Home Blog Page 119

Virginia Legislative Black Caucus Fends off Republican Attacks on Voting Rights

6

From the Virginia Legislative Black Caucus:

The Virginia Legislative Black Caucus (VLBC) remains united in our efforts to block Republican attempts to roll back voting rights. For years, Republicans have stoked fear and resentment around American’s concerns for fair elections to further disenfranchise marginalized voters, basing their arguments on provably false claims. In 2021, the VLBC was proud to champion the Voting Rights Act of Virginia, which made voting more accessible while protecting residents from discrimination at the ballot box.

This year, we are fighting to preserve, defend, and strengthen this crucial law.

VLBC members Senator Aaron Rouse, Chair of the Senate Privileges and Elections Committee, and Delegate Marcia Price, chief patron of the VRA of Virginia and Chair of the House Privileges and Elections Committee, have used their leadership roles to protect Virginians from the types of politically motivated attacks that gut integral voter protections,depress turnout and make it harder for people to have their voice heard.

“As someone who has fought to protect and expand voting rights on the local level in the City of Virginia Beach, I look forward to continuing my efforts to not only protect voting rights, but to also restore rights as Chair of Privileges and Elections in the Virginia State Senate,” said Senator Rouse.

As Delegate Price put it, “We live in a democracy, and the historic number of VLBC members, of women, and of LGBTQIA+ members now serving in the General Assembly is proof that the voting public wants diverse voices representing them and accomplishing bold things on their behalf. That inherent strength of the people’s voice starts at the ballot box. Republicans may see this as a threat to their power, but we see it as the result of the people exercising their power through the foundational freedom of voting. So as we continue to embody the historic legacy of the VLBC, we must continue to protect, enhance, and expand access to the ballot.”

And these efforts have proven effective in pushing back against an extremist agenda. Just a few years ago, Virginia was ranked the second most difficult state to vote in. Now, thanks to the vigilance and advocacy of VLBC members, Virginia has become the 11th easiest state in which to vote.

But even as we celebrate these successes and the positive impact they have had on voters, the VLBC remains steadfast in our commitment to fighting ongoing Republican efforts to reestablish anti-voter, anti-democratic policies.

Policies like requiring photo identification to vote, even though we know that nearly three times as many Black Americans do not have photo IDs when compared to white Americans. We also know that so-called “voter fraud” is a nearly nonexistent occurrence, despite what anti-voting extremists would have us believe.

Policies like attempting to attack and reverse Virginia’s early voting initiatives this session. This comes just a few months after the GOP launched their own campaign to take advantage of early voting amongst Republicans, a revealing, unfortunate, but not altogether surprising reversal. Knowing that our elderly, disabled, and working-class communities rely on absentee voting as a way to participate in the democratic process, we have been steadfast in our rejection of Republican-led proposals that seek to reinstate unfair barriers to vote.

And there are still other damaging policies we have stood up against and were able to defeat, including requiring in-person absentee voting, establishing limits on the special annual application of absentee ballots for those with an illness or disability, and the elimination of drop-off locations for the return of ballots. We also protected same-day voter registration, including on Election Day, which 25,000 people utilized in order to vote for the very first time in 2022.

And in response, we simply see more restrictive bills introduced, more fear-mongering, and more Republican officials saying the quiet part out loud. In defense of these attacks on voting access, one Senate Republican stated, “This year in Virginia, we’re going to have 135 days of voting… that’s a lot of voting. A whole lot of voting.”

We agree that 135 days is a lot of voting, and the VLBC celebrates each and every opportunity Virginians have to cast
their ballot and impact public policy.

Historically, those with institutional power in Virginia have never chosen to make this country a more inclusive democracy; we have. Black Americans have always understood the power of casting a ballot. It’s why we marched for it, organized for it, and now, we fight, and vote, to keep it. Our Republican counterparts did not bestow this right upon us and they certainly cannot take it away.

The VLBC’s goals are clear: we will continue to fight to protect and expand voting rights here in the Commonwealth. We refuse to be silent, especially in the face of consistent attempts to undermine the protections we have fought so hard to attain. Our caucus is the largest it has ever been, with 32 Delegates and State Senators proudly representing 1.6 million Black voices in every corner of the Commonwealth.

And you will be hearing from all of us each November

Sunday News: “U.S. Strikes Avoid Iran’s Red Lines”; By Abandoning Ukraine, Speaker Mike Johnson and the House GOP Are De Facto Putin Puppets; Biden Wins 95% Landslide in SC; “How Donald Trump reduced the GOP to groveling sycophants”

23

by Lowell

Here are a few international, national and Virginia news headlines, political and otherwise, for Sunday, February 4.

VAPLAN’s Summary of Week #4 of the 2024 Virginia General Assembly: Guns, “Gambling and marijuana, oh my!”

