Connect with us

Virginia

Senate panel blocks GOP voting limits, advances ballot reforms • Virginia Mercury

Published

on

Senate panel blocks GOP voting limits, advances ballot reforms • Virginia Mercury


The Democratic-controlled Senate Privileges and Elections Committee on Tuesday afternoon struck down several Republican-backed bills aimed at restricting voting access, while advancing measures to expand ballot accessibility, including a local option for ranked choice voting.

Defeated proposals included stricter photo ID requirements, a shorter early voting period, and tighter voter registration verification rules. Despite the partisan divide, the committee unanimously approved a bipartisan bill to shorten the voter registration closure period, signaling rare cooperation in an otherwise contentious debate over election laws.

By an 8-7 party-line vote, the panel killed a Republican proposal to reinstate stricter photo ID requirements for voters. Senate Bill 1070, sponsored by Sen. Mark Peake, R-Lynchburg, would have required voters to present a photo ID at the polls, ending the current option to sign a statement affirming identity under penalty of perjury.

Peake defended the measure, saying photo ID laws previously worked well in Virginia and enjoyed broad public support. “Eighty percent of the population supports photo ID, and I’m just trying to help bring the commonwealth into agreement with that 80%,” he said.

Advertisement

A national Gallup poll from October found that 84% of Americans favored a photo ID requirement for voting. 

Supporters, like Melody Clarke of Virginia Institute Action, argued that voter ID laws increase trust in elections and boost minority participation. Opponents, including Chris DeRosa of the Virginia League of Women Voters, countered that the bill would turn away legitimate voters without improving election security.

By another 8-7 party-line vote, the committee defeated another Peake proposal to reduce the early voting period for primary elections from 45 days to 14 days. SB 1072, merged with an identical bill from Sen. Timmy French, R-Shenandoah, aimed to streamline election operations and reduce costs associated with maintaining lengthy early voting periods, according to Peake.

Sen. Mark Peake, R-Lynchburg, sponsored a slate of measures aimed at limiting access to voting which Democrats defeated. (Photo by Nathaniel Cline/Virginia Mercury)

Peake argued the change is necessary to address overburdened registrars and underutilized resources during early voting. 

“Fourteen days is more than enough for primaries,” he said. “Registrars are horribly overworked, and people are not showing up in these primaries, even the presidential ones.” French added that the current 45-day period was costly for localities in his district, stating, “It’s costing about $150,000 a year in my district alone — money that could go to schools.”

Advertisement

Supporters of the bill, including Clarke of Virginia Institute Action, highlighted the financial and personal toll of extended early voting. “These very extended elections cost a lot of money, and it’s not just money. Grandmothers who work in registrar’s offices don’t get to spend time with their grandkids because of 45 days of early voting,” Clarke said.

Opponents, however, warned the proposal would reduce voter access and create barriers for those with limited availability. 

Kristin Szakos, an election worker from Charlottesville, said the longer early voting window reduces Election Day congestion and helps prevent errors. 

Gaylene Kanoyton of the Virginia NAACP emphasized the importance of prioritizing voter access over cost savings. “Once you start cutting back on voting rights and cutting back on access, it’s going to keep cutting, and we’re not going for it at all,” she said.

Committee members also debated the bill’s potential impact. 

Advertisement

Sen. Bill DeSteph, R-Virginia Beach, supported the proposal, citing weeks of low voter turnout in smaller jurisdictions. “The last two weeks or 14 days is very reasonable,” he said. 

But Sen. Schuyler VanValkenburg, D-Henrico, opposed the measure, arguing that elections should focus on voters’ needs, not registrars. “It’s not ‘We the registrars of the United States.’ It’s ‘We the People,’” he said.

In closing, Peake called the current 45-day period excessive and costly. “135 days of early voting out of 365 is absurd,” he said. Despite his arguments, Democrats on the panel ultimately rejected the proposal.

The panel further voted to defeat SB 1073, another Peake proposal which proposed verifying voter registration information — such as Social Security numbers — against federal or state databases before finalizing registration.

Peake argued the bill would bolster election security and prevent fraud. 

Advertisement

“We could make sure that our elections would be foolproof, and that way when somebody lost, as a sore loser, they can’t go around saying, ‘Oh, I think some illegal person voted in the election and cost me the election,’” Peake said. He called the requirement “very easy” and emphasized it would apply only to new registrations.

Supporters like Clarke of Virginia Institute Action called the bill “common sense,” adding, “It’s unfortunate that we have so many measures that would help all Virginians, including your constituents, of the individuals who are voting against these measures.”

Critics argued the measure would create barriers for voters and overburden local election offices. “This requirement would impose undue and costly burdens on local offices of voter registration and likely lead to the denial of the right to vote to qualified residents,” Szakos, the election worker from Charlottesville, said.

