Virginia
West Virginia could be getting bigger
West Virginia could soon see its borders shift for the first time in more than a century, as lawmakers weigh a proposal that would formally add new territory to the Mountain State.
State Senator Chris Rose said he is introducing a resolution to adopt several counties in neighboring Maryland and Virginia, including Amherst, Bedford, Botetourt, Floyd, Pulaski, and Rockbridge.
“Exciting update on our Appeal to Heaven movement for freedom in Appalachia! Due to overwhelming interest and support, I’m thrilled to announce we’ve expanded our Senate resolution inviting even more Virginia counties, along with counties from Maryland, to join West Virginia,” he wrote on X.
“Now including Amherst, Bedford, Botetourt, Floyd, Pulaski, and Rockbridge, counties that share our values of freedom, Second Amendment rights, and rural prosperity. Let those country roads take you home. Break free from out of touch policies and unite for a stronger future.”
Altogether, the resolution invites 27 Virginia counties to join the state of West Virginia, as well as three Maryland counties.
The initiative originally targeted only a handful of neighboring counties, but Rose says the scope widened after residents from deeper inside Virginia reached out, urging him to add their communities to the plan.
The proposal mirrors growing movements in other states, including California, Illinois and Oregon, for independent or merged states.
In California, organizers of the New California movement want to split the state, they say has become a “totalitarian one-party system” in two and create a new state. In Illinois, organizers of the New Illinois campaign want to do broadly the same thing.
Meanwhile, in Oregon, organizers behind the Greater Idaho campaign say they want to transfer more than a dozen rural Oregon counties into neighboring Idaho, arguing that their communities have little in common with the state’s liberal, urbanized western half.
Rural–Urban Divide Driving the Campaign
The same rural–urban divide underpins the push in West Virginia, where advocates say cultural and political differences have grown too wide to ignore.
A statement published by Senator Rose said the counties were selected based on their “geographic, economic, cultural, and historical connections with West Virginia, including a strong Appalachian heritage, rural lifestyles, and a focus on individual liberties.”
“This resolution is about empowering communities to choose governance that truly reflects their values and needs,” he added. “West Virginia was born from the spirit of self-determination, and we’re extending that invitation to our neighbors who share our way of life. By uniting, we can foster economic growth, better infrastructure, and a stronger voice for Appalachia.”
In an interview with ABC 13, Rose added that the movement is about residents in those counties, which lean Republican, having their voices heard.
“We want our voices to be heard, we want our vote in elections to matter,” he said.
Unlike Maryland, West Virginia is a solidly Republican state. As of August 2025, Republicans outnumber Democrats in registered voters by a significant margin. There are over 170,000 more registered Republicans than Democrats in the state. And the state has voted Republican in every presidential election since 2000.
Nonetheless, campaign organizers say politicians from Democrat leaning areas in the two states have too much influence.
“For too long, rural communities in Western Virginia and Western Maryland have been ruled by distant politicians in Richmond and Annapolis who don’t share our values,” campaign organizers said on their website.
In the 2024 presidential election, the Richmond metro area in Virginia voted decisively for the Democratic ticket. Richmond city itself gave 82 percent of its vote to the Democratic candidate. And Annapolis, Maryland, is strongly Democratic; in the 2025 mayoral election, Democrat Jared Littmann won with 74 percent of the vote.
For campaign organizers, that is a problem. “They restrict your Second Amendment rights, raise your taxes, indoctrinate your children, and funnel your hard-earned dollars into radical green experiments and government waste. Meanwhile, just across the border, West Virginia stands strong—defending freedom, faith, family, and the Constitution,” they said.
A Nearly Impossible Path Ahead
But the hurdle is steep. For any county to shift into West Virginia, lawmakers in each affected state would have to pass authorizing legislation, and Congress would then need to sign off on the boundary change.
For that reason, some lawmakers doubt that the campaign’s aims are realistic. “I wasn’t aware of it and it’s not going to happen,” Virginia Senator Tim Kaine told ABC13.
But Senator Rose is still optimistic. “If that would happen, West Virginia would be more than happy, willing and able to take the counties in and provide the freedom and representation they so much deserve,” he told ABC13.
“I would definitely take the frustration of your constituents seriously, because they feel like they are not being heard in their states,” he added.
Virginia
Congressional hearing in Northern Virginia spotlights impact of deep government cuts – WTOP News
Several Democratic members of the House Oversight Committee held a hearing in Fairfax County, Virginia, on Thursday, taking a broad look at the impact DOGE had on the federal government.
The nation is more than a year removed from the start of President Donald Trump’s second administration, which came to D.C. with the idea of major cuts through the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE.
The result, Democrats claim, is a hollowed out civil service system.
Several Democratic members of the House Oversight Committee held a hearing in Fairfax County, Virginia, on Thursday, taking a broad look at the impact DOGE had on the federal government.
“We know the Trump-Vance administration has taken a wrecking ball to our civil service and decimated the federal workforce,” Rob Shriver, the managing director of civil service and good government initiatives at Democracy Forward, said. “In so doing, it has harmed everyone in America who relies on essential government functions.”
Rep. Robert Garcia, a Democrat representing California’s 42nd District and the ranking member of the committee, said a new report showed how DOGE failed to eliminate waste and its “incompetence” endangered federal workers and Americans as a whole.
The first months of the program, lead by Tesla CEO Elon Musk, saw the dismantling of the United States Agency for International Development, or USAID, the decision to cancel the U.S. media agency Voice of America, the cancellation of thousands of government grants, contracts and programs and the departure of more than 300,000 federal employees and contractors in 2025.
The Trump administration has repeatedly defended DOGE and the changes, arguing they needed and have enhanced “efficiency” within the federal workforce.
But former and current federal employees testifying at the hearing say that’s hardly been the case. They point to figures from the Brookings Institute and others that show there are roughly three million federal employees today, and that is about the same size as it was 60 years ago, but the nation’s population has soared by more 100 million. They say they were already doing excellent work and at a high level of efficiency.
On its website, DOGE claims to have saved taxpayers upward of $200 billion initially. But some experts have pushed back, suggesting the savings are closer to between $1 billion and $7 billion, which is far lower than the $2 trillion Elon Musk said in 2025 that DOGE would save American taxpayers.
Rep. James Walkinshaw, a Democrat representing Virginia’s 11th District, said the cuts hit several critical agencies deeply.
“This administration has hollowed out the cybersecurity agency through RIFs (Reductions in Force) and politically driven reassignments, weakened NOAA by indiscriminately firing staff critical to public safety, and undermined our national security by dismantling USAID,” he said, noting the high number of federal workers who live in his district.
Many Republicans have defended DOGE saying government had grown too large, was bloated and was trying to do many missions the states should undertake.
But former GOP Rep. Barbara Comstock, who has become a vocal Trump Administration critic said the White House behavior and treatment of civil servants has been “egregious.”
“I apologize to you, as a Republican, for what has happened over the last year because it’s been so egregious and so traumatic,” Comstock said. “It’s the only promise kept by this administration.”
The more than two hour hearing included testimony from former federal employees, watchdog groups and others who described what they said were illegal activities, including the firing of the Inspector Generals and the disorganized way the job cuts were performed by DOGE.
Doreen Greenwald, the President of the National Treasury Employees Union testified how tens of thousand of federal employees who want to leave the government have been unable to get their retirements finalized and the process is taking three to four times as it normally does.
“Federal retirees are stuck in limbo as agencies slow walk their retirements, and once those make it to OPM (U.S. Office of Personnel Management), they are waiting six to nine months for their first annuity payment.”
But there was a small sliver of optimism among the speakers. They said Elon Musk is no longer in government and DOGE was officially disbanded in November 2025, instead of the summer of 2026.
Faith Williams, the director of the Effective and Accountable Government Program, Project on Government Oversight (POGO) said her group and others will be there to help rebuild what they say are the depleted government ranks.
