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Tag: election 2025

  • Northern Virginia accounts for 88% of Spanberger’s victory margin – WTOP News

    Democrat Abigail Spanberger speaks on stage after she was declared the winner of the Virginia governor’s race during an election…

    This article was republished with permission from WTOP’s news partner InsideNoVa.com. Sign up for InsideNoVa.com’s free email subscription today.

    Democrat Abigail Spanberger speaks on stage after she was declared the winner of the Virginia governor’s race during an election night watch party Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2025, in Richmond, Va. (AP Photo/Stephanie Scarbrough)(AP/Stephanie Scarbrough)

    Northern Virginia accounted for about 88% of Gov.-elect Abigail Spanberger’s victory margin on Tuesday, according to preliminary election results analyzed by InsideNoVa.

    In the region’s four counties and five cities, Spanberger, the Democrat, won 72.3% of the total vote to just 27.4% for her Republican opponent, Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears.

    Across the rest of Virginia, the margin was much tighter, with Spanberger winning 51.2% to 48.7% for Earle-Sears. Spanberger wound up winning with 57.1% of the total vote statewide as she ran up the largest margin in a gubernatorial election since 2009.

    InsideNoVa’s analysis is based on results from the Virginia Department of Elections as of midday Wednesday and does not include provisional ballots or late-arriving mail ballots, which will be counted and reported later this week.

    Spanberger’s margin across the region also far outpaced that of Democratic candidate Terry McAuliffe in the 2021 election, which McAuliffe wound up losing to Republican Glenn Youngkin. In that race, McAuliffe won 63.7% of the Northern Virginia vote to 35.6% for Youngkin. He won the region by about 265,000 votes, but lost to Youngkin by 64,000 statewide.

    This year, Spanberger won the region by about 426,000 votes, only about 60,000 votes less than her statewide margin of 486,000.

    Total votes cast in the region were about 950,000, about 8,000 more than were cast in 2021. The 2025 number will increase as the provisional and late-arriving ballots are tallied.

    Statewide, 3.36 million votes were cast this year, an increase of about 72,000 from 2021.

    In last year’s presidential election, Democrat Kamala Harris won the region with 64.2% of the vote. About 1.25 million votes were cast regionwide. Harris trailed President Donald Trump across the rest of the state but still won the statewide vote by about 5 percentage points, a margin that Spanberger tripled on Tuesday.

    In Northern Virginia, Spanberger’s biggest margins were in the largest localities, and her margin increased by at least 24% in every locality, compared with McAuliffe’s margins in 2021. The biggest percentage increase was in Manassas, which Spanberger won by 3,502 votes, compared with a margin for McAuliffe of only 1,105 in 2021.

    Spanberger’s margin increases in the other Northern Virginia localities were as follows:

    • Alexandria, up 35.5%, or about 12,000 votes
    • Arlington, up 24.6%, or 13,000 votes
    • Fairfax County, up 53%, or 70,000 votes
    • Fairfax City, up 60%, or 1,600 votes
    • Falls Church, up 35.5%, or 1,400 votes
    • Loudoun County, up 163.8%, or 30,000 votes
    • Manassas Park, up 109.5%, or 850 votes
    • Prince William County, up 139.3%, or 32,000 votes

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  • Spanberger win leads Democratic sweep of statewide races in Virginia – WTOP News

    Election Day has brought two major victories for Democrats in Virginia’s statewide races.

    Stay with WTOP on air, online and on our news app for team coverage, live results and analyses of election night in Virginia. Listen live.

    Abigail Spanberger has won a historic election to become Virginia’s first female governor and led a Democratic sweep of statewide races in an pivotal election ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.

    Down ballot, Democrat Jay Jones won the attorney general race and Democratic state Sen. Ghazala Hashmi won the lieutenant governor race.

    The candidates’ wins dashed Republican hopes of maintaining power in all three top offices, currently led by Gov. Glenn Youngkin alongside Attorney General Jason Miyares and Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears, who both lost their campaigns.


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    Spanberger, a former congresswoman, won 57.5% of the vote and Earle-Sears fell behind with 42.3%, according to The Associated Press with 97% of votes counted as of 12:50 a.m.

    In the lieutenant governor race, Hashmi walked away with 55.6% of the vote, while Republican radio host John Reid fell behind with 44.1%, The Associated Press reported at 12:55 a.m. with 97% of votes counted. Hashmi will succeed Earle-Sears as the new lieutenant governor.

    Jones’ victory squashed Miyares’ bid for a second term as Virginia’s top prosecutor.

    The Democratic challenger prevailed over the incumbent despite controversy surrounding resurfaced text messages referencing political violence. Jones pulled ahead winning 53.1% of the vote while Miyares earned 46.5%, The Associated Press reported at 12:55 a.m. with 97% of votes counted.

    The results also mark a major victory for Democrats in an election that both parties have viewed as a bellwether for the midterm elections in 2026.

    Virginia’s election is also treated by analysts as a measure of voter attitudes amid a lengthy government shutdown during President Donald Trump’s second term in office.

    Outside the statewide races, all 100 seats in Virginia’s House of Delegates were up for grabs Tuesday. Democrats are projected to maintain their majority in the lower chamber.

    A moderate approach wins a high-stakes governor’s race

    The governor’s race was called in favor of Spanberger about one hour after polls closed.

