes two staggered deadlines to keep the federal government open until March 8 and March 22.

“Not only do government shutdowns have devastating consequences for Virginia’s workforce and economy, but bringing our country to the precipice of disaster time and time again brings massive uncertainty to tens of thousands of federal workers, government contractors, small business owners, servicemembers, and families I represent. When Speaker Johnson took on the mantle of Speaker, he took with it a core duty to fund the federal government in a responsible way and protect the livelihoods of millions of Americans.

“Today, I voted alongside 206 Democrats and 113 Republicans who understand our fundamental responsibility to keep our government functioning. But we have not given Virginians the peace of mind they deserve. Instead, Speaker Johnson’s leadership has our country yet again one week away from a partial government shutdown and within a month of the whole of the federal government shutting its doors.

“If we continue to neglect this duty, then Congress will not be able to tackle our long to-do list — securing America’s southern border, reforming our broken immigration system, getting the Farm Bill across the finish line, supporting our Ukrainian allies in their fight against Putin’s aggression, getting humanitarian aid into Gaza to support Palestinian civilians, supporting our Israeli allies as they continue to stop Hamas terrorists, and addressing the fentanyl crisis in our communities — with the seriousness these issues deserve.

“As our country remains on a collision course with a completely preventable potential shutdown, I will continue to press Speaker Johnson to bring bipartisan bills forward that would pass in the U.S. House, pass in the U.S. Senate, and get to the President’s desk.”

Long-Overdue Legislation Finally Allowing Farmworkers to Receive Minimum Wage Passes Virginia General Assembly

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Great work by first-term Virginia Delegate Adele McClure (D-Arlington). Note that Republicans (disgracefully) all voted *against* this important, essential legislation. Now we’ll see what Youngkin/Trumpkin does, but I can’t say I’m optimistic he’ll sign this – or any legislation that might actually help people.

Long Overdue Legislation Finally Allowing Farmworkers to Receive Minimum Wage Passes Virginia General Assembly

Virginia now only one step away from ensuring these essential workers are fairly compensated

RICHMOND, VA – Today, HB 157 received critical support on the Senate floor, by a vote of 20 to 19, meaning that the bill has officially been passed by the General Assembly for the first time in Virginia history. It will now go to the Governor for consideration. 

This bill removes a vestige of Jim Crow-era law which exempts farmworkers from the protections provided by the Virginia Minimum Wage Act (“VMWA”). Delegate Adele McClure (D – Arlington) introduced HB 157 along with her colleague Delegate Phil Hernandez (D – Norfolk) in the House of Delegates to ensure that all of Virginia’s farmworkers receive fair pay. The bill also removes the exemption for temporary seasonal workers on H-2 visas.

“I’m excited that the very first bill I introduced as a Delegate addresses an issue as crucial as making it possible for the Commonwealth’s farmworkers to finally be included in Virginia’s minimum wage protections,” Del. McClure said. “Paying the hardworking people who help feed our families and bolster our economy fairly is not only the right thing to do, it’s also extremely personal. I am the granddaughter of a sharecropper, and my family has felt the impacts of these types of exclusionary policies for generations, as have so many others. This bill represents another step toward erasing the troubling legacy of Jim Crow from state law while supporting the essential workers who we may not often see, but who nevertheless support every single Virginian.”

“This bill represents the very least we can do for farmworkers, who work tirelessly to put food on our tables,” said Del. Hernandez. “The fact that this legislation has, for the first time, passed the House and the Senate underscores the growing momentum in the General Assembly to prioritize farmworker justice and advance the dignity of all workers.”

The gap in fair wages for farmworkers dates back to the 1938 Congressional exclusion of farmworkers from the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”). The FLSA farmworker minimum wage exemption was based on racially motivated, pro-segregation policies, and while Congress eventually removed this exemption, Virginia and several other states did not.

While most farmers across the Commonwealth are already doing right by their employees by paying them at or above the state minimum wage, there are employers that continue to demand more and more from their employees while paying far below the minimum wage—which creates an unfair competitive advantage and undercuts farmers who are paying their workers fairly.

Now, Governor Youngkin has the unique opportunity to sign this important legislation and right a historical wrong for some of Virginia’s hardest and most essential workers.

In 2020, while the Virginia General Assembly passed momentous legislation to raise the minimum wage, this act still maintained the outdated farmworkers exemption, while also adding an exemption for H-2A and H-2B workers on temporary visas. These steps resulted in worsening wage inequities between farmworkers and temporary migrant workers and the rest of Virginia’s workforce.

“I feel very good that this has passed. It is beneficial for many people and would change their lives. I hope that the Governor signs this proposal—we have been working for a long time with very low wages, and we would be very grateful that we are now protected,” said Maria G., a farmworker in the Northern Neck of Virginia.

