January 27, 2026
Democrats in the General Assembly wasted no time in getting to work ending the Commonwealth’s movement toward sensible governance in the preceding four years, and heading in the direction of California and Minnesota.
Newly elected Governor Abigail Spanberger also wasted no time discarding the phony badge she wore saying she was a “moderate” candidate.
From the Americans for Tax Reform website: “Under unified Democrat control, Virginia is poised to become a tax-hiking outlier in a region full of states that are phasing out their income taxes. Immediately upon seizing control of government, Virginia Democrats introduced the following bills that seek to impose an array of new and higher taxes:
“HB 378 – Imposes a 3.8 percent net investment income tax on individuals, trusts, and estates beginning in taxable year 2027. If enacted, HB 378 would raise VA’s top marginal income tax rate on portfolio and passive income to 9.55percent.
“HB 900 – Authorizes sales tax hikes in various transportation districts, imposes a new tax on each and every retail delivery in Northern Virginia (Amazon, Uber Eats, FedEx, UPS, etc.), similar to the one imposed in Minnesota by Gov. Tim Walz (D).
“HB 919 – Imposes a firearm and ammunition tax equal to 11 percent of the gross receipts from the retail sale of any firearm or ammunition by a dealer in firearms, firearms manufacturer, or ammunition vendor, as such terms are defined in the bill.
“HB 978 – Extends the retail sales and use tax to dry cleaning, landscaping, and other previously exempt services.”
Some suggest that Virginia’s tax rate could rise from 5.75 percent to 13.8 percent, the highest in the nation.
And then there is House Bill 863 which moves down the path toward soft-on-crime government. The bill contains language that would effectively eliminate minimum sentencing requirements for such crimes as manslaughter, rape, possession and distribution of child pornography, and assaulting a law enforcement officer. Democrats are said to also seek to remove the mandatory five-day minimum sentence for certain first-time DUI offenses.
Along that same line of mis-thinking, Spanberger took the oath of office and a couple of breaths, and then signed 10 executive actions. One of those was to fulfill a campaign promise to rescind the executive order of her predecessor, former Republican Governor Glenn Youngkin, which required Virginia law enforcement to cooperate with federal immigration officials.
So, the new governor wants Virginia to become another Minnesota?
Defending this foolish decision, Spanberger commented that "State and local law enforcement should not be required to divert their limited resources to enforce federal, civil immigration laws – it is the responsibility of federal law enforcement," and that "Virginia state and local law enforcement officers must be able to focus on their core responsibilities: investigating crime and community policing."
There is also a move that would require government contracts under $100,000 to be awarded to minority-owned and women-owned businesses. It instructs the executive branch of Virginia’s government to base the awarding of at least 42 percent of its contracts on DEI criteria, rather than to whatever businesses appear to be the most qualified or best suited. It also requires allocating a certain portion of those contracts to certified DEI businesses.
Spanberger also announced Virginia would rejoin the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) – a move she said would lower costs.
"For me, this is about cost savings. RGGI generated hundreds of millions of dollars for Virginia — dollars that went directly to flood mitigation, energy efficiency programs, and lowering bills for families who need help most," Spanberger said. "Withdrawing from RGGI did not lower energy costs. In fact, the opposite happened — it just took money out of Virginia's pocket. It is time to fix that mistake."
Republican State Senator Glen Sturtevant said, however, that the RGGI is a 501(c)(3) carbon tax entity that taxes member states through citizen’s electric bills, meaning electric bills will increase. He said further that by withdrawing from RGGI, Youngkin saved Virginians between $500 million and $1 billion.
There is also a bill to regulate gas-powered leaf blowers and other electric landscaping equipment. These machines are quite noisy. But, they are also quite efficient.
However, the most troubling topics deal with voting. There is a bill to end hand counting of ballots that can be read by a scanner. Scanners, of course, can be controlled online.
And there is talk of proposing a constitutional redistricting amendment. Attempting to justify this, Spanberger said during a joint session of the Virginia General Assembly that "Virginia's proposed redistricting amendment is a response to what we're seeing in other states that have taken extreme measures to undermine democratic norms."
However, critics claim this move would give Democrats a 10-1 advantage in voting districts, since their goal is keeping control. Many districts vote Republican, although the large eastern districts near D.C. and Richmond vote Democrat.
Spanberger’s new-found love of redistricting is wholly partisan. Back in 2019 she commented that “Gerrymandering is detrimental to our democracy and it weakens the individual voices that form our electorates. Opposing gerrymandering should be a bipartisan priority.”
And, Spanberger’s often mentioned plan for improved “affordability” is just words, not actions.
Virginia will join California and Minnesota, and the people will suffer.