    Spanberger delivered a victory speech in Richmond on Tuesday night, touching on topics such as education, abortion rights and the federal workforce.

    “We sent a message to every corner of the commonwealth, a message to our neighbors and our fellow Americans across the country,” Spanberger told a crowd of supporters. “We sent a message to the whole world that in 2025, Virginia chose pragmatism over partisanship. We chose our commonwealth over chaos.”

    Supporters at the celebration in the state’s capital shared their excitement with WTOP’s Scott Gelman.

    “This is history, the first woman governor in Virginia, and the right person to do the job,” said Monica Lucus, of Richmond. “I think it’s time for a change, and this is a burst of energy that the country needs, not just Virginia but the country.”

    After losing the governor’s race, Earle-Sears said she left a voicemail for Spanberger to wish her success.

    “I asked her to support policies that will unite us, that will not divide us, that will strengthen our families and keep us safe, and that if I can ever be of help doing that, I’m here,” Earle-Sears said at her campaign headquarters in Stafford County.

    Surveys showed Spanberger carried a commanding lead over Earle-Sears in the weeks leading up to Election Day.

    Spanberger had also far outraised her Republican opponent, bringing in more than $65 million compared to Earle-Sears’ $35 million, according to recent campaign finance reports shared by the Virginia Public Access Project.

    Though the election guaranteed to name the state’s first woman as governor, neither candidate made the race’s historic nature a focal point of their campaigns, instead focusing on topics such as the economy.

    Spanberger, a former CIA case officer and member of Congress, had said the election is about the struggles of everyday voters, including those impacted by cuts to the federal workforce or tariffs. She took a more moderate approach and avoided talking about Trump.

    Earle-Sears drew attention to transgender students in public schools and reducing the cost of living. Before taking office as lieutenant governor, Earle-Sears served in the U.S. Marine Corps and in the Virginia House of Delegates during the early 2000s.

    Attorney general race stirs up old texts

    Jones thanked Miyares for his service as attorney general and praised his supporters.

    “To the folks who stood by us every single step of the way, labor. We love you,” Jones said during a speech in Richmond. “The weight of that trust is not lost on me at all, nor is the history that led us to this moment right here. My ancestors were slaves. My grandfather was a civil rights pioneer who braved Jim Crow. My father, my mother, my uncles, my aunts endured segregation all so that I could stand here before you today.”

    In the final weeks before Election Day, the attorney general race spotlighted old text messages sent by Jones that showed he fantasized about political violence toward a former colleague.

    Jones has apologized for those texts, but they sparked pushback from the GOP nationwide, and Republicans called for the Democratic nominee to drop out of the race.

    During the candidates’ debate, Jones attempted to refocus the race on Trump and said Miyares couldn’t push back on overreach from the White House.

    Miyares had argued that Jones is unqualified and pressed him on the text messages.

    But during a speech Tuesday night, he wished Jones the best and reflected on his time as attorney general.

    “The attorney general’s office we inherited was weak and a soft office focused more on politics, but we made it focused on where the victims should always come first, where crime fighting was our number one priority, and public safety was the objective,” Miyares said of his time in office.

    Lieutenant governor’s race makes history

    Hashmi will take over the lieutenant governor position from Earle-Sears, who opted against running for reelection and instead campaigned for governor.

    Hashmi is the first Indian American to win statewide office in Virginia. She will also be the country’s first Muslim woman in statewide office.

    “I know that many of us feel as though the nation is in the midst of challenges that are much deeper and more intense than those we have faced before, and that it will take us generations to repair,” Hashmi told a crowd in Richmond. “But let us not forget that the challenges we endure today are not entirely new, and they can be navigated.”

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    Voters cast ballots in high-stakes election in Virginia

    Before being elected to the Virginia General Assembly, Hashmi was an academic administrator. She has pushed for issues such as reproductive health care, gun violence protection and the economy.

    Polls had leaned in favor of Hashmi, with a slight lead of around two points over Reid in recent weeks. Both candidates are based out of the Richmond area.

    Reid has also spotlighted the economy in his campaign, along with law enforcement, parental rights and immigration enforcement.

    Early in his career, Reid worked as an intern for President Ronald Reagan. He has served as chief communications officer for Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, a veterans organization, according to his website.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Jessica Kronzer

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  • WATCH: Victory, concession as Virginia votes in general election – WTOP News

    Stay with WTOP on air, online and on our news app for team coverage, live results and analyses of election night in Virginia. Listen live.

    Virginia voters headed to the polls to elect their governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general, as well as a slew of delegates in the lower chamber.

    Democratic candidate Abigail Spanberger held court in Richmond as she awaited results, while Lieutenant Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears was headquartered in Stafford Tuesday night.

    Both were poised to make history as the first woman elected governor in the Commonwealth.


    More Election News


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    Abigail Spanberger gives victory speech after winning Va. governor’s race

    [ad_2] Abigail Constantino
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  • Sherrill Wins New Jersey Governor Race | RealClearPolitics

    Sherrill Wins New Jersey Governor Race

    Bridget Bowman, NBC News

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  • Election 2025: Local and county election results for Virginia and Maryland – WTOP News

    From school boards, to mayors and sheriffs, here is a break down of the unofficial results of local races across Virginia and in parts of Maryland.

