Tag: Congress

  • McGuire faces primary test as Democrats eye more competitive 5th District race

    McGuire faces primary test as Democrats eye more competitive 5th District race

    U.S. Rep. John McGuire may have breathed a sigh of relief after courts last month invalidated Virginia’s voter-approved redistricting amendment, which would have made the state’s 5th congressional District more favorable to Democrats.

    But the Goochland Republican still enters his first reelection campaign facing turbulence, including accusations that he has done little for constituents and a Democratic field trying to flip a district where affordability concerns and dissatisfaction with Washington could reshape the race heading into the 2026 midterms.

    The 5th District covers a vast stretch of Central and Southside Virginia, running from Charlottesville and Albemarle County through Lynchburg and Danville and south toward the North Carolina border. It also extends east into parts of Goochland, Hanover and Powhatan counties near Richmond.

    Roughly 760,000 people live in the district, including about 575,000 registered voters.

    Republicans still hold a clear advantage there. President Donald Trump carried the district by 11 points in 2024 after Glenn Youngkin, the GOP’s 2021 gubernatorial nominee, won it by an even wider margin that year. But Democrats believe changing suburban voting patterns and economic frustration could give them an opening this cycle.

    Under the redistricting amendment invalidated last month by the Supreme Court of Virginia — a ruling later left in place by the U.S. Supreme Court — Democrats had expected the district to become friendlier to their party. Instead, the race will move forward under the current court-drawn congressional map from 2021.

    The Aug. 4 primary election will determine nominees in one of Virginia’s most closely watched congressional races this year.

     

    Incumbent draws a GOP challenge

     

    McGuire, a former U.S. Navy SEAL and state senator first elected to Congress in 2024, defeated then-U.S. Rep. Bob Good, R-Campbell, in one of the country’s nastiest nomination contests.

    The race quickly became a loyalty test tied to President Donald Trump — then running for a second term — after Good backed Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis during the 2024 presidential primary. Trump later endorsed McGuire, helping push him past the conservative incumbent by a narrow margin that triggered a recount.

    Now McGuire faces a Republican challenger in Louisa County real estate broker Melanie Lucero, who has focused much of her campaign on constituent services and what she describes as McGuire’s lack of accomplishments in Congress.

    “We need to send representatives who are going to help the 5th district and who are going to fight for us,” Lucero told Charlottesville’s WVIR earlier this month.

    Lucero has also argued that many voters across the sprawling district — the state’s largest — feel disconnected from McGuire and unable to get responses from his office.

    McGuire has closely aligned himself with Trump and Republican leadership in Congress, emphasizing border security, tax cuts and reducing federal spending. On his campaign website, McGuire says he is focused on “putting America first” while fighting inflation and government overreach.

    By May 27, McGuire had raised just over $1.4 million for his reelection bid and reported roughly $497,000 cash on hand. Lucero had raised a little more than $64,000 and reported about $34,000 cash on hand.

    David Richards, a political science professor at the University of Lynchburg, said the existence of a Republican primary challenge is notable for a Republican congressman from the 5th District.

    “Normally, an incumbent would not draw a serious challenger, but Lucero seems pretty serious,” he said. “She has really driven home McGuire’s lack of accomplishments in Washington and his general lack of interest in his own constituents.”

    Richards said McGuire has increased campaign appearances around the district but may still struggle to point to major legislative achievements, which “may hurt him in the primary or the general election.”

    Still, Richards said he does not expect McGuire to be defeated in the nomination contest.

    “I don’t see him losing the primary, especially since Bob Good is no longer running,” he said.

    Virginia’s 5th congressional District. (Photo courtesy of the Supreme Court of Virginia)

     

    Democrats consolidate around Perriello

     

    On the Democratic side, former U.S. Rep. Tom Perriello has emerged as the clear frontrunner in a field that once looked likely to become much larger under the proposed redistricting map.

    Perriello represented the 5th District from 2009 until 2011 after defeating longtime Republican U.S. Rep. Virgil Goode on the coattails of Barack Obama’s 2008 presidential wave. He launched his latest campaign late last year with a message heavily focused on affordability and economic pressure facing Virginia families.

    “It is not right that Virginians are working harder and harder just to afford the rising cost of food, electricity, and health care,” Perriello said at the time.

    After leaving Congress, Perriello served in the Obama and Biden administrations and later became president and CEO of the Open Society Foundations. He also mounted an unsuccessful run for governor in 2017.