4

by Cindy, cross-posted from VAPLAN a MUST-follow and MUST-read if you want to be well-informed about what’s going on in the Virginia General Assembly!

Week 4: Things are really getting going now!

Things are starting to move along in week four, as bills with fiscal impacts need to be in the money committees by now in order to get through and be voted on the floors of their respective chambers before crossover.

QUOTE OF THE WEEK, David Hogg, Parkland shooting survivor, testifying at House Firearms subcommittee against a bill to arm teachers: “The best way to protect our schools from gun violence is doing it the same way they do it in every other country: it’s to ensure that bad guys have as hard of a time as possible at getting a firearm to begin with.”

Big floor votes:

  • The House passed on a party-line vote HB1 (Ward) to approve a raise in the minimum wage (this was a re-enactment of a bill passed in a previous year) to $13.50/hr on January 1, 2025; and $15.00/hr on January 1, 2026.
  • The House passed HB906 (Shin) that prevents utilities from shutting off service to consumers during a state of emergency or the next 30 days.
  • On party-line votes, the House passed HB183 (Simon) and the Senate passed SB368 (Boysko) to require gun owners with minors in the house store firearms and ammunition in a locked place inaccessible to the minor.
  • The House passed a ban on assault weapons (HB2-Helmer) on a party-line vote.

Gambling and marijuana, oh my!

  • SB675 (Marsden) to add Tyson’s to the list of localities that can host a casino (by referendum) was continued to next year, clearly lacking the support to pass this year.
  • HB1478 (Simonds) to allow gambling aboard Princess Cruises while in Virginia waters (rather than waiting until they reach international waters) was killed in a House subcommittee; a matching bill (SB689-Craig) in the Senate is still alive.
  • The House bill (HB590-Hayes) to allow, tax and regulate so-called “skill games” or “gray machines” was drastically amended in a subcommittee, putting lots more protections and guardrails on it before reporting out. The Senate version (SB212-Rouse) is sitting in the Finance and Appropriations Committee waiting to be heard, but does not have the changes made by the House, which may be complicated after crossover.
  • The Senate moved forward with its bill to create a framework for a retail marijuana market (SB448-Rouse), but it does not contain some of the equity provisions of the House version (HB698-Krizek) and some members continue to vote against it. Although the Governor has already indicated he does not support creating retail markets (preferring the illicit and unsafe black markets that currently exist instead I guess?), House GOP members said in subcommittee this week that they recognize the need to create these markets to ensure safe products are sold.

Some bipartisanship:

  • Six GOP senators joined the Democrats in passing the long-overdue bill granting all localities the ability to raise their own local sales taxes by referendum to fund school construction (SB14-McPike)
  • GOP Senator Suetterlein voted with the Democratic Senate Caucus on SB235 (Hashmi) to affirm that nothing in the 2023 sexually-explicit materials parental notification law should be interpreted as permitting book banning.
  • Unanimous passage in the House (HB22-Jones) and bipartisan support in the Senate (SB210-Perry) for bills to ban the sales and possession of auto sears, small inexpensive devices that turn any handgun into a fully automatic weapon. (Last year a similar bill died in a GOP-majority House subcommittee.)
  • Ten GOP delegates joined in with the Democratic Caucus in passing a bill to repeal the common-law crime of suicide (HB81-Simon).
  • 14 GOP delegates joined with the Democratic Caucus in passing a bill to facilitate opioid prescribing for patients with the extremely painful sickle cell disease (HB257-Mundon King).

As Youngkin Takes an Axe to the “Deep State,” Including the *Building Code* (!), What Could Possibly Go Wrong?

6

by Ivy Main, cross-posted from Power for the People VA

The letter landed in email inboxes Monday morning like a grenade tucked into a plain manila envelope. In keeping with Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s Executive Directive Number One requiring agencies to eliminate 25% of government regulations “not mandated by federal or state statute,” the administration planned to take its axe to the building code.

Yes, the building code. The Board of Housing and Community Development has been told to remove a quarter of the rules that protect homes and businesses against fires, bad weather and shoddy workmanship.

The Board only last summer completed its triennial update of the Virginia building code, so you’d think they would have removed any unnecessary provisions already. But that’s not the point. The point is that the Axe of Freedom must fall wherever regulations gather in big bunches, and the building code is, by definition, a bunch of regulations.

Wasting no time, the board plans to meet on January 26 to kick off what it is calling “the reduction cycle.” Virginians will have a chance to comment, although in keeping with what I’ve found to be board practice, only the comments the board likes will count. And as the governor appoints the board members, successful opinions will be those that confirm Youngkin’s vision.