“Securing fair wages for farmworkers could improve safety, productivity, and particularly raise the wellbeing of workers, their families, and the community,” said Antonio Tovar, Senior Policy Associate from the National Family Farm Coalition.

“This legislation not only ensures that farmworkers are treated equally and paid wages that allow them to put food on their own families’ tables, but also levels the playing field for small farmers who have a competitive disadvantage at the hands of the few bad actors who continue to pay inhumane wages,” said Jason Yarashes of the Legal Aid Justice Center.

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Delegate Adele McClure proudly represents the 2nd District in the Virginia House of Delegates. She is the daughter of a resilient early childhood educator and the daughter of a Filipino immigrant and veteran. Adele was raised in Northern Virginia, where her lived experiences highlighted the systemic issues facing those in poverty and made her a fierce advocate for vulnerable populations. Through this lens, Adele has worked with advocates, stakeholders, members of the General Assembly, and now as a Delegate herself, to draft, pass, and implement legislation that breaks down barriers, expands human rights, and improves access to services for people in Arlington and across the Commonwealth of Virginia. She is both the first Black person since Reconstruction and the first Asian person to represent Arlington County in the Virginia General Assembly.
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UPDATE: Also, see below for a press release from Progress Virginia on this legislation.

Historic $15 Minimum Wage Increase Will Include Farmworkers For The First Time

Richmond, Virginia—Today, we moved closer to pay equity and racial justice when the Virginia Senate voted to remove the exemptions that excluded farmworkers from earning the minimum wage. HB157, sponsored by Delegate Adele McClure, narrowly passed the Senate by a vote of 20-19 and will move to the Governor’s desk for a signature. The exemption from the minimum wage for farmworkers, which HB 157 repealed, targeted some of our community’s most vulnerable families. Farmworkers have historically suffered from poverty-level wages despite the fact that they perform some of the most difficult and dangerous work that exists.

“Farmworker exemptions are racist relics of Jim Crow designed to keep a vulnerable group of workers in poverty and in the shadows,” LaTwyla Mathias, Executive Director of Progress Virginia, said. “Farmworkers are essential workers who deserve the same respect as any other worker, and we celebrate that from here forward, they will earn at least the minimum wage, just like everyone  else. Governor Youngkin took an oath to serve everyone in our community and treat people fairly; he must sign this bill into law. All working families deserve a raise, particularly our most vulnerable, and we won’t stop fighting until we make that a reality.”

 

Background:

  • The minimum wage is currently $12.00 an hour; if bills passed in 2024 are signed into law, the minimum wage will increase to $13.50 in 2025 and $15 in 2026.
  • If the minimum wage kept up with productivity, the wage would be $21.50 per hour.
  • Farmworkers were excluded from the minimum wage when it was adopted in 1938. In 1938, most farmworkers were Black, and Southern states led the objection to extending the minimum wage to Black agricultural workers.
  • In 1966, Congress extended the federal minimum wage (currently $7.25/hr) to farmworkers, but they are still excluded from federal overtime requirements, union protections, and OSHA protections/workers’ compensation laws in many states.

Thursday News: “Ukraine Sees Risk of Russia Breaking Through Defenses by Summer”; SCOTUS Decision on Trump Immunity Case “is outrageous and, at its heart, fundamentally corrupt”; McConnell’s Exit Marks “Trump’s last step toward a total MAGA Republican party”

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by Lowell

Here are a few international, national and Virginia news headlines, political and otherwise, for Thursday, February 29 – Leap Day, 2024!

VA State Sen. Aaron Rouse’s Legislation Creating a Retail Marijuana Market in Virginia passes House, Senate, Heads to Governor’s Desk

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From VA State Senator Aaron Rouse’s office:

Senator Aaron Rouse’s Legislation Creating a Retail Marijuana Market in Virginia passes House, Senate, heads to Governor’s Desk

28 February 2024 – Today, the Virginia House and Senate passed Senator Aaron Rouse’s legislation, which legalizes retail marijuana sales in Virginia beginning May 1, 2025.

In response to the passage of the legislation in the House and Senate, Senator Rouse made the following statement:

“Today, the Virginia House and Senate passed the legislation I carried with the support of a broad coalition of stakeholders from across the Commonwealth to create an equitable, legal marijuana retail market in Virginia.”

“As House Republican Leader Todd Gilbert told the Washington Post“This is one of the most monumental pieces of legislation that we’ve ever had before us.”

“Fully legalizing marijuana and creating an equitable retail market in Virginia is a major step forward for justice in our Commonwealth. This would not have been possible without justice advocates across Virginia who have been putting in the work on this issue for years. I also want to thank President Pro Temp Lucas, Senators Ebbin, McPike, and Favola, and Delegate Krizek for their years of hard work on real marijuana justice in Virginia and for helping to get this bill to the Governor’s desk.”

“Governor Youngkin: the ball is in your court.”