    Several Democrats who had considered campaigns in a potentially redrawn district abandoned those plans after courts invalidated the redistricting amendment last month.

    Perriello now faces two remaining primary opponents: Suzanne Krzyzanowski and Rob Tracinski.

    Krzyzanowski, a physician and cancer researcher, has centered her campaign on healthcare, reproductive rights and scientific research funding. On her campaign website, she describes herself as a “doctor, scientist and advocate” focused on lowering costs and defending democratic institutions.

    Tracinski, a writer, political commentator and former Republican-turned-Democrat, has emphasized congressional independence and constitutional checks on executive power.

    Richards described Tracinski as an unconventional candidate whose message could still resonate with some voters.

    “Tracinski is an interesting alternative; he seems odd because he was part of the Tea Party, which tended to break with Republicans,” Richards said. “However, his message has been around reinforcing the powers and duties of Congress, and that squares with the Tea Party’s focus on constitutional rights.”

    However, Richards said Perriello’s name recognition and fundraising advantage make him the clear favorite for the nomination.

    “On the Democratic side, it seems like Perriello has the nomination locked up,” Richards said.

    The latest campaign finance reports reinforce that advantage.

    By May 27, Perriello had raised more than $1.4 million and reported roughly $1.1 million cash on hand, according to the latest campaign finance filings. Tracinski had raised about $44,000 with nearly $40,000 cash on hand, while Krzyzanowski had raised close to $16,000 and reported about $14,000 remaining.

     

    Affordability shapes the race

     

    Like many competitive congressional contests around the country, the race in Virginia’s 5th District is increasingly centered on affordability and cost-of-living concerns.

    Richards said both parties are trying to tap into voter frustration over prices and economic uncertainty, even though they blame very different causes.

    “The big issue in the 5th, as elsewhere, is affordability,” he said. “This seems to mean different things to each of the front-runners.”

    According to Richards, McGuire has largely embraced Republican arguments that tax cuts and deregulation will reduce economic pressure, while Democrats have tied rising prices and uncertainty to Republican control in Washington and the war against Iran.

    “McGuire wants to focus on tax cuts by the current administration, while Perriello wants to blame that same administration for the rise in prices,” Richards said. “Both are talking past each other in a way, both noting the affordability crisis but blaming different sources.”

    The district’s political makeup could ultimately determine how much room Democrats have to grow.

    Much of the district remains heavily conservative and rural, but Democrats have steadily improved in suburban and university-centered communities such as Charlottesville and Albemarle County. Lynchburg has also become somewhat more competitive in recent statewide elections.

    Richards said Perriello’s earlier victory in the district could help him, though he cautioned that both the lines and the political environment have changed significantly since 2008.

    “He did win the 5th in 2008, but that was a 5th with very different boundaries, plus he had the coattails of President Barack Obama’s big win,” Richards said. “This time will be different.”

    Richards said that Perriello would need overwhelming Democratic turnout, strong support from independents and at least some crossover Republican voters unhappy with Washington to seriously compete in November.

    “All of that is a tall order, but Perriello probably has a better shot at it than almost anyone else in the commonwealth,” he said.

    Even so, Richards said the race could remain competitive regardless of who emerges from the August primaries.

    “The question becomes, will enough voters in the middle vote for Perriello if things are still bad in the fall?” Richards said. “I am dubious that enough will swing to the Democrats, but it will be a close thing, even if McGuire wins in November.”

  • Luria to face Democratic challengers before a potential rematch with Kiggans in 2nd District

    Luria to face Democratic challengers before a potential rematch with Kiggans in 2nd District

    This summer, four Democratic candidates will face off in a primary for the chance to oust incumbent Republican representative Jen Kiggans in Virginia’s 2nd Congressional District.

    The Virginia Beach-anchored district is politically purple and often oscillates between partisan control, though in past years it had a decidedly Republican lean.

    Its nearly 600,000 residents backed Gov. Abigail Spanberger last year by 53% and analysts consider it flippable — making it a key contest that could help determine partisan control of Congress.

    All four Democratic primary candidates — which include the district’s former representative Elaine Luria, acute care doctor Nila Devanath, former USAID worker Patrick Mosolf and regional government official Bill Fleming — seek to hold Kiggans “accountable” and help congress provide a check and balance to the “corruption” of President Donald Trump.