From that perspective, the building code is shot full of nanny state rubbish. It dictates things like safe wiring and roofs that don’t fly off in a storm and plumbing that actually works. The governor no doubt believes we can safely trust these kinds of things to profit-maximizing corporations without state inspectors second-guessing their work. (I assume the requirement for inspections also falls to the Axe. There is nothing more nanny-state than inspections.)

But if the government does away with standards, won’t builders cut corners? Yes, of course they will. That is the whole point, because then they can make more money. And making money is the ultimate conservative value, second only to owning the libs.

As for the people who wind up living in unsafe, flimsy firetraps, I expect the administration thinks it’s about time those snowflakes took personal responsibility for the quality of their homes. If they can’t correct hidden defects before a house erupts in flames or grows black mold or the basement floods, that’s on them.

Housing advocates worry the administration might especially target energy efficiency requirements, though Lord knows the board already watered those down plenty, and illegally so. But things can always get worse, and Youngkin seems committed to ensuring they do.

(Indeed, that would make a great tagline for Youngkin’s 25% initiative. “Glenn Youngkin: Making Virginia Government One-Quarter Worse.” Feel free to use it, governor, with my compliments.)

Anyway, excising the energy efficiency section of the housing code could be a retro move to appeal to old folks’ nostalgic yearning for the days when houses were so drafty you could feel a breeze with the windows closed. Maybe you never thought we’d let new homes get built that were like those of my childhood, where the kitchen pipes froze when the temperature plunged unless you put a hot water bottle in the cupboard under the sink and left the faucet dripping.

But here we are. Will the board also remove the bans on lead paint and asbestos insulation?

The building code may be the first place to look for regulations to cut, but reaching his 25% goal will require Youngkin to take the Axe of Freedom to regulations wherever they lurk. And they lurk all over the place. Virginia’s administrative code contains 24 titles.

One colleague suggests simply removing every fourth word from every section of every title, which would have the virtue of wreaking havoc with the entire Deep State bureaucracy at once. And it would keep lawyers busy! Though not everyone would appreciate that feature (and sure enough, my colleague is a lawyer).

Another easy option might be to just remove a quarter of the titles indiscriminately. Chopping off the last 6 of the 24 would eliminate the following:

• Public safety (creating an interesting experiment in anarchy)

• Public utilities and telecommunications (turning the management of these critical functions over to the private sector, but what could go wrong?)

• Securities and retail franchising (as I have only a dim idea of what those are all about, it’s okay by me, but I expect these things have their defenders)

• Social services (this could be dicey when combined with the anarchy thing)

• Taxation (a popular title to jettison, with the added benefit of making the rest of government unworkable) and

• Transportation and motor vehicles (which would either allow everyone to speed to their heart’s content, or mean no one would do road repair; we’d just have to see how that went)

You will object that I’m proposing a totally mindless approach to regulatory reform. On the contrary, I’m just trying to help implement the governor’s regulatory reform agenda using the same level of care and foresight he did.

Let the Axe of Freedom fall!

 

This article was published in the Virginia Mercury on January 25, 2023. Later that day, the Department of Housing and Community Development sent out another letter, this one scheduling an additional meeting for January 31 due to “quorum concerns” surrounding the upcoming January 26 meeting. No explanation was offered as to why board members had chosen to absent themselves.

Saturday News: “U.S. Targets Iran’s Forces and Allies in Syria and Iraq”; “Biden’s [strong] economy keeps messing up Trump’s message”; “Slowpoke federal appeals court puts 2024 election in jeopardy”; “For a such a tall man, Glenn Youngkin is starting to look very small”

22

by Lowell

Here are a few international, national and Virginia news headlines, political and otherwise, for Saturday, February 3.

DLCC: Virginia House Democrats Use New Majority to Pass Legislation to Raise Minimum Wage and Ban Assault Weapons 

3

From the DLCC:

Virginia House Democrats Use New Majority to Pass Legislation to Raise Minimum Wage and Ban Assault Weapons 

WASHINGTON — Today, the progressive agenda of the new Democratic majority in the Virginia House of Delegates was on full display. As we approach one month of the legislative session under the new Democratic majority won in November’s legislative elections, today House Democrats passed legislation to raise the minimum wage to $15 and ban assault weapons. House Democrats advanced these proposals to help working families, strengthen the state’s economy, and protect communities from senseless gun violence.

Today’s action in the House shows that elections have consequences. Under the leadership of newly-elected Virginia House Speaker Don Scott, Democrats are delivering on their promise to fight to help Virginia communities succeed. Their agenda stands in stark contrast to Republicans’ MAGA extremism – including their plan to pass an abortion ban – and illustrates what happens when Democrats lead the state legislature. In November, the DLCC and our partners won majorities in both legislative chambers in Virginia, protecting reproductive rights for millions of Virginians and giving Democrats full legislative control in a key political battleground state.

Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee Communications Director Abhi Rahman issued the following statement:

“Virginia House Democrats are wasting no time in getting to work for Virginia communities by passing legislation to make a real, lasting impact on people’s lives. These Democratic proposals to raise the minimum wage and ban assault weapons are long overdue and show that elections have consequences. Speaker Scott and Virginia Democrats’ agenda is a night and day difference compared to Republicans, who continued to push extreme policies like a dangerous abortion ban. If Democrats were not put in charge, Republicans would have focused on unpopular culture wars that would move Virginia backward. The balance of power in states has a tangible impact on people’s lives – this is the most important level of the ballot.

“The DLCC applauds Democrats in action in Virginia thanks to the monumental victory we earned last year, and we look forward to the Democratic majority continuing to advance Virginians’ fundamental freedoms. 2025 is right around the corner, when we have a critical opportunity to create a Democratic trifecta.”

The Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee (DLCC) is the official Democratic Party committee dedicated to winning America’s state legislatures and building state infrastructure. Over the last decade, we have fought cycle-over-cycle to gain a dozen new legislative chamber majorities and we are leading the effort to bring national attention and investment to our ballot level. State legislatures are the building blocks of our democracy and have the closest connections to Americans’ day-to-day lives. From protecting fundamental freedoms and voting rights to growing the middle class, the DLCC and state legislators are moving the Democratic agenda forward and shaping the future of this country.

Virginia House of Delegates Passes Bill to Raise Minimum Wage to $15 by 2026

4

From the Virginia AFL-CIO:

Virginia House of Delegates Passes Bill to Raise Minimum Wage to $15 by 2026

RICHMOND, Va. – The Virginia AFL-CIO today celebrated the advancement of Delegate Jeion Ward’s bill to raise the state minimum wage as it successfully passed the House floor by a vote of 51-49.

Virginia’s minimum wage has incrementally increased from $7.25 per hour to $12 per hour over the last three years. HB1 builds on the progress started in 2020 by raising the minimum wage to $13.50 by 2025 and $15 per hour by 2026.

“No one who works a full-time job should struggle to make ends meet, but wages have not kept up with inflation,” said Virginia AFL-CIO President Doris Crouse-Mays. “We commend the House of Delegates for standing with workers and passing our union sister Delegate Ward’s legislation. The governor has said he wants to address the cost of living, so he can start by signing this bill and giving Virginia’s minimum wage workers a raise.”

Wason Center poll in 2021 showed that this momentum has broad backing among Virginians. A majority (53%) of Virginians supported raising the minimum wage to $15 per hour. Notably, this issue extends across party lines, with 66% of independents and 61% of moderates in support.

The companion bill, SB1, is patroned by Senator Louise Lucas. It most recently passed out of the Senate Committee on Commerce and Labor and has been referred to Finance and Appropriations.

###

Virginia AFL-CIO is a labor organization that represents over 330,000 union members and their families within the Commonwealth. VA AFL-CIO is a state federation of the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO) working tirelessly to improve the lives of working people.

VA Senate Majority Leader Scott Surovell Walks Us Through “A Day In The Life of Session!”

6

Interesting perspective, from VA Senate Majority Leader Scott Surovell (D), on “A Day In The Life of Session!”

The Biden Economy Keeps Roaring, with 353,000 More Jobs Added in January. As Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-VA11) Says, “I’ll take four more years of this economy please.””

32

Under the leadership of President Joe Biden’s administration, along with the great work of the 2021-2022 Democratic-controlled Congress – and ZERO thanks to Republicans, who have relentlessly obstructed and bad mouthed the economy – this morning we got yet ANOTHER tremendous jobs report, with a “blowout” 353,000 jobs added in January.

Also great news: wage growth has been outpacing inflation (which is totally under control/back to Fed targets at this point); the unemployment rate remains at decades-long lows; manufacturing has come roaring back under the Biden administration; clean energy (and energy in general) production is BOOMING (with the U.S. actually a net EXPORTER of energy!);  the U.S. economy is the strongest IN THE WORLD; etc.  Seriously, if anyone had predicted this back in  2020, in the midst of the COVID pandemic and disastrously botched response by the Trump administration, would anyone have believed it?!? Just amazing – not that the media will ever give Democrats the credit they deserve. Anyway, as Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-VA11) says, “I’ll take four more years of this economcy please.” Seriously, who wouldn’t?!?

Friday News: “Our Economy Isn’t ‘Goldilocks.’ It’s Better.”; “30 Things Joe Biden Did as President That You Might Have Missed”; “What Biden *really* says about Trump behind closed doors”; Kevin McCarthy Seeks Revenge Against Bob Good, etc.

25

by Lowell

Here are a few international, national and Virginia news headlines, political and otherwise, for Friday, February 2.