Democrats on the committee ultimately defeated the proposal, citing concerns about restricting voter access.

But they advanced a bill that would allow localities to use ranked choice voting for local offices, such as mayoral and school board elections. SB 1009, sponsored by Sen. Saddam Azlan Salim, D-Fairfax, passed on an 8-7 party-line vote.

Advertisement

Ranked choice voting enables voters to rank candidates in order of preference, redistributing votes until a candidate secures a majority. 

Sen. Saddam Azlan Salim, D-Fairfax County, introduced a measure that would allow localities to use ranked choice voting for local offices. (Photo by Charlie Paullin/Virginia Mercury)

Salim’s legislation directs the State Board of Elections to establish standards, approve compatible vote tabulation software, and create educational materials to inform voters about the system. It also requires the Department of Elections to review the state’s voting equipment testing process and submit a report by 2026.

“This bill provides localities the flexibility to include mayoral and school board races in their adoption of ranked choice voting,” Salim said. “It clarifies and continues the concept, allowing every jurisdiction to choose how to make every vote count in a way that fits their community.”

Supporters highlighted the benefits of ranked choice voting in crowded local races. Sean Crow of UpVote Virginia noted examples of races where localities could improve outcomes, such as Arlington’s sheriff races, Loudoun County’s school board contests, and mayoral elections in Newport News and Richmond. 

“All of these are local races with crowded fields, and all of these are races which are currently not covered under the ranked choice voting local option,” Crow said.

Fatima Moaihead of the Humanization Project emphasized how ranked choice voting could amplify underrepresented voices. “This bill provides each community the opportunity to choose how to best get voters’ voices heard for all local offices, not just some,” she said.

Advertisement

However, opponents argued that it complicates voting and could discourage turnout. 

Clarke of Virginia Institute Action expressed concerns about its impact on elections. “We are opposed to ranked choice voting because the ballots are more complex than the traditional one person, one vote,” she said, adding that turnout tends to drop in districts adopting RCV.

The proposal, seen by supporters as a step toward modernizing Virginia’s election practices, now heads to the full Senate for consideration.

In a rare display of bipartisan support, the committee unanimously advanced a proposal to reduce the period when voter registration records are closed before elections. SB 991, sponsored by Sen. Angelia Williams Graves, D-Norfolk, aims to align voter registration deadlines more closely with absentee ballot requests, giving Virginians more time to register ahead of elections.

“What this does is just bring all of those dates in line to the same date,” Williams Graves explained. “The last day to register to vote and the last day to request an absentee ballot are now 10 days prior to election day. This bill came from the registrars.”

Advertisement

Under the proposed change, the closure period for voter registration would decrease from 21 days to 10 days for primary and general elections. For most special elections, the period would shrink from 13 days to 10 days. 

Supporters say the adjustment would improve accessibility, particularly for voters who register closer to Election Day.

David Bailey of the Voter Registrar Association voiced support for the measure, noting that it could ease administrative burdens. 

“When you cut off at 21 days, certainly you could have more people that happen to go provisionally or have to come back later,” Bailey said. “If you allow the registration to go ahead and take place up until 10 days, it should shorten some of the work.”

If enacted, the bill could simplify voter registration timelines and encourage greater participation, while also helping election officials better accommodate last-minute registrants. 

Advertisement

YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE.

 

Advertisement



Source link

Virginia

Democrats see historic gains in Virginia’s House of Delegates races

Published

on

Democrats see historic gains in Virginia’s House of Delegates races


By 10 p.m. on election night, just three hours after polls closed, Democrats had flipped nearly one dozen seats from Republican incumbents.

Want more election coverage?

Cardinal covered races across Southwest and Southside. For more election stories, click here.

By 11:30 p.m., they had picked up two more. 

Advertisement

The party picked up seats from the city of Roanoke to Petersburg to Spotsylvania County and Northern Virginia and others, after they knocked out incumbents in 13 districts. 

House of Delegates District 41 was among those that flipped from red to blue. Democratic challenger Lily Franklin had a 2.46 percentage point lead over incumbent Republican Del. Chris Obenshain, of Montgomery County, by 10:45 p.m.

This year’s race for the 41st District was a rematch between Obenshain and Franklin after the latter lost by 183 votes in 2023 once provisional ballots were counted. That race was not called until nearly one week after Election Day. 

“Lily Franklin ran a spirited campaign. She earned a lot of votes, and she has earned my respect,” Obenshain said in his concession statement. “Tonight was a setback not just for me, but also for the causes I have championed and the people I have sought to represent. Ultimately though, the voters have the final word and while this result is disappointing, I respect their decision tonight.”

Advertisement

In a statement released Tuesday evening, Franklin said, “I’m deeply honored by the trust the people of the 41st District have placed in me. Folks are ready for new leadership.”

