Virginia Political Newsletter

Virginia Political Newsletter

Share this post

Virginia Political Newsletter
Virginia Political Newsletter
House leaders from both parties are stumping in Virginia

House leaders from both parties are stumping in Virginia

A Richmond organization pulled their endorsement from a City Council candidate who is facing accusations of lying about several aspects of his campaign.

Brandon Jarvis's avatar
Brandon Jarvis
Oct 28, 2024
∙ Paid
1

Share this post

Virginia Political Newsletter
Virginia Political Newsletter
House leaders from both parties are stumping in Virginia
1
Share

This is the Virginia Scope 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 reach out to me directly at Brandon@virginiascope.com.


The rundown

  • Former state Sen. Frank Ruff passed away.

  • The Speaker of the House is coming to VA-07 to help Anderson in the final days of the election.

  • House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries stumped for a Virginia Democrat Sunday.

  • A Richmond organization pulled their endorsement from a City Council candidate who is facing accusations of lying about several aspects of his campaign.

  • Rep. Kiggans released a new ad.


Today’s Sponsor: Virginia Election Protection

Virginia's largest nonpartisan voter protection effort, Virginia Election Protection, is working on the front lines of fighting voter suppression this year. If you have a voting question or experience an issue when voting, you can call the national, nonpartisan Election Protection Hotline, 866-OUR-VOTE, for help. Learn more about Virgnia Election Protection, powered by the Virginia Civic Engagement Table, at ProtectTheVoteVA.org. 


Former state Sen. Frank Ruff has passed away

Former Republican state Senator Frank Ruff passed away after a battle with cancer.

Ruff served in the state Senate from 2000 until he announced his retirement in December. Prior to that, he served three terms in the House of Delegates.

“Virginia has lost a legend of public service whose legacy will be felt across the Commonwealth not for years—but generations to come,” Gov. Glenn Youngkin said in a statement. “Senator Frank Ruff has always believed that his public service was about finding good policy solutions to improve the lives of Virginians in rural communities.”

Share


A new ad from the Kiggans campaign

This post is for paid subscribers

Already a paid subscriber? Sign in
© 2025 Brandon Jarvis
Privacy ∙ Terms ∙ Collection notice
Start writingGet the app
Substack is the home for great culture

Share