    Who’s who

    Kiggans, a Navy veteran and nurse practitioner, has represented the district for two terms after ousting Luria, who also represented it for two terms. With no primary challenger, she did not do an interview for this story, but she did respond to questions by email.

    With Navy veteran Luria formerly representing the district, she already has backing from the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee along with Democratic leadership in Virginia including Gov. Abigail Spanberger and Sen. Louise Lucas, D-Portsmouth.

    During her time in Congress Luria backed the creation of the Affordable Care Act’s Enhanced Premium Tax Credits — which have since expired but helped reach more people struggling to afford healthcare. She also backed the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act, a range of energy efficiency and healthcare affordability measures.

    Devanath,the daughter of Bangladesh immigrants, is an acute care doctor but previously worked as a lawyer at a legal clinic defending domestic violence survivors.

    If elected, she plans to bring her legal and medical insights to Congress. She has already made trips to D.C. to meet with members of finance committees, she said, to prepare for how she can help address economic issues if she earns a seat on Capitol Hill.

    Virginia Beach Soil and Water Conservation District director Bill Fleming hopes to join the U.S. House Committee on Agriculture if elected so that he can help advance environmental laws. He shares many progressive policy priorities with some of his primary opponents but considers himself an “independent democrat.”

    From serving as director of a homeless shelter to time spent working for USAID, Mosolf said his time spent solving problems has helped him prepare to take that work to the nation’s legislative body. He was motivated to run and find new routes to solve problems after losing his job to Trump’s closure of USAID.

    Addressing the cost of living

    The rising cost of living, from groceries to housing to healthcare, is a motivating factor for Kiggans and all four Democratic candidates.

    Each candidate criticized Kiggans’ support for Trump’s tariffs, war with Iran, and a reconciliation bill that entails changes to Medicaid and hospital funding mechanisms. They also pointed out Kiggans’ vote to not renew expired Affordable Care Act subsidies.

    Luria said Kiggans expressed interest in bipartisan collaboration after ousting Luria from the seat in 2022, a stance she said was in contrast with Kiggans’ votes in favor of Trump policies.

    Ahead of the passage of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act last summer, Kiggans joined an open letter in opposition to aspects of the bill she ultimately voted for.

    Kiggans was previously outspoken about the need to renew expiring ACA tax credits, Luria said, even writing a letter in support of extending the credits, but ultimately changed her tune.

    Virginia Congressman Wittman among just 17 Republicans nationally to back ACA credits extension

    “Writing a letter that is in opposition to something you’re voting for — it just doesn’t work that way,” Luria said.

    In an email, Kiggans said her initial support of renewing the credits was conditional on “meaningful reforms” to strengthen protections against “waste fraud and abuse.”

    All Democratic challengers said addressing affordability issues will be a priority for them, if elected.

    “I think it’s going to take a lot of small things. It’s not just pushing a magic button,” Mosolf said.

    All the Democratic contenders said they would work to extend the ACA subsidies and undo the healthcare provisions of the reconciliation bill.

    They are supportive of a massive bipartisan housing bill that is nearing Trump’s desk and could see his signature; if it doesn’t, though, they said they will try again.

    On healthcare, Devanath and Fleming are backing a growing Democratic embrace of universal healthcare. The idea is to replace private insurance companies with government-run insurance available to everyone.

    Because uninsured and underinsured people are more likely to put off primary care, Devanath said she’s increasingly treating people in critical condition or for whom more drastic measures could have been prevented.

    This is why she’ll back the Medicare For All Act, she said.

    “You have to have people who are willing to be bold,” Devanath said. “Instead of following incremental change, let’s go for the gold. Put it out there, stick to it, and see where we land.”

    Devanath and Fleming also support the Working Americans’ Tax Cut Act, which would create a tiered surtax on income over a million dollars.

    “It’s one thing to sit and grumble about something while you’re watching television, but it’s better to try to get a seat at the table, so that you can maybe affect change,” Fleming said.

    Stock trading crackdown, campaign finance reform

    Luria said Congress should hold itself accountable by banning stock trading of elected officials, pointing to what she called a “long list” of ways Trump has capitalized on his presidency to financially benefit his family or allies.

    As a congresswoman, Gov. Abigail Spanberger championed an effort to prevent lawmakers from capitalizing on sensitive information and disproportionately benefitting from their positions of power.