“Virginians turned out in force to support candidates who embody the very best of who we are – champions of fairness and truth over the forces of bigotry and deceit,” state Sen. Lamont Bagby, chair of the Democratic Party of Virginia, said in a statement. 

Governor-elect Abigail Spanberger will enter office with a trifecta, with the governor’s seat, the state Senate and House of Delegates all under the same party. She will be the first Democratic governor to do so in nearly 40 years, according to the Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee.

“Democrats, we’re back,” said House of Delegates Speaker Don Scott during a speech in Richmond on election night. “Tonight we shocked the world.”

The Portsmouth Democrat added that Virginia sent a message of love and unity over hate and division to the country. 

Advertisement

“We just made history tonight. … Not only did we keep the majority in the House tonight, I think we’re at 57 seats. And we’re not done counting,” he said just before 10 p.m. on election night.

Here’s how the rest of Virginia’s Southwest and Southside House of Delegates races shook out

The political makeup of Southwest and Southside Virginia remained largely unchanged. 

Most incumbents held onto their seats, and new Republican candidates for open seats in districts 46 and 49 won their elections: Mitchell Cornett won Del. Jed Arnold’s seat, and Madison Whittle won Del. Danny Marshall’s seat. Arnold, of Smyth County, did not seek reelection, citing his wife’s health concerns. Marshall, of Danville, declined to seek reelection to undergo lung transplant surgery. He is currently recovering from that surgery. 

District 35 winner: incumbent Republican Del. Chris Runion, Rockingham County

District 36 winner: incumbent Republican Del. Ellen Campbell, Waynesboro

Advertisement

District 37 winner: incumbent Republican Del. Terry Austin, Botetourt County 

District 38 winner: incumbent Democratic Del. Sam Rasoul, Roanoke

District 39 winner: incumbent Republican Del. Will Davis, Franklin County

District 40 winner: incumbent Republican Del. Joe McNamara, Roanoke County

District 41 winner: Democratic challenger Lily Franklin (seat flipped)

Advertisement

District 42 winner: incumbent Republican Del. Jason Ballard, Giles County

District 43 winner: incumbent Republican Del. Will Morefield, Tazewell County 

District 44 winner: incumbent Republican Del. Israel O’Quinn, Washington County

District 45 winner: incumbent Republican Del. Terry Kilgore, Scott County 

District 46 winner: Republican Mitchell D. Cornett

Advertisement

District 47 winner: incumbent Republican Del. Wren Williams, Patrick County

District 48 winner: incumbent Republican Del. Eric Phillips, Henry County 

District 49 winner: Republican Madison Whittle

District 50 winner: incumbent Republican Del. Tommy Wright, Lunenburg County

District 51 winner: incumbent Republican Del. Eric Zehr, Campbell County

Advertisement

District 52 winner: incumbent Republican Del. Wendell Walker, Lynchburg 

District 53 winner: incumbent Republican Del. Tim Griffin, Bedford County

District 56 winner: incumbent Republican Del. Tom Garrett, Louisa County

Advertisement





Source link

Continue Reading

Virginia

Final polls predict winners of New York, New Jersey, Virginia elections

Published

on

Final polls predict winners of New York, New Jersey, Virginia elections


Newsweek has rounded up what the latest polls are saying about the elections in New York, New Jersey and Virginia as Americans cast their votes.

Why It Matters

The 2025 races in the three states are drawing national attention as voters prepare to select leaders in three high-profile contests.

The results could set the tone for the 2026 midterms and provide insight into shifting political dynamics on the East Coast. The outcomes will also serve as a measure of support for the Democratic and Republican parties.

What To Know

New York City Mayor’s Race

Democrat Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani is favored to win the mayoral contest against former Governor Andrew Cuomo, running as an independent, and Republican Curtis Sliwa.

Advertisement

According to the latest Marist Poll (conducted October 24-28), Mamdani leads Cuomo by 16 points among likely voters, 48 percent to 32 percent, with Sliwa at 16 percent. The poll sampled 792 likely voters and has a margin of error of =/-4.2 percent.

A separate AtlasIntel poll places Mamdani’s lead at 4.5 points over Cuomo (43.9 percent to Cuomo’s 39.4 percent). Some 2,404 people were surveyed between October 31 and November 2. The poll has a margin of error of =/- 2 percentage points.

In a Fox News poll, Mamdani has a 16-point lead with 47 percent on Cuomo (31 percent). These results are based on 971 likely voters questioned between October 24 and October 28—there is a margin of error of +/- 3 percentage points.

New Jersey Governor’s Race

The New Jersey gubernatorial race between Democrat Mikie Sherrill and Republican Jack Ciattarelli is one of the closest in recent history.

The latest AtlasIntel poll (October 25-30; 1,639 likely voters, =/-2 percent margin) gives Sherrill a narrow edge, 50.2 percent to 49.3 percent.

