Virginia Political Newsletter

Virginia Political Newsletter

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Virginia Political Newsletter
Virginia Political Newsletter
A Richmond City Councilor is rumored to be planning a run for the House of Delegates

A Richmond City Councilor is rumored to be planning a run for the House of Delegates

Also: Will abortion access help Democrats in November? I asked a political expert.

Brandon Jarvis's avatar
Brandon Jarvis
Oct 26, 2022
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Virginia Political Newsletter
Virginia Political Newsletter
A Richmond City Councilor is rumored to be planning a run for the House of Delegates
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This is a daily newsletter covering Virginia politics from top to bottom. Please consider becoming the ultimate political insider by supporting non-partisan, independent news and becoming a paid subscriber to this newsletter today.

Have a tip? You can reply to this email, or email me directly at Brandon@virginiascope.com


The rundown

  • Rumor Mill: Sources say a Richmond City Councilwoman is planning a run for the House of Delegates. This could set up a competitive primary against a candidate who announced earlier this year.

  • Could abortion impact base turnout in red and blue states in a surprising way? A political scientist provides analysis on how abortion could impact turnout for midterm elections.

  • Cook Political Report changed the rating for two Virginia congressional races.

  • Luria and Kiggans’ campaigns respond to the debate with statements attacking each other.


    Today’s Sponsor: Meet Our Moment

    Meet Our Moment is an effort spearheaded by former Delegate Jay Jones to recruit and train minority and female Democratic candidates to run for and win state and local offices across the Commonwealth. To date, Meet Our Moment has trained 25 Virginians from every region of Virginia, and six alumni are now running for office in 2022 and 2023. The programming is entirely free to participants.

    Apply for the December 3rd training session in Northern Virginia here. Applications will be accepted through October 31st.


Cook shifts VA-07 and VA-10 to the right

Cook Political Report shifted Virginia’s seventh congressional district from “Lean-Democratic” to a “Toss-Up.” Rep. Abigail Spanberger (D) is currently seeking reelection to the House in this newly drawn district. Prince William Supervisor Yesli Vega (R) is looking to unseat her.

In the grand scheme, these ratings don’t actually matter — but they are a reflection of what prognosticators, who are not always correct, believe will happen in one of the tightest congressional races in the country.

They also shifted VA-10 from “Solid Democratic” to “Likely Democratic.”

Vega responded to the news on Tuesday by calling it “Huge News.”

Twitter avatar for @yestoyesli
Yesli Vega @yestoyesli
🚨HUGE NEWS🚨 As Abigail is spiraling in the last 2 weeks of this election, #VA07 is a TOSS-UP. Find your polling location below and get out and vote early! yeslivega.com/vote/ Help us finish strong, please chip in whatever you can here: secure.winred.com/yesli-vega/don… https://t.co/GJfvmQ9Ooo
Twitter avatar for @Redistrict
Dave Wasserman @Redistrict
NEW @CookPolitical: 10 House rating changes this week, including four Dem incumbents from Lean D to Toss Up and two - #AKAL Mary Peltola (D) and #KS03 Sharice Davids (D) - from Toss Up to Lean D. Full analysis: https://t.co/QxOmHybgEl https://t.co/tFYim1sNT6
8:07 PM ∙ Oct 25, 2022
97Likes31Retweets

Could abortion impact base turnout in red and blue states in a surprising way?

Could Democrats in blue states be in trouble due to the lowered risk to voters on abortion rights? Could the same issue arise for Republicans in red states? Cook Political Report pointed out the discrepancies in Biden-won districts and how Democratic candidates are running behind him now in blue states and ahead of him in red states.

In Virginia, where Biden won Virginia by 10 points just 12 months prior to a Republican governor winning here for the first time since 2009, it is difficult to say what this will mean; or if abortion access will have any impact on the congressional elections.

A Republican governor and House of Delegates have stated that they intend to try and enact a 15-week ban on abortion, which would drastically reduce access in the Commonwealth. Currently, you can receive an abortion up to the 26-week and 6-day mark. The Democratic-controlled state Senate is the only obstacle to Republicans enacting this 15-week ban.

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