    Stay with WTOP on air, online and on our news app for team coverage, live results and analyses of election night in Virginia. Listen live.

    From school boards to mayors and sheriffs, here is a break down of the unofficial results of local races across Virginia and in parts of Maryland.

    Leading candidates and referendums will be in bold.

    For live results on Virginia’s general election results for governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general and House of Delegates races, click here.

    To follow election results for Maryland, click here.


    Arlington County

    School Board (Vote for 1)

          • Maj. Mike Webb
          • James “Vell” Rives IV
          • Monique A. “Moe” Bryant

    County Board (Voters rank up to three candidates in the order of their choice. One candidate will be elected.)

          • Takis P. Karantonis
          • Bob Cambridge
          • Audrey R. Clement
          • Jeramy L. Olmack
          • Carlos “DC” De Castro Pretelt

    Culpeper County

    Mayor, Town of Culpeper (Vote for 1)

          • Jon D. Russell
          • Frank Reaves, Jr.

    Member, Culpeper Town Council (Vote for no more than four)

          • Max B. Sternberg
          • N. Janie Schmidt
          • William M. “Bill” Yowell
          • Brian H. Brumfield-Horner
          • Whitney R. Grespin
          • Brent M. Amos
          • Joseph M. “Joe” Short

    Fairfax County

    Mayor, Town of Clifton (Vote for 1)

    Mayor, Town of Vienna (Vote for 1)

    Member Town Council, Town of Vienna (Vote no more than six)

          • Daniel R. “Dann” Nash
          • Howard J. Springsteen
          • Charles L. “Chuck” Anderson
          • Douglas K. “Doug” Francis
          • Roy J. Baldwin
          • Sandra D. Allen
          • Jessica H. Ramakis

    Referendum

    (Public School Bonds Question): Shall Fairfax County, Virginia, contract a
    debt, borrow money, and issue capital improvement bonds in the maximum aggregate principal amount of $460,000,000 for the purposes of providing funds, in addition to funds from school bonds previously authorized, to finance, including reimbursement to the County for temporary financing for, the costs of school improvements, including acquiring, building, expanding, and renovating properties, including new sites, new buildings or additions, renovations and improvements to existing buildings, and furnishings and equipment, for the Fairfax County public school system?

    Yes

    No

    Fauquier County

    Member Town Council, Remington Special Election

          • Devada R. Allison Jr.
          • Lisa M. Schulz

    City of Alexandria

    Commonwealth’s Attorney (Vote for 1)

    Sheriff (Vote for 1)

    City of Fairfax

    Commissioner of Revenue (Vote for 1)

    Treasurer

          • W. Thomas “Tom” Scibilia

    City of Falls Church

    Sheriff (Vote for 1)

    Commissioner of Revenue (Vote for 1)

    Treasurer (Vote for 1)

    City Council (Vote for no more than four)

          • Laura T. Downs
          • David F. Snyder
          • Marybeth D. Connelly
          • Arthur H. Agin
          • Brian W. Pendleton
          • James C. Thompson, Jr.

    School Board (Vote for no more than four)

          • Lori K. Silverman
          • Sharon M.Z. Mergler
          • Anne H. Sherwood
          • MaryKate H. “MK” Hughes
          • Kathleen E.C. Tysse

    City of Manassas

    Commissioner of Revenue (Vote for 1)

          • Tim Demeria
          • Deon A. Shamberger

    Treasurer (Vote for 1)

          • Patricia E. Richie-Folks
          • Nathaniel “Nate” Fritzen

    Loudoun County

    Dulles District, School Board (Vote for 1)

          • Santos O. Munoz Melendez
          • Jonathon A. Pepper

    Member School Board, Algonkian District (Vote for 1)

          • April Moore Chandler
          • Matt D. Malone

    Member School Board, Leesburg District (Vote for 1)

    Member School Board, Broad Run District (Vote for 1)

          • Chuntao Samuel Yan
          • Ross C. Svenson

    Member School Board, Sterling District (Vote for 1)

          • Amy M. Riccardi
          • Arben Istrefi

    Mayor, Town of Middleburg (Vote for 1)

          • Trowbridge M. “Bridge” Littleton

    Member Town Council, Town of Middleburg (Vote for no more than four)

          • Cindy Craun Pearson
          • C. Darlene Kirk
          • Deborah Scott Gallagher
          • Chris K. Hersh

    Mayor, Town of Round Hill (Vote for 1)

    Member Town Council, Town of Round Hill (Vote for no more than three)

          • Paula G. James
          • T. Sean Lloyd
          • Beth A. Caseman

    Referendums

    (School Projects Question): Shall the County of Loudoun, Virginia contract a debt and issue its general obligation capital improvement bonds in the maximum principal amount of $75,620,000 to finance, in whole or in part, the design, construction, equipping and other costs of the Capital Renewal and Alteration and the Special Program / Academy Expansion; and the costs of other public school facilities as requested by the Loudoun County School Board?

    Yes

    No

    (Transportation Question): Shall the County of Loudoun, Virginia contract a debt and issue its general obligation capital improvement bonds in the maximum principal amount of $30,126,000 to finance, in whole or in part, the design, construction and other costs of improvements for Braddock Road Widening – Paul Vl Eastern Entrance to Loudoun County Parkway, Croson Lane Widening – Claiborne Parkway to Old Ryan Road, and Farmwell Road Intersections Improvements; and the costs of other public road and transportation projects approved in the County’s Capital Improvement Program?

    Yes

    No

    Parks and Recreation and Public Safety Projects QUESTION: Shall the County of Loudoun, Virginia contract a debt and issue its general obligation capital improvement bonds in the maximum principal amount of $32,631,000 to finance in whole or in part, the design, construction, equipping and other costs of the Cascades Library and Senior Center Complex Renovation, Linear Parks and Trails System, Sterling Neighborhood Park, and Fire and Rescue Station #02 / #14 – Purcellville Addition; and the costs of other public parks, recreational and community center and public safety projects approved in the County’s Capital Improvement Program?

    Yes

    No

    Prince William County

    Board of County Supervisors, Gainesville District (Vote for 1)

          • George T. Stewart
          • Patrick Richard Harders

    Member Town Council, Occoquan (Vote for 1)

    Stafford County

    Board of Supervisors, Hartwood District (Vote for 1)

          • Darrell E. English
          • Marcus T. Oats
          • Kelly M. Robertson

    School Board Member, Hartwood District (Vote for 1)

          • Shannon M. Fingerholz
          • Steven D. Epple

    Board of Supervisors, Aquia District (Vote for 1)

          • Maya P. Guy
          • Henry S. “Hank” Scharpenberg

    School Board Member, Aquia District (Vote for 1)

          • Annette E. Scharpenberg
          • Josh G. Regan

    Board of Supervisors, Falmouth District (Vote for 1)

          • Kecia S. Evans
          • Michael A. Catell

    School Board Member, Falmouth District (Vote for 1)

          • Sarah D. Breedin Chase
          • Fawn M. Chergosky

    Board of Supervisors, Garrisonville District (Vote for 1)

          • R. Pamela Yeung
          • Barton M. “Bart” Randall

    School Board Member, Garrisonville District (Vote for 1)

          • Wanda D. Blackwell
          • Maureen L. Siegmund
          • Stephanie J. Mojica

    Maryland

    In neighboring Maryland, residents in Annapolis, the City of Gaithersburg and Prince George’s County will also be heading to the voting booths to vote on city mayors and referendums, among other issues. Polls in Maryland do not close until 8 p.m.

    Prince George’s County

    City of Greenbelt, Council member (Vote no more than 7)

    • Frankie Santos Fritz
    • Bill Orleans
    • Kristen L. K. Weaver
    • Silke I. Pope
    • Emmett V. Jordan
    • Rodney M. Roberts
    • Kevin “Coach K” Lockhart
    • Danielle P. McKinney
    • Jenni Pompi
    • Amy Knesel

    City of Greenbelt, Referendums

    Do you approve of the City using Ranked Choice Voting for all City Council Member elections and amending the City Charter’s forty percent (40%) threshold criteria (Sec 31)?

    Yes

    No

    Should the Charter be amended to change Council terms from two years to four years?

    Yes

    No

    If four-year terms are approved, should Council Members be subject to Voter Recall Petitions during their terms in office?

    Yes

    No

    Montgomery County

    City of Gaithersburg, Mayoral Candidates

    Gaithersburg City Council Candidates

          • Lisa Henderson
          • Jim McNulty
          • Chris Thoms
          • Omodamola Williams

    City of Annapolis

    Mayoral Candidates (Vote for 1)

          • Jared Littmann
          • Robert “Bobby” Alan O’Shea

    Aldermanic Candidates, Ward 1 (Vote for 1)

          • Harry M. Huntley
          • Thomas “Tom” Krieck

    Aldermanic Candidates, Ward 2 (Vote for 1)

          • Karma O’Neill
          • Kenneth “Ken” G. Vincent

    Aldermanic Candidates, Ward 3 (Vote for 1)

          • Keanuú Smith-Brown
          • Michael L. Dye

    Aldermanic Candidates, Ward 4 (Vote for 1)

          • Janice Elaine Allsup-Johnson

    Aldermanic Candidates, Ward 5 (Vote for 1)

          • Brooks Schandelmeier
          • Jack P. Papaleonti

    Aldermanic Candidates, Ward 6 (Vote for 1)

          • Diesha Contee
          • George M. Gallagher

    Aldermanic Candidates, Ward 7 (Vote for 1)

    Aldermanic Candidates, Ward 8 (Vote for 1)

        • Frank Thorp
        • William R. Cunha

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Gaby Arancibia

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  • LIVE RESULTS: Virginia General Election 2025 – WTOP News

    Virginia voters are deciding their next governor and several other statewide contests in Tuesday’s election. Follow this page for live election results.

    Stay with WTOP on air, online and on our news app for team coverage, live results and analyses of election night in Virginia. Listen live.

    Virginia voters are deciding their next governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general and the makeup of the lower chamber of the state legislature in an election Tuesday that observers nationwide are watching closely to determine which political party has momentum heading into the 2026 midterms.

    Polls opened Tuesday at 6 a.m. Live results below will begin updating after polls close at 7 p.m.

    There’s also a slew of local races in jurisdictions across Northern Virginia that will determine town mayors, school board members, city council members and more.

    For those local results, check here.

    Governor

    Lieutenant Governor

    Attorney General

    House of Delegates

    All 100 seats in Virginia’s House of Delegates are on the ballot. Below find results for races in Northern Virginia.

