Virginia Political Newsletter
Virginia Political Newsletter
Listen: Youngkin and Cruz stump for Vega
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Listen: Youngkin and Cruz stump for Vega

Listen to the everything Vega, Cruz, and Youngkin said last night.

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Today’s Sponsor: Meet Our Moment

Meet Our Moment is an effort spearheaded by former Delegate Jay Jones to recruit and train minority and female Democratic candidates to run for and win state and local offices across the Commonwealth. To date, Meet Our Moment has trained 25 Virginians from every region of Virginia, and six alumni are now running for office in 2022 and 2023. The programming is entirely free to participants.

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Cruz and Youngkin stump for Vega

Close to a thousand people piled into a parking lot in Northern Virginia Monday night to listen to Gov. Glenn Youngkin and United States Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas) campaign for VA-07 Republican nominee Yesli Vega. You can listen to the full event with the link at the top of this email, or the individual speeches from Cruz, Youngkin, and Vega can be found below.

Vega is running against two-term Rep. Abigail Spanberger (D) in VA-07.

The event took place at Montclair Tabernacle in Dumfries. Youngkin, Cruz, and Vega arrived on a bus that had a deck on the top where they were standing and waving to the crowd as they pulled into the church lot.

As the pastor at the church introduced the politicians, he called the event a gathering of patriots.

Vega eventually took the stage first. Listen to her full speech below:

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Vega then introduced Youngkin who brought basketballs and tossed them to the crowd before giving his speech.

Listen to Youngkin’s full comments below:

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Then Youngkin introduced Cruz, a former Republican presidential candidate and staunch conservative who has no problem attacking Democrats at every chance he gets. Cruz made fun of President Joe Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris, and several other prominent Democrats.

Listen to his full speech below:

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Later, after the event in a conversation with the press, Youngkin also discussed election security in Virginia and emphasized that he believes Vriginia’s elections are secure.

“First of all, Virginia’s elections are secure,” Youngkin said. “I want to remind everybody, we passed three bills this year: we got rid of Zucker-bucks, we update our voter rolls every week, and we make sure mail-in ballots get assigned right back to their precinct. In Virginia, every ballot is cast on a paper ballot, it is kept. We do not have voting machines, we have counting machines - I went and certified them myself. Voters can trust the elections in Virginia. That doesn’t mean we shouldn’t go to work. We have got to continue to improve our election process and continue to improve people’s faith in our election process.”

Youngkin then said early voting in Virginia is safe and encouraged people to vote early for this election.

Election day is Nov. 8.

A reminder of the electorate profile in VA-07 according to analysis from VPAP:

  1. Glenn Youngkin won VA-07 with 52% of the vote in 2021

  2. Tim Kaine won VA-07 with 55% of the vote in 2018

  3. Ralph Northam won VA-07 with 52% of the vote in 2017

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Young voters might be a wildcard, but organizers hope voting becomes habit

By Cassandra Loper - Capital News Service

RICHMOND, Va. -- Roughly three years ago, Maria Reynoso determined local policy issues and election information were not readily available or easily digestible to the average voter, and especially younger voters. 

Reynoso now runs We Vote Virginia, a nonpartisan digital media resource to help voters become more informed. 

“What my focus when creating the organization, and I guess my mission, was really to make it incredibly accessible and fun and engaging to learn about local politics,” Reynoso said. 

The most critical change happens in local and state politics, according to Reynoso. Virginia voter turnout traditionally drops off between presidential elections. Candidates are vying for U.S. House of Representatives seats in Congress this year, with other local races and initiatives on the ballot throughout the state’s districts.

Political organizers and candidates are watching to see if they pull younger voters to the polls in an election that could change the balance of power in Congress. They hope that more education on the importance of voting, and how to vote, can develop a consistent habit among young voters whose participation can be a wildcard.

Virginia Commonwealth University’s VCU Votes Student Coalition is a network of the university’s students, faculty and staff that promote voter engagement on campus, according to the VCU Votes website.

“Younger voters are considered a wildcard because they're still very new to voting, and I think also, they're still new to the democratic process as a whole,” said Cameron Hart, director of partnerships for VCU Votes Student Coalition.

Young voters understand the urgency of issues, such as climate change, according to Hart, and it can motivate them to the polls. 

Both the Democratic and Republican parties of Virginia could do more in terms of encouraging young people to vote by making appearances on college campuses, Hart said.

Generation X, millennials and Generation Z make up over 46% of the Virginia population, according to American Community Survey data by the U.S. Census Bureau. That percentage is totaled from the provided categories of ages 20-54, although the generations are ages 10-57. Gen Z and millennial eligible voters ages 20-44 account for over a third of the population, based on the census data. 

Virginia young voter turnout ages 18-29 has been a mixed bag in the past few elections, according to Tufts Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement, or CIRCLE. That age group is most commonly used by researchers, versus a precise snapshot of voter participation by generation. 

  • The 18-29 voter turnout more than doubled in the 2018 midterm election, according to CIRCLE (13% to 33%). Virginia voters are inconsistent when it comes to midterm elections, in general. Since 2000, anywhere from almost 32% to almost 60% of voters participated, according to the Virginia Department of Elections website.

  • The 18-29 voter turnout was 56% in Virginia in 2020, according to CIRCLE, up from 48% in 2016. Voter turnout for the 2020 presidential election was the highest turnout of the 21st century, overall. 

  •  The 18-29 voter turnout decreased in the 2021 gubernatorial election, according to CIRCLE, from 34% in 2017 to 27%. 

Social media is a great way to engage young voters, according to Reynoso. The We Vote VA Instagram account launched in late 2019. The account now has nearly 16,000 followers and is one of the organization's primary methods of reaching voters. It features easy to read and visually appealing posts containing information about polling locations, important dates, redistricting background and more. The concept is to inform and help create a habit of voting.

“It is so important that young voters know their facts,” Ellie Sorensen, press secretary for the Republican Party of Virginia, stated in an email.

Young voters may think their vote doesn’t matter because some policy issues might not directly impact them, according to Sorensen. 

“Sometimes, voters just vote based on what other people around them vote, but if they are taught the importance of voting and the facts about what they are actually voting for, it will encourage younger people to vote,” Sorensen stated.

Voting can become a habit, especially when voters can see the “good it can do,” according to Gianni Snidle, press secretary for the Democratic Party of Virginia. 

“If we’re not actively participating in our democracy, then we’re failing,” Snidle said.

Nonprofit organization Rock the Vote has worked to make voting a habit among young voters since 1990. It launched with a public service announcement featuring singer, songwriter and actress Madonna.

Rock the Vote serves as a one-stop shop for all things voting, Carolyn DeWitt, president and executive director of Rock the Vote, stated in an email. Voters can check registration status, request an absentee ballot, get election reminders and view election deadlines through the website.

The organization had direct channels to young voters through their partnership with MTV, and through concert venues where the organization would register people to vote. 

Rock the Vote has adapted through the decades and was the first to launch an online voter registration platform in the late ‘90s, according to an L.A. Times report. The organization reports that they’ve helped register 14 million people to vote. 

The new generation of voters are extraordinarily in touch with their values, according to DeWitt.

“But over the past few years, they’ve witnessed our political culture become increasingly volatile and our democracy threatened on multiple counts,” DeWitt stated.

Young people know their value and they keep showing up despite the obstacles put before them, according to DeWitt.

State lawmakers have made voting more accessible in recent years. Virginia voters are no longer required to show photo identification at the polls. Voters can prove their identity with things such as a driver’s license, passport, college student ID and even a current bank statement or utility bill that contains the voter's name and address. Same-day voter registration can be done up to and on Election Day, although voters receive a provisional ballot.

Voters can find local polling places and request an absentee ballot on the Virginia Department of Elections website.

Early voting started Sept. 23 and will end on Nov. 5. Absentee ballots must be requested by Oct. 28 and postmarked by Election Day on Nov. 8.

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Youngkin calls latest student test scores ‘catastrophic’ - AP

by Sarah Rankin

Math and reading scores declined in Virginia, as they did around the country, according to the results of a closely watched national test, findings that Gov. Glenn Youngkin said Monday were “catastrophic.”

“I hope we’re all shocked, because we should be,” Youngkin said at a news conference in Richmond highlighting Virginia’s performance on the National Assessment of Educational Progress, known as the “nation’s report card.”

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