Advertisement

Meanwhile, a John Zogby Strategies poll, carried out among 1,205 people between October 31 and November 3, places Sherrill ahead (55 percent) of Ciattarelli (43.4 percent). There is a +/- 2.9 percentage point margin of error.

Research Co. also has Sherrill in the lead with 3 points more than Ciattarelli (52 percent to 48 percent) among 450 likely voters questioned between November 2 and 3—there is a =/- 4.5 percentage point margin of error.

Virginia Governor’s Race

Democratic incumbent Abigail Spanberger appears favored over Republican Winsome Earle-Sears.

Trafalgar Group has given her a 5.6 percentage point lead over Earle-Sears (49.8 percent to 43.3 percent). Meanwhile, the latest Insider Advantage survey of 800 likely voters (questioned between November 2 and 3) has Spanberger at 50 percent and Earle-Sears at 40 percent. There is a +/- 3.46 percentage point margin of error.

Research Co.’s poll (November 2 and 3 among 450 likely voters) shows Spanberger with a lead of 54 percent over Winsome Earle-Sears’s 46 percent. There is a =/- 4.6 percent margin of error.

Advertisement

What People Are Saying

Statistician Nate Silver, founder of FiveThirtyEight (538), said about the race in New Jersey: “A close race could just come down to Sherrill being part of an unpopular two-time incumbent party. That’s why it’s going to be hard to infer much from this election, either about the state of New Jersey or the broader political environment.”

Democratic candidate Zohran Mamdani, outside New York City Hall on Monday: “I continue to be confident about our chances heading into Election Day tomorrow. But I will not allow myself or let this movement to become complacent.”

What Happens Next

Polling places in New York, New Jersey and Virginia are open for in-person voting, with initial results expected to emerge after polls close Tuesday evening.

High mail-in and early voting rates add potential uncertainty—final outcomes may not be clear until late Tuesday or Wednesday.



Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Virginia

Virginia is about to make history! Earle-Sears, Spanberger make final push as Election Day approaches.

Published

on

Virginia is about to make history! Earle-Sears, Spanberger make final push as Election Day approaches.


RICHMOND, Va. — Republican Lieutenant Governor Winsome Earle-Sears and Democrat Abigail Spanberger made their final appeals to Virginia voters across the Commonwealth on Monday, as each hopes to make history as the state’s first female governor.

Earle-Sears began her day at Shorty’s Diner in Henrico County, flipping pancakes and serving coffee alongside the Republican statewide ticket and Governor Glenn Youngkin.

“We’re going to keep it moving. Our Governor has begun it. We’re going to finish it,” Earle-Sears told supporters gathered at the restaurant. “Do you like what we’ve been doing in Virginia? Well, Abigail Spanberger was never a part of it. She hasn’t been a part of creating any of these jobs, she hasn’t been a part of helping Virginia to remain safe and secure.”

WTVR

Advertisement

Shakile Ali, an Earle-Sears supporter, said he backs her positions on school choice and policies regarding transgender students in sports and bathrooms.

What Virginia voters are telling CBS 6 about the Virginia economy and their vote

“I believe that the love of her country, the love of Virginia is what makes me support her the most. From her guidance, her family values, the Christian values make me support her,” Ali said.

Advertisement

Just blocks away on West Broad Street, Spanberger’s campaign bus arrived at a field office to energize volunteers before a day of door-knocking.

“We are giving people not just hope, but a plan and a path towards utilizing that hope,” Spanberger said. “Virginians, tomorrow, will make clear that we want a governor who’s focused on lowering costs, strengthening our communities, strengthening our public schools and growing our economy despite all the challenges we see coming out of D.C.”

Spanberger Nov. 2025

WTVR

Patty Heidelmark, who has volunteered for Spanberger since 2018, said she supports the candidate’s positions on public education, women’s rights, and healthcare.

“I’m a Type 1 diabetic. I’m on a pump. Insulin saves my life. She has supported healthcare and the need for healthcare for people. Especially people of my age, who are in our 60s,” Heidelmark said.

Advertisement

A recent Emerson College Polling/The Hill survey showed Spanberger leading Earle-Sears by double digits in the historic race.

What’s on the mind of Virginia voters in Chesterfield?

More than 1.4 million Virginia voters have already cast ballots during the early voting period, which has now closed. Polls will open at 6 a.m. on Election Day and remain open until 7 p.m.

Advertisement

CBS 6 is committed to sharing community voices on this important topic. Email your thoughts to the CBS 6 Newsroom.

📲: CONNECT WITH US

Blue Sky | Facebook | Instagram | X | Threads | TikTok | YouTube

This story was initially reported by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. Our editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy. To learn more about how we use AI in our newsroom, click here.





Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending