The 2025 Elections in Virginia Will Be the Most Diverse in History; Newport News Justice Reform Forum; Nicole Cole Kickoff
➡️ There are 10 days until early voting starts on May 2 for the June 17 primary
➡️ There are 57 days until the June 17, 2025 primary in Virginia
➡️ There are 560 days until the November 3, 2026 midterm elections
➡️ There are 1,295 days until November 7, 2028
Black Virginia News is giving you vital news and information on the Black community in Virginia. We give you facts others ignore. Thank you to all of our subscribers! Please support unbossed indy news in Virginia. Thank you!
Follow us on 🦋 BlueSky
🏛️ Trump Litigation Tracker: Legal Challenges to the Administration
💼 Executive Order Tracker | Federal Register List of Executive Orders
💼 Statutory whistleblower protections: Whistleblower
Virginia 2025 Statewide Elections Will Be Most Diverse in History
Who would ever guess that with the most anti-diversity and anti-inclusive presidential administrations in the background that Virginia will feature the most diverse set of candidates on the ballot ever? The Commonwealth currently has a Chief Diversity, Opportunity and Diversity Officer, Martin Brown, who famously declared in 2023 that “DEI is dead.” Well, diversity sure is alive and kicking on both sides of the ballot for Virginia’s June primary and the November general election is certain to be uber-diverse in the Commonwealth.
Below are some of the diverse candidates running statewide this year: Lt. Governor and gubernatorial candidate Winsome Earle-Sears, State Senator and LG candidate Ghazala Hashmi, State Senator and LG candidate Aaron Rouse, former Delegate and AG candidate Jay Jones, Attorney General Jason Miyares, former journalist and Republican leader LG candidate John Reid, and former Congresswoman and gubernatorial candidate Abigail Spanberger.
SEARS-REID-MIYARES: The Republican statewide field is now set. After the announcement yesterday that GOP candidate for Lieutenant Governor and Fairfax County Supervisor Patrick Herrity would drop out of the race because of health reasons, the 2025 GOP statewide ticket is set and it is the most diverse in history.
With the guarantee that the next Governor will be a woman and a record number of Blacks and women on the ballot running for the 100 seats in the Virginia House of Delegates, 2025 was already destined to be a historically diverse year. There’s even a chance of an all-women statewide ticket in 2025.
The irony of the moment couldn’t be more jarring. The in your face take-Jackie-Robinson-off the website anti-Black, anti-immigrant, anti-women and anti-LGBT Trump Administration has been crystal clear on their worldview. Despite MAGA Republicans constantly signaling a return to the America of the pre-1950s, the reality of the current demographic trends in the U.S. can’t be denied.
While Trump and his South African counterpart seek to shape who holds power and controls access to economic opportunity, Virginia tells a different story—one of growing diversity reflected in candidates at every level of the ballot. The state’s shifting demographics are both visible and undeniable.
RELATED: Tracking Racism: The Trump Administration Discrimination Database (Contraband Camp, April 21, 2025)
Virginia is for ❤️ DEI. The Republican statewide ticket will include a Black woman who was born in Kingston, Jamaica, the first openly gay nominee for statewide office in Virginia and the first Cuban American elected to the Virginia General Assembly who would also make history for his victorious 2021 run for Attorney General. Lt. Governor Winsome Earle-Sears, John Reid and Attorney General Jason Miyares are now the GOP statewide ticket for 2025.
“I just got off the phone with Governor Glenn Youngkin and I am very appreciative of his call and his support and I am excited to work hard over the coming months to bring home a win for Republicans and for Virginians who want to build on his solid success over the last four years,” wrote Reid, the former radio host at Richmond’s WRVA 96.1 FM, on Facebook last night.
Reid has also worked in Republican communications and will be the only white male among the six candidates on the statewide tickets nominated by both Republicans and Democrats.
SPANBERGER and OTHER HISTORY MAKERS. On the Democratic side, there will also be a ton of diversity and history. Former Congresswoman Abigail Spanberger will be the Democratic nominee for Governor. For the first time ever two women will lead the top of Virginia’s statewide tickets. Spanberger will likely be joined on the ticket by either two women or two Black men or a woman and a Black male. Whatever the combination it’s a historically diverse one and the Democratic ticket will carry a diverse never-before-seen history just as the GOP one.
LG candidates State Senator and attorney Ghazala Hashmi, who was born in India, and physician and Prince William County School Board Chair Babur Lateef are only two examples of the growing political power of members of the South Asian community in Virginia. That power has already been witnessed with the elections of State Senator Saddam Salim and Congressman Suhas Subramanyam and Delegate Kannan Srinivasan.
Though the June 17, 2025 primary will confirm exactly who will carry Virginia into its historically diverse next chapter, the current field of candidates already reflects a significant shift in the state's political landscape.
Black Virginia News Podcast
Podcast 48 🎙️ Fergie Reid, Jr. on the 2025 Virginia House Races
In this episode, Dr. Fergie Reid Jr., a prominent voting rights advocate and the son of civil rights pioneer Dr. William Ferguson Reid Sr., who in 1968 became the first African American elected to the Virginia General Assembly after Reconstruction, offers his perspective on the 2025 Virginia House of Delegates races. It’s a historic year from women and Black candidates on the ballot in Virginia. Check out Fergie Reid, Jr. on 90for90 on BlueSky and Twitter (not X, twitter).
Trump’s Decisions Continue to Kill Jobs and Make 401Ks Dive
The economic stats continue to indicate that President Donald Trump is one of the worst presidents in recent memory when it comes to the economy.
RELATED: Volvo Layoffs to Affect up to 350 at New River Valley Plant (Cardinal News, April 21, 2025)
Yesterday, Cardinal News reported that Volvo will layoff 350 workers at their New River Valley plant in Pulaski County. Why? Because of Trump’s tariff policies. As the economy continues to dive, Republicans in Virginia and in Congress remain silent.
Virginia Bridges and Tunnels: New Law Means Improvements
By Nathaniel Cline for Virginia Mercury. Certain Virginia bridges and tunnels could be repaired or replaced ahead of schedule, saving citizens years of waiting to use the structures, thanks to a law that will take effect this summer that stems from a bipartisan effort in this year’s General Assembly approved by the governor.
Lawmakers and Gov. Glenn Youngkin passed an administrative proposal allowing the state to expedite projects considered under Virginia’s Special Structures Program by issuing revenue bonds up to $200 million a year, and up to $1 billion total. Issuance will begin in 2028.
The Commonwealth Special Structures Program stems from a 2020 measure that allocates $80 million annually to cover “special structures,” identified by the Commissioner of Highways and approved by the Commonwealth Transportation Board (CTB) as very “large, indispensable, and unique bridges and tunnels.” Read entire.
Newport News: Justice Reform Forum at Ivy Baptist
Last night a justice reform form was held in Newport News. Panelists included Rep. Bobby Scott, Norfolk Commonwealth's Attorney Ramin Fatehi, advocate Kemba Smith, and Hampton University Professor Zina McGee.
The entire forums can be seen here:
Bon Air Juvenile Facility Stays Open, Despite Understaffing
By Lucille Hancock for Richmond Capital News Service - Bon Air Juvenile Correctional Center is the last juvenile correctional center in Virginia, standing as a relic of the pervasive fear of juvenile offenders.
An increase in violent incidents over the last two months at BAJCC has brought attention to the lack of resources supplied by the Virginia Department of Juvenile Justice.
The facility holds 272 beds and houses mostly males between 11 and 20 years old. The mission of the BAJCC is to, “protect the public by preparing court-involved and committed youth to be successful citizens,” according to its website.
Within the last two months, there have been three instances of inmates inciting violence. On the afternoon of Feb. 9, 11 residents of a male housing unit became non compliant, necessitating the staff to call for additional assistance, BAJCC stated in a press release.
A few weeks later, a resident started a small fire in his cell by using a battery and its connecting wires from headphones. A similar event occurred on March 6, according to the facility.
Headphones are used as an enrichment tool for juveniles, and removing them wouldn’t be in their best interest, according to the press release.
Julie McConnell, the director of the Children’s Defense Clinic (CDC), acts as legal defense for many inmates at BAJCC. The CDC is a program that allows third-year law students to advocate for indigent juveniles in criminal court. She is also a professor of law at the University of Richmond.
McConnell explained that the root of the problem with Virginia’s treatment of juveniles began in the 1990s when the concept of the superpredator worked its way into state legislation and government budgeting.
John DiIulio, a professor at Princeton University who coined the term superpredator in the 1990s, insisted that the rise in juvenile offenses would continue to increase if left unaddressed. His hypothesis, which was later disproved, caused widespread panic and worsened the treatment of young people in the court systems and the building of facilities like BAJCC.
As the shortcomings of the superpredator myth became clear, the 2008 recession took a blow to government spending in every state. Virginia began closing the juvenile prisons that the state had overbuilt to warehouse these allegedly heathenistic and pervasive juveniles, McConnell said.
Rather than reinvesting the prison funds into communities to serve juvenile offenders, McConnell said that Virginia’s budgets were simply directed back into the general fund. For children in the state system to get the help and support they need, BAJCC is often the solution.
“We’re not fully committed to providing those services on the front end. We wait until it gets bad enough that we can just incarcerate them. I see it over and over again, families come to the court begging for services and have to wait up to 90 days,” McConnell said. “I represent kids in juvenile court every day and have been doing it for 25 years, and I find more often than not that we cannot provide the services that kids need.”
According to a presentation given Sept. 19, 2023 by the director of the BAJCC, Amy Floriano, “The majority (93%) of youth appeared to have at least one symptom of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), conduct disorder, oppositional defiance disorder, or substance use disorder.”
Melodie Martin, the public information officer for the VDJJ, acknowledged in an email the issues of understaffing at BAJCC.
The problems with staff at the center go beyond a lack of personnel.
In a press release from March 28, the BAJCC stated that as a result of their investigation, Cedric A. Thomas, 60, wasn arrested on charges of sexual assault of a female prisoner. The purported assault took place in May 2024, when Thomas was employed to supervise and maintain the security of the juveniles incarcerated at BAJCC. The DJJ said that assault was not reported to Chesterfield Police until June 28, after the DJJ investigation had identified the perpetrator. A grand jury issued indictments 10 months later. The DJJ maintains that the incident was not reported to them until weeks later, but did not provide a date.
The female prisoner has since been relocated and her identity has not been shared. Police said that “based on the investigation, detectives believe Thomas may have additional victims in the community.”
Despite lawmaker’s call for an independent investigation into the BAJCC, Martin has refused to comment on the recent issues at the center. Press releases have been shared with the public, but news sources are generally being denied any further information.
The Prison Rape Elimination Act states that “The agency shall require all staff to report immediately and according to agency policy any knowledge, suspicion, or information regarding an incident of sexual abuse or sexual harassment that occurred in a facility.”
PREA is a set of national, zero tolerance guidelines that all prisons must abide by. These standards require any abuses of inmates under 18 or any adult considered vulnerable to be mandated to report the allegation to designated state or local services. In the case of sexual assault, there are more specific requirements set forth regarding evidence collection and trained officials. Given the lack of complete timeline provided by BAJCC, a timely response to the allegation may not have been possible.
In the letter to Gov. Glenn Youngkin, the Commission on Youth called for a closer look “into the operations, staffing, programming, mental health services, and other practices at Bon Air Juvenile Correctional Center to assist the Department of Juvenile Justice in making the changes necessary.”
McConnell placed a heavy emphasis on the necessity of positive social environments within interaction centers for juveniles, which would allow them to better reenter the community. For many, the mental health services and educational resources offered at BAJCC place them on a successful path; for some, recidivism becomes more likely. Many incarcerated at BAJCC face a lack of positive social interaction, said McConnell.
To end up incarcerated at a facility like BAJCC, a juvenile must be convicted of four misdemeanors or one felony. In McConnell’s eyes, this is too little. Offenders who have been caught shoplifting twice and trespassing twice, for example, could be incarcerated in BAJCC with those convicted of murder.
“Sometimes people take the opportunity to learn how to be a different kind of criminal when they’re around really serious criminals,” McConnell said. “They might become affiliated with a gang for protection.”
BAJCC has instituted the G.R.E.A.T. program to help end gang violence and combat the existing issues in the facility. According to their 2023 transformation plan update, “The 15-week G.R.E.A.T. curriculum includes developing positive relationships with law enforcement and instilling life skills, goal setting, empathy and pride for the community, violence intervention and conflict-resolution techniques, decision making and problem solving.”
Programs like G.R.E.A.T. and other social activities, including the Super Bowl party hosted during the Feb. 6 breakout, allow juveniles to become more prosocial. However, the lines between punishment, accountability and rehabilitation are blurry at best, McConnell said.
“I remember one of the judges I was in front of in a case said, ‘It’s not supposed to be a country club,’ ” said McConnell. “So it depends on your perspective, whether you think that that actually helps people to become more prosocial when you give them pro-social opportunities, right?”
According to a poll conducted by GBAO Strategies, 85 percent of Virginia residents prefer a youth justice system that focuses on prevention and rehabilitation, and the rest favor a system focusing on punishment and incarceration.
McConnell reflected this sentiment, saying that “These kids are finally getting the therapeutic intervention that they need while incarcerated. There are a lot of people that truly believe in the resilience of kids.”
She explained that with the constantly changing director of the DJJ, staff have difficulty keeping up with the shift in philosophy on punishment versus rehabilitation that occurs every four years. Since the fall of the superpredator myth, Virginia’s government tried to refine its rehabilitation by closing all juvenile correctional facilities other than BAJCC.
The JLARC’s investigation found that “Stakeholders generally agree that the Bon Air facility is not adequately meeting the needs of committed youth and should be replaced. However, there is disagreement on the size, number, and locations of future secure treatment facilities.”
While the future of the BAJCC remains unclear, the overall state of juvenile offenders in Virginia continues to improve. The JLARC reported that in the last 10 years, the youth in Virginia’s juvenile justice system has dropped by 70 percent.
Legacy Civil Rights vs. Trump 🎙️ Listen to the podcast
Interview with Congresswoman Jennifer McClellan 🎙️ Listen to the podcast
➡️ SUBSCRIBE TO BLACK VIRGINIA NEWS. “One had better die fighting against injustice than die like a dog or a rat in a trap.” —Ida Wells. 👨🏽💻 Send press releases, submissions, tips, pitches, comments and corrections to BlackVirginiaNews@gmail.com.
There needs to be an effort to get information out to people on what papers to have for voting. Link up with someone who has Ancestry and trace your birth certificate. Register to vote by mail so you can track your status online. Do so now. Fine a person who knows technology and register. Vote early so you can challenge your vote if it is rejected. Request documentation on who has challenged your vote if it comes to that. Don’t be intimidated by no one. Get involved and help one another.