    Luria was not always on board with the proposal, calling it “bullsh-t,” but her stance has evolved into support.

    “Congress can set the example and actually walk the walk,” she said.

    Kiggans is co-sponsor of a similar, more recent effort.

    Wittman seeks to keep 1st District seat, as Democratic challengers face crowded primary

    All of the Democratic contenders want to address how candidates receive donations for their campaigns by reigning in large political action committees’ donations along with “dark money” contributions, large entities’ donations that are not publicly disclosed.

    Luria’s Democratic challengers have taken issue with her updated stance on campaign finance. In 2018, she’d signed a pledge to not take corporate money before accepting $34,000 from corporate PACs in 2020.

    Luria’s donors have included the Democratic Majority for Israel PAC and some of her donors have also contributed to American Israel Public Affairs Committee. After a United Nations committee concluded that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza, Luria’s challengers said it would be unethical for them to take money from groups that support Israel. (Israeli officials have denounced the report as “distorted and false,” according to NPR.)

    While AIPAC has historically supported both parties so long as candidates are “pro-Israel,” the group’s supporthas emerged as a rift among some Democratic candidates in recent election cycles.

    Kiggans, who has also been boosted by AIPAC, has supported U.S. involvement in Israel’s affairs. In 2024 she voted for military aid to Israel in a package of bills she said were “not perfect,” but needed at the time.

    Kiggans defends record, discusses future

    Kiggans recently reaffirmed that she “couldn’t be a stauncher supporter” of Trump and U.S. military actions against Iran.

    The conflict, initiated by America, has contributed to spiking gas prices because Iran is a critical global player in oil trades.

    “When the Iran conflict is over, gas prices will come down and we’ll work to get them even lower with American energy dominance,” Kiggans said.

    While Democrats have lambasted Kiggans for voting for the Big Beautiful Bill, she emphasized that the measure also “cut taxes on social security, tips and overtime” to “put more money in the pockets of Virginians.”

    The two-term congresswoman has bucked Trump’s administration over a new rule that will exclude post-baccalaureate nursing degrees from a “professional degrees” list, joining a bipartisan letter in opposition.

    Kiggans was also critical of the Trump administration’s efforts to stop construction of Dominion Energy’s offshore wind project, which is located in her district.

    Still, her Democratic opponents said she has too often aligned with GOP majorities and the president, including her endorsement of federal workforce trimming despite the 2nd district having among the largest concentration of federal workers in the state.

    “The bottom line is she has put Trump over the people of Hampton Roads,” Luria said. “People will hold her accountable at the ballot box in November.”

    The Democratic hopefuls will face off for the chance to defeat Kiggans in the Democratic state primary election on Aug. 4.

    Editor’s note: This story has been corrected to reflect that Luria has not received donations from AIPAC, as previously stated, but some of her donors have contributed to the organization.

  • Wittman seeks to keep 1st District seat, as Democratic challengers face crowded primary

    Wittman seeks to keep 1st District seat, as Democratic challengers face crowded primary

    After a grueling redistricting battle that spanned months and cost millions, the congressional district lines Virginia adopted in 2021 remain in place as Democratic contenders line up to challenge longtime Republican incumbent Robb Wittman in this fall’s race to represent the state’s 1st Congressional District.

    The 1st District stretches from Colonial Beach down the eastern coast of the state to Williamsburg, and hooks over the north side of Henrico County into part of Chesterfield.

    Over 615,000 registered voters live in the 1st District, with the largest portions of the population in Henrico, Chesterfield, Hanover, and James City counties. The majority of voters there are white, but U.S. Census Bureau data shows diverse demographics: nearly 13% of voters are Black, almost 7% identify as multiracial and 6% are Asian. About 6% of voters are Hispanic or Latino.

    Voters in the area have historically favored Republicans, with 51.6% choosing Donald Trump in the 2024 presidential election and 57.8% voting for Glenn Youngkin in 2021, helping send the GOP newcomer to the governor’s mansion.

    That tide shifted in 2025, when Abigail Spanberger was elected governor with a margin of 51% in the district. Spanberger’s victory supercharged scrutiny from up-ballot Democrats, who saw it as a sign the district could be flipped in the 2026 midterm elections.

    Virginia Congressional District 1 (Photo courtesy Supreme Court of Virginia)

    Wittman to defend seat of nearly two decades

    U.S. Rep. Rob Wittman, R-Westmoreland, has represented the 1st District in Congress since 2007. Before taking office, he served in the Virginia Department of Health’s Division of Shellfish Sanitation for 26 years, which has shaped his policies and tenure on the House Natural Resources Committee.

    Wittman was one of just a handful of House Republicans nationwide to join Democrats in voting to extend the Enhanced Premium Tax Credits through the Affordable Care Act for three years. The measure ultimately failed.

    Wittman has consistently supported H.R. 1, the One Big Beautiful Bill, which excluded the credits when passed last summer, critics have highlighted. The congressman also faced blowback from constituents last year who said he avoided in-person town halls amid sweeping federal budget cuts and layoffs.

    Promising to guard against “reckless government spending” on his website, Wittman also supports enhanced border security – including the construction of a wall bordering Mexico to staunch illegal immigration.

    Wittman constituents host town hall in his absence to address immigration, federal funding concerns

    Wittman did not respond to requests for comment on his campaign and has not completed The Virginia Mercury’s candidate questionnaire, sent to all contenders on June 1.

    Seven Democrats vie to take on Wittman

    Shannon Taylor, the frontrunner in the race to flip the 1st District to blue, is an experienced prosecutor and has spent the last 13 years as the Henrico Commonwealth’s Attorney. She was the first woman to hold the position and the first Democrat to be elected to the seat in 40 years.

    Her courtroom experience undergirds one of her key campaign priorities: managing political corruption. She also advocates for congressional stock trading to be made illegal.

    Taylor is also committed to protecting healthcare access in the wake of the sweeping changes from H.B. 1, she said.

    “More than 44,000 Virginians have lost their ACA coverage, and rural hospitals like Rappahannock General are at risk of closure,” Taylor said. “I’ll fight to lower health care costs by extending the ACA tax credits, expand Medicare’s ability to negotiate drug prices, and protect Medicaid.”

    Shannon Taylor launches bid to represent Virginia’s 1st Congressional District

    She previously ran for the office of the Attorney General but lost the primary to Jay Jones, who was elected to the seat last fall. Taylor’s campaign has raised $1,300,040, as of the latest campaign finance reporting.

    Political newcomer and lawyer Salaam Bhatti’s priorities center on expanding Medicare access, increasing taxes for the highest earners and reforming political candidates’ campaign finance process.

    The former Virginia Poverty Law Center attorney is a child of immigrants who relied on programs like WIC and free school meals while growing up. Bhatti focused his VPLC work on expanding SNAP access and at the Food Research and Action Center, worked against a farm bill addition that would have made major cuts to SNAP.

    Wittman has had more than enough time to better address issues of poverty and healthcare access in the district, Bhatti said.

    “Rob Wittman has been in office for nearly 20 years and in that time our neighbors have gotten poorer, healthcare has become more expensive, corporate donors have gotten more access, and Rob has become a multimillionaire through stock trades,” he said.

    Bhatti has raised $184,834 as of March 31 reporting.

    Tim Cywinski, another Democratic challenger, is not new to the political sphere. He spent years as a community advocate and has worked on the political side as an intern for the Obama campaign when he was 17.

    Cywinski’s brother was born with a heart defect, and the cost of his care contributed to his family’s skyrocketing medical debt and eventual loss of their home. That experience, Cywinski said, gave him personal experience with the challenges of America’s healthcare system and fuels his interest in addressing it via federal legislation.

    Wittman represents what Cywinski characterized as the political establishment, which doesn’t provide solutions for constituents’ healthcare needs, tax burdens and other priorities. His campaign is about finding ways to take big money out of politics, he said.

    “My main platform is what I call the fair shot agenda because unless you’re already powerful or unless you’re really wealthy and well connected, no one feels like they have a fair shot in this country and our politics upholds that reality,” Cywinski said.

    As of March 31, Cywinski has raised just over $8,113, the smallest campaign coffer of any candidate in the race. He lives in the greater Richmond area.

    Jason Knapp has served his country for 21 years as a naval officer and said his military background shapes his policy goals.

    A former defense fellow assigned to the Armed Services Committee and deputy director of legislative affairs for the U.S. European Command, Knapp has taken aim at the cost Virginians and Americans are paying for the Iran war, a conflict Wittman has supported.

    “Food, fuel, energy, housing, and medical costs are skyrocketing and people are literally choosing between buying food, buying medicine, or paying bills — and the man who represents this district is at worst complicit in these hardships, and at best, apathetic to the real problems people are facing,” Knapp said.