“POGO has several solutions Congress can implement to restore the merit based civil service, strengthen whistleblower protections, protect inspectors general and other watchdogs, combat corruption, abuse of power and strengthen congressional oversight,” she said.
Rep. Glenn Ivey, who represents Maryland’s 4th District, a suburban area in Prince George’s County that is home to thousands of federal workers, said he believes there is a place in government for many of the employees who were let go.
“We’ve got cases that run the gamut of people in the government who’d been doing great work, who’ve been forced out. We’ve got to make sure we find ways to get them back so they can pick up where they left off,” Ivey said.
Ivey pointed to the hundreds, if not thousands of employees who were dismissed, only to be rehired weeks and months later, when government officials determined their positions were essential.
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Virginia
Two Southwest Virginia families seek help rebuilding after home fires
Continuing coverage Thursday night on the recent fires across Southwest Virginia.
2 families are now picking up the pieces after losing their homes and the memories inside them.
Glade Spring homeowner, Billy Cannon’s home went up in flames around 3 a-m last Thursday.
Billy said it started with something you wouldn’t expect a motor inside their refrigerator.
Now, the family is trying to move forward after losing so much.
Your house is more than just a house. It’s all of the memories from decades and decades of a gatherings. The Cannons have a lot of history here and I think that is what hurts the most, said Billy Cannon’s niece, Tanika Gilbert.
Billy Cannon’s family has owned his home for generations and last Thursday, it went up in flames. His girlfriend Debby first saw the fire around 3 a-m.
At first, she thought she was dreaming, until she realized the kitchen was on fire, said Tanika.
3 fire departments, Glade Spring, Damascus, and Meadowview responded and fought the flames for nearly 5 hours.
In a separate fire this past Sunday in Dickenson County, Ronnie Mccowan, 72, lost the home he had lived in for 60 years. Ronnie’s son Raymond said it was his childhood home, filled with a lifetime of memories.
I can only imagine on his end when I look at it, and you know all the memories that were there, so I can only imagine what he feels, said Ronnie’s son, Raymond Mccowan.
A local woman, Millie Brown is the Founder of nonprofit God’s Second Chance. She has been collecting donations for both families, driving around picking up essential items and delivering them directly.
Their homes is just a shell right now nothing inside of it, said Founder of nonprofit God’s Second Chance, Millie Brown.
Both families told News Five’s Natalea Hillen they are grateful for the community support.
I thank everybody in the community, said Glade Spring fire victim, Billy Cannon.
But still need help as they begin to rebuild.
As of right now, we don’t have nearly enough to be able to stick build even a smaller home, so we’re just continue to ask for the community support, said Tanika.
The biggest thing is any kind of donations you know, it doesn’t have to be in money, said Raymond Mccowan.
If you’d like to donate to help the Cannon Family, click here.
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Virginia
What would a proposed redistricting bill mean for Virginia’s voting districts?
Change could be coming to Virginia’s voting districts.
Governor Abigail Spanberger recently signed a bill that would allow voters to decide on a proposed Constitutional amendment that would give the Virginia General Assembly the power to redraw state congressional maps.
This comes on the heels of other states such as Texas and California making similar decisions when it comes to their district maps.
This has been defined as “partisan gerrymandering,” and it comes on the heels of other states like Texas and California making similar redistricting efforts.
Out of the 11 districts within Virginia, Democrats hold six of those districts. Should voters approve the amendment and it gets signed into law, Democrats could control up to ten of those districts.
“So it draws one district in Southwest Virginia, which is extremely heavily Republican, and then draws eight seats that are pretty heavily Democratic, and then two competitive seats that I think would favor the Democrats, especially in a year like 2026,” Virginia Tech Associate Professor of Political Science Nicholas Goedert said.
Re-drawn districts could also lead to some districts that would normally lean Republican shift into a district that leans more Democrat.
A special election will be held on April 21 to decide this.
Copyright 2026 by WSLS 10 – All rights reserved.
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