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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  • House of Delegates results in Virginia could change state’s balance of power – WTOP News

    The margin in Virginia’s state legislature is slim, and Tuesday’s election could tip the balance of power in the House of Delegates.

    Stay with WTOP on air, online and on our news app for team coverage, live results and analyses of election night in Virginia. Listen live.

    The margin in Virginia’s state legislature is slim, and as polls close on Election Day in the state, incoming results could tip the balance of power in the House of Delegates.

    And even though the state Senate seats were not on the ballot, the lieutenant governor holds the tiebreaking vote, which could come into play as Democrats hold just a 21-19 edge in the upper chamber.

    The race for lieutenant governor could be the closest of the statewide contests, and of the 100 House of Delegates seats voters decided Tuesday, 10 were labeled “competitive” in the Virginia Public Access Project Index.

    Virginia Public Access Project is a nonprofit that provides nonpartisan state government and election data.

    Of those 10 competitive seats, three were in the Northern Virginia region.

    House District 21 — Prince William County (partial)

    Virginia’s 21st District pitted incumbent Democratic Del. Josh Thomas against Republican challenger Gregory Lee Gorham.

    Among the top issues in the district, according to University of Mary Washington political science professor Stephen Farnsworth, were the economy and data centers, of which the district is home to dozens.

    “There is a great challenge for figuring out a way to create the electric capacity that would be required from the data centers that are being proposed. A statewide mechanism would allow for a more effective calculation,” Farnsworth said. “There’s a great deal of frustration on the part of voters with respect to the potential downstream costs in terms of their own electric bills.”

    Former Vice President Kamala Harris won the district in 2024’s presidential election, but Gov. Glenn Youngkin won in the state’s last election for governor.

    Thomas ended the campaign with a significant edge in fundraising, collecting over $1 million to Gorham’s $21,570, according to the Virginia Public Access Project.

    “It is important to note the advantage of an incumbent in this environment. This district is drawn to be relatively competitive, but there is a huge financial challenge for a challenger in this race, and that creates a difficult environment to be heard, particularly in the very national politics-dominated conversation that’s been going on in Virginia this year,” Farnsworth said.


    More Election News


    House District 22 — Prince William County (partial)

    Republican Del. Ian Lovejoy currently holds the seat in Virginia’s District 22, and faced a challenge from Democrat Elizabeth Guzman.

    The district is home to neighborhoods such as Linton Hall, Bristow, Nokesville and Buckhall.

    “I think the district in an ordinary election would be more favorable to Republicans, just in terms of where the lines are drawn. But Guzman is an experienced candidate, who has won a number of elections in Prince William County and has become a candidate for statewide office during the primaries. And those have created environments where she has a national donor network,” Farnsworth said.

    Guzman represented Virginia’s 31st District, which includes parts of Prince William and Fauquier counties, for six years.

    Before his time in the House of Delegates, Lovejoy was elected to two terms on the Manassas City Council.

    Farnsworth said this race is no different from others across the state, in that it will be affected by the national political climate.

    “In the same way that Republicans benefited from attacking the Biden economy a year ago, Republicans are on the defensive now when people are talking about the Trump economy,” Farnsworth said.

    House District 65 — Fredericksburg and parts of Spotsylvania and Stafford counties

    A bit farther from the D.C. metro, there was yet another competitive race in Virginia’s 65th District. Incumbent Democratic Del. Joshua Cole faced a challenge from Republican Sean Steinway.

    Cole was first elected to the seat in 2019, but lost the seat in 2021 in a tight race. He won the seat back in 2023.

    Before running for the seat, Steinway served in the Marines, Fairfax County Police Department and Stafford County Sheriff’s Department and worked with the Drug Enforcement Administration.

    Cole ended the campaign with more than double the funds, raising $1.2 million to Steinway’s $576,082.

    Former Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris won the district, which includes all of Fredericksburg, by a sizable 9.3 points in 2024, but the district went for Youngkin by nearly 3 points in 2021 — the same election that resulted in Cole losing the seat.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Thomas Robertson

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  • Election Day kicks off in Va. with high stakes races for governor, attorney general – WTOP News

    Polls are open in Virginia in an election to decide the state’s next governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general, House of Delegates and local offices across the commonwealth.

    Polls are open in Virginia in an election to decide the state’s next governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general, House of Delegates and local offices across the commonwealth.

    Observers across the nation have their eyes on Tuesday’s election to determine if the results indicate momentum toward one party or the other heading into next year’s midterm elections, which will decide the balance of power in Congress.

    Virginia’s race for governor has pitted the current Republican lieutenant governor, Winsome Earle-Sears, against Democratic former U.S. Rep. Abigail Spanberger.

    There’s plenty of intrigue in the commonwealth’s other statewide races, too. Democrat Ghazala Hashmi and Republican John Reid are vying to be Virginia’s next lieutenant governor in a race that’s shaping up to be the closest of the statewide contests.

    And the race that’s grabbed the most headlines in recent weeks is the one for attorney general, after texts sent by Democratic nominee Jay Jones surfaced in which Jones hypothesized about shooting a political rival.

    That controversy has opened the door to the possibility of a split administration, as Spanberger is favored in the governor’s race, but the controversy has propelled incumbent Attorney General and Republican Jason Miyares to a lead in many polls to retain his position.

    All 100 seats in Virginia’s House of Delegates are also on the ballot, though some are not contested. Democrats have a slim 51-48 majority headed into Tuesday, with one current vacancy.

    Democrats also carry a majority in the Virginia State Senate; the 40 seats in the upper chamber are on the ballot in 2027.

    Before Election Day, hundreds of thousands of Virginians voted early. According to the Virginia Public Access Project, a record number of early ballots were cast for a non-presidential election in Virginia.

    What to know about casting a ballot

    Polls close at 7 p.m. Anyone in line to vote at that time will still be able to do so.

    All voters need to provide an acceptable form of ID, sign an ID confirmation statement at the polls or vote with a provisional ballot. Those who vote a provisional ballot will have until noon on the Friday after the election to deliver a copy of their ID to their jurisdiction’s election board or sign a confirmation statement in order for their ballot to be counted.

    list of acceptable forms of ID is available online.

    The deadline to register to vote or to update voter registration has passed. Voters can view what’s on their ballot and find the location of their polling place on the Virginia Department of Elections website.

    WTOP will report results live as soon as they start coming in shortly after the polls close.

    Voters hit the polls

    Chelsea Lamm went to the polls early Tuesday morning and said helping others in need was top on her mind.

    “Just how can we be fair and think about everybody instead of just ourselves and what our own religious beliefs are,” she said.

    Voter Matthew Ziegler said he had several big topics on his mind when walking into the voting booth Tuesday.

    “The general safety of the population, unnecessary taxes, the car tax, that’s been ridiculous for years to be honest, and other issues of course the economy in mind as well across the entire state,” he said.

    Nader Chaaban said taxes were a big issue for him as he stepped up to vote.

    “Honestly I wish that they would get rid of the car tax, that’s a killer right there,” Chaaban said. “You pay a property tax, you pay a food tax, you pay for everything and then they come back and they tax you on the car that you’ve already paid taxes on,” he said.

    Voting in the historic Virginia governor’s race

    Lamm said when it comes to the governor’s race, she’s made up her mind.

    “I’m definitely voting Spanberger … especially as we’re seeing the government shutdown and SNAP benefits come into question for a lot of folks whether you’re voting Republican or Democrat, and so just how can I vote to take care of other people,” she said.

    Ziegler said, for governor, he’s voting, “Winsome-Sears, she has a lot of great leadership qualities, confidence, she knows what she’s talking about and is concerned about all of the safety issues and especially with the economy she really stood out to me this year.”

    When it comes to the government shutdown, Ziegler said he trusts Winsome-Sears to get the state through the difficult times.

    “I think that will be something that she’ll definitely work on and sway to connect across the entire population of Virginia,” Ziegler said.

    Chaaban said Spanberger “to a certain extent appeals to some of the things that I believe in and one of them honestly is looking at the educational system and supporting it and helping teachers, helping the school system.”

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Thomas Robertson

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  • 2 Northern Virginia races could determine which party has majority in House of Delegates – WTOP News

    Democrats currently have a slim majority in Virginia’s House of Delegates, and two competitive Northern Virginia races could help determine which party controls that chamber.

    Democrats currently have a slim majority in Virginia’s House of Delegates, and two competitive Northern Virginia races could help determine which party controls that chamber of the state’s General Assembly.

    Stephen Farnsworth, a political science professor at the University of Mary Washington, said the House of Delegates majority is “going to be determined by the outcome in these outer ring suburban communities.”

    That includes districts in places such as Chesterfield County and Hampton Roads, Farnsworth said, and two districts in Prince William County.

    Currently in the House of Delegates, Democrats hold a 51-48 majority, with one open seat.

    In House District 21, the incumbent, Democrat Del. Josh Thomas is facing Republican challenger Gregory Lee Gorham. Gorham worked in information technology, and Thomas is a lawyer who served with the U.S. Marine Corps.

    That district, Farnsworth said, is “drawn to be relatively competitive, but there is a huge financial challenge for a challenger in this race, and that creates a difficult environment to be heard, particularly in the very national politics-dominated conversation that’s been going on in Virginia this year.”

    Meanwhile, in House District 22, Republican incumbent Ian Lovejoy is facing Democrat Elizabeth Guzman. Lovejoy is a former Manassas City Council member, and Guzman is a former state delegate.

    House District 22, “in an ordinary election, would be more favorable to Republicans, just in terms of where the lines are drawn,” Farnsworth said. But Guzman “has won a number of elections in Prince William County” and has an established national donor network.

    The Virginia Public Access Project describes the House of Delegates races in both district as competitive.

    David Ramadan, a former member of Virginia’s House and a professor at George Mason University’s Schar School of Policy and Government, said in District 21, he expects Thomas, the incumbent, to win his seat again.

    Thomas raised $1.2 million and Gorham raised $21,000 for their campaigns, Ramadan said.

    “There’s been no spending in this race by the caucuses or the parties,” Ramadan said. “Therefore, this is a no contest.”

    However, Ramadan described the District 22 race as a “battleground.”

    “If Democrats, overall, have that 10-12% on top of the ticket, then Guzman wins the seat,” Ramadan said. “If this is a lower margin on top, then Ian Lovejoy has a chance of keeping his seat.”

    Data centers have been at the forefront of the issues candidates in those two races have discussed frequently.

    “Data centers are toxic in Prince William, as they are in Loudoun. Ten years ago, they used to be the darling of any candidate because they were good, at least they had good PR, and people wanted them,” Ramadan said. “Today, data centers in Northern Virginia, specifically in Prince William and Loudoun, are absolutely toxic.”

    Broadly, turnout in Northern Virginia is one of the key things to monitor, Farnsworth said.

    “There is a tradition in Virginia of angry voters showing up to protest the presidential election through this governor’s vote, and this year, that may be more intense than normal,” Farnsworth said. “Because a lot of federal workers, now a month into the shutdown, or former federal workers who were impacted by the Trump administration cutbacks, may be inclined to participate in great numbers.”

    In many election cycles in Virginia, Farnsworth said there’s a lot of time spent discussing what’s happening in and the future of the state. In this cycle, though, he said “it does seem like all politics are national.”

    The key challenge for Republicans in competitive state races is “how to present yourself in a way that can speak to voters who are not reflexively Republican,” Farnsworth said.

    “The environment is unfavorable for Republican candidates because of the actions of the Trump administration, and that’s a big challenge for Republicans,” he added. “The conversation on the Republican side is how to draw attention to the issues you want to emphasize about the future of Virginia. That’s a challenge, particularly when you look at the Democratic fundraising advantages.”

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Scott Gelman

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  • Vote “No” on Denver’s bonds to reject irresponsible debt (Letters)

    Vote “No” on Denver’s bonds to reject irresponsible debt

    After reading my ballot, I researched previous bonds that were passed by voters. The Rise Denver bond in 2021 was $260 million, and the Elevate Denver Bond in 2017 was $937 million. I added up the 2A to 2E bonds this year, and the total is up to $950 million. The total for all of these bonds adds up to more than $2 billion.

    The debt repayment for the current bonds is about $1.9 billion. The ballot states, “without imposing any new tax,” but that is not completely correct. The reason is that all these bonds are paid through commercial and residential property taxes in Denver County. The mill levy could go down if voters say no, and if voters say yes it also could have to increase to pay for these billions of dollars if property values decrease. Denver County is where I live, and expenses have gone significantly higher this year. Why do we keep adding to the bond debts? We should not vote to increase the county’s debt.

    Pete Hackett, Denver

    Denver clerk errs in leaving out information on ballot issues

    Did I hear that correctly?

    Denver’s “Ballot Issue Notice” does not provide any information about three matters: 2F, 2G and 310.  I called Denver’s Clerk and Elections Office to ask why the omissions. I was told two things: 1) Those three ballot issues have no fiscal impact on government, so applicable law does not require their inclusion in the notice. 2) Due to “budget cuts,” it was decided not to address them in the notice.  Then, I was informed that I could garner information about them at denvervotes.org.

    Denver voters expect the notice each year to address all matters on the ballot. The current notice does not highlight that 2F, 2G and 310 are not included and does not highlight denvervotes.org as a source of information about them.

    I have no way of learning how much money was “saved” by excluding these ballot matters. What I do know is that it would have been money well spent.

    Vic Reichman, Denver

    Trump’s cuts to education funding risk America’s future

    Re: “Federal government’s cuts cost state colleges millions,” Oct. 9 news story

    As an educator, I was saddened to read: “Trump administration cuts grants to Colorado colleges serving high percentage of diverse students,” October 9.

    Every American, regardless of race, gender or religious persuasion, should have the opportunity to realize their natural potential via education. Yet, there are wide swaths of America that are not properly educating students and where students are just unable to succeed for economic or other reasons. As a result, America is not producing sufficient STEM graduates to sustain, let alone grow, America’s high level of technology upon which we all heavily depend for our economy, well-being and national defense.

    On top of that, President Donald Trump has made it significantly more challenging for foreign students (who would often pursue STEM careers) to enter American schools.

    Given the fact that the president is seeking to reindustrialize America, I would like to ask him from where will the required scientists, engineers, technicians, doctors and other highly educated specialists come? America is now in crisis as we seek to pay down our $37 trillion debt and stay competitive internationally. One way to do this would be to encourage and help all groups of Americans — particularly those who are underrepresented in STEM (as an untapped talent pool) — to pursue STEM careers. Persecuting and defunding schools that seek to help underrepresented students succeed and contribute to America’s recovery is absolutely the wrong thing to do.

    Education is the only hope for the next generation of Americans to move forward.

    Michael Pravica, Henderson, Nevada

    If the U.S. doesn’t support Ukraine, we are complicit in its destruction

    Recent news articles galvanized my thought that America is sleepwalking while Ukraine is fighting for survival against Russia’s genocidal invasion. We need to take a moment to answer the question: Are we really supporting Ukraine to win? It is in America’s interest that Ukraine is successful. Our future prosperity, and that of our children, depends on what we do right now.

    Either the United States supports Ukraine to win, or we will be complicit in its destruction. Such complicity will damage national security by strengthening enemies, driving away allies, harming international trade, increasing nuclear proliferation, encouraging new wars of territorial conquest, and ending America’s role as leader of the free world. There will be less stability and fewer allies within the West, investments abroad will be less safe, and the entire West will be less prosperous. Therefore, what all of us should strive for in Ukraine is not peace at any price, because that will be bad for all countries, but a future that makes Ukraine, America, and the West stronger by making its enemies weaker.

    Take a moment to consider our future and then do what you feel is best: take up a keyboard and send a note, pick up a pen and write your political leadership, sit down with friends or family and discuss this letter, or pull out your checkbook, but just do something now. History will judge what we do today; which side will you be on?

    Arthur Ives, Highlands Ranch

    Don’t just give away national forest lands

    Should our beloved but flat-broke White River National Forest sell an asset worth more than half its annual budget or just give that asset away?

    Retired White River National Forest Supervisor Scott Fitzwilliams’ 2021 plan to effectively donate 832 acres surrounding Sweetwater Lake to Colorado Parks and Wildlife for the creation of a state park might have made sense prior to DOGE’s cuts to the forest service’s budget. It also might have made sense before the $23,860,000 Derby Fire burned 5,453 acres in the national forest  just one mile east of the lake.

    DP Opinion

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  • Is GOP’s Virginia Surge Too Little, Too Late? | RealClearPolitics

    The GOP’s surge in the 2025 Virginia elections comes after months of lackluster campaigning and may be too little, too late

    Jeremiah Poff, Washington Examiner

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  • The Unconscionable Loss of Conscience for VA Democrats | RealClearPolitics

    In 2019, Virginia Democrats denounced Gov. Ralph Northam. But when it comes to Jay Jones, they appear to have a loss of conscience.

    Salena Zito, DC Examiner

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  • Virginia Shake-Up 3 Weeks Before Election Day | RealClearPolitics

    Earle-Sears trails Spanberger by just 2.6%, 47.7% to 45.1%. And Miyares has overtaken Jones, 48.9% to 43.1%.

    Paul Bedard, Washington Examiner

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  • Democrats in governors races see political opportunity amid government shutdown

    By MIKE CATALINI and OLIVIA DIAZ, Associated Press

    GLEN RIDGE, N.J. (AP) — Democrats say fallout from the Trump administration’s aggressive tactics during the shutdown of the federal government could give them a welcome boost in the only two governors’ races on the ballot this year.

    In Virginia, 175,000 people work for the federal government, according to the Congressional Research Service. In New Jersey, where federal workers number roughly 23,000 by the CRS’s estimate, the Republican administration has announced the freezing of $18 billion in funding for a rail tunnel connecting the state to New York City.

    The Nov. 4 elections in Virginia and New Jersey represent the next big tests of how voters view both President Donald Trump’s second term and Democrats’ reaction to it. They take place against the backdrop of the shutdown fight, ignited by Senate Democrats’ decision to oppose a Republican-backed funding bill in hopes of negotiating an extension of expiring Affordable Care Act subsidies.

    Shutdown puts Trump ‘front and center’

    The Republican president’s threats to lay off more government workers and stop the tunnel project has left Democrats anticipating an unexpected boost in the off-year elections.

    “I think this decision by Donald Trump on the Gateway tunnel is devastating for Jack Ciattarelli,” said Democratic Sen. Andy Kim of New Jersey. “It puts Trump front and center.”

    Ciattarelli is the Trump-backed Republican nominee for governor of New Jersey, a state that tilts toward Democrats but has shown a willingness to support the GOP in governor’s races. He’s running against U.S. Rep. Mikie Sherrill, a four-term Democratic congresswoman who has made Trump administration tactics a centerpiece of the case she’s been making to Garden State voters.

    Democrat Mikie Sherrill responds to questions during the first general election gubernatorial debate with Republican opponent Jack Ciattarelli, Sunday, Sept. 21, 2025, in Lawrenceville, N.J. (AP Photo/Noah K. Murray)

    The shutdown, and Trump’s decision to pull the plug on the tunnel project, fits seamlessly into Sherrill’s narrative. Outside a suburban New York City train station recently, she said the project is a boon for New Jersey laborers and commuters and blamed the president and her rival.

    “We’re risking the failure of a century old tunnel. That means over 200,000 people every single day,” she said. “It’s despicable that the president of the United States is costing us so much money and attacking our economy. And it’s despicable Jack Ciattarelli is going right along.”

    Republicans put the blame on Democrats

    Ciattarelli, in turn, blames Sherrill and her Democratic colleagues in Congress.

    “Instead of doing her job, she chose to play partisan politics,” said campaign strategist Chris Russell. “She should be embarrassed.”

    Republican Jack Ciattarelli responds to questions during the first general election gubernatorial debate with Democratic opponent Mikie Sherrill, Sunday, Sept. 21, 2025, in Lawrenceville, N.J. (AP Photo/Noah K. Murray)
    Republican Jack Ciattarelli responds to questions during the first general election gubernatorial debate with Democratic opponent Mikie Sherrill, Sunday, Sept. 21, 2025, in Lawrenceville, N.J. (AP Photo/Noah K. Murray)

    While Democrats see an opportunity in the shutdown and its aftermath, Republicans aren’t ready to concede the point. Even those critical of Trump say it probably doesn’t matter.

    New Jersey state Sen. Jon Bramnick, the lone Trump critic in this year’s GOP primary, said voters he talks to all seem to have their minds made up already. They either love the president and back his policies — and Ciattarelli as his choice for governor — or dislike him intensely.

    Associated Press

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