Reps. Abigail Spanberger and Jennifer Wexton are hoping the electoral change they were part of in the 2018 midterms continues.
Early voting got underway Wednesday in two special elections with long-shot potential to upend Democrats’ narrow control of the state House and Senate — and boost Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s prospects for legislative wins in his final year in office.
Early voting began on Wednesday for two key special elections in Virginia’s General Assembly, with reproductive rights groups urging support for the Democratic nominees. Voters in House District 26 and Senate District 32,
Courtesy Date of Birth / Aug. 24, 1968 Residence / Goochland County, Va. Occupation / Small business owner, SEAL Team PT Inc. Family / Married to wife Tracy
As Rep. Abigail Spanberger prepares to conclude her tenure in Congress, the Virginia Democrat is setting her sights on a new challenge: the 2025 gubernatorial race.
After six years in Congress, Rep. Abigail Spanberger, D-7th, leaves for a different kind of challenge as the presumptive Democratic nominee for governor next year in what looks to be a historic battle with Lt.
Cifers prevailed after 1 a.m. Saturday in the third round of voting at the Goochland Rec Center. The candidates included Louisa Supervisor Duane Adams and former state Sen. Amanda Chase.
Scott’s declaration tossed a bundle of political dynamite into the Democrats’ so far sleepy gubernatorial primary contest.
Luther Cifers, a businessman from Prince Edward County, emerged victorious in the Republican nomination contest for Virginia’s 10th Senate District during a mass meeting at the Goochland Rec Center. The meeting,
How much is the school paying him. Here are the details of the agreement: Hours of secretly recorded videos and phone calls have offered a rare glimpse into how the longest-serving legislative leader in American history operated behind closed doors.
A newly elected West Virginia delegate was jailed Thursday for threatening to kill five Republican colleagues after they expelled him from their party for falsifying his resume.
Sen. Joe Manchin (I-WV) is at it again, giving senators on both sides of the aisle reason to be upset with him.