    Universal healthcare is another top priority for Knapp, who aims to counter the privatization of the Veterans Administration, which he said creates barriers for servicemembers to access essential care.

    Knapp has raised $501,287 as of March 31.

    Ericka Kopp, a healthcare attorney and a caregiver to her husband who is a disabled veteran, said Wittman’s support of the congressional bill that stripped funding for Medicaid compelled her to run to replace him.

    Kopp earned her law degree from the University of Richmond and clerked for a Virginia circuit court judge. She said she never considered running for office until her frustrations with Wittman bubbled to the surface because he did not attend several town hall meetings in her district in 2025.

    “He’s not accessible to the people, let alone accountable to us. In April of last year, I started thinking that anyone could do a better job, even me. And then I thought, ‘Why not me?’” Kopp said.

    Her campaign priorities include expanding Medicaid and healthcare access. She has raised $13,867 so far.

    Business lawyer and small law firm owner, Mel Tull believes he can help bridge the partisan divide in Congress and said his experience successfully navigating competing interests can earn the trust of other lawmakers and the people they represent.

    Like several other Democratic contenders, Tull said Wittman’s 18 years in Congress is too long a time to serve without better addressing issues like healthcare, affordability, and government functionality.

    “My job has been to evaluate competing interests, understand risks and consequences, and help people make sound decisions. I’ve spent my career bringing people together to solve difficult problems, not score political points,” Tull said.

    Tull served in the Army before branching into business law. His campaign has raised $179,991, to date.

    Elizabeth Dempsey Beggs, the final Democratic contender in the contest, was one of the first women to serve as a tank commander in a combat role in the U.S. Army. The veteran now works in the package and manufacturing industry.

    She said concerns about affordability and government transparency drove her to enter the race. Her campaign priorities also include protecting the right to vote and reproductive healthcare access.

    As a mother, foster parent, and business leader, I’ve seen firsthand how decisions made in Washington affect families every single day,” Beggs said. “Whether it’s the cost of childcare, access to healthcare, housing affordability, or the lack of accountability in government, people are working harder than ever and feeling like they have less and less to show for it.”

    Public office should be a service and not a long-standing career, Beggs added, pointing out Wittman’s tenure in the seat. So far, she has raised $64,494.

    Early voting for the primary election for the first congressional district begins on June 18. Election day is Aug. 4.

  • State report finds 13 rural hospitals vulnerable to closure

    State report finds 13 rural hospitals vulnerable to closure

    A new report by Virginia’s Joint Commission on Health Care found 13 of Virginia’s 36 rural hospitals are at distant or immediate risk of closure, as state lawmakers and their constituents work to close healthcare access gaps in the commonwealth’s farthest-flung regions.

    The commission based its analysis on patients’ socioeconomic demographics and insurance types as well as hospitals’ financial information to determine risk levels for closure.

    King William resident Celeste Garrett’s go-to facility, VCU Health Tappahannock Hospital, is on the list. It takes her about 20 minutes to get there and she worries about an emergency if it were to close. That would make VCU’s Richmond location her closest resource, an hour or more away “depending on the traffic.”

    “Minutes matter. Seconds matter,” Franklin County resident Penny Blue said as she joined Garrett on a press call with the state’s health committee chairs Tuesday.

    After a brain aneurysm in 2021, Blue was taken 15 minutes to her nearest hospital and then air-lifted to another one in Roanoke (which otherwise would have been an hour commute).

    With rural hospitals already shoring up access in Southwest and South Side Virginia, the women expressed concern about themselves and their neighbors.

    Some hospitals’ struggles can be traced back years and include demographics and economic regional shifts. But, the current strains are attributed to recent Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement rate cuts, a reconciliation bill Congress passed last summer that makes thousands of Virginians vulnerable to losing health insurance, and Congress’ failure to renew expired Affordable Care Act credits.

    33,000 Virginians have already lost that form of insurance.

    Screenshot from a June 2026 Virginia Joint Commission on Health Care presentation.

    “(Rural hospitals) have always been living on the edge, but with H.R. 1 kicking in our hospitals across Virginia will lose about $2 billion dollars a year,” said Sen. Barbara Favola, D-Arlington, who chairs the Senate’s Education and Health Committee.

    Uninsured people are more likely to delay care until dire situations, so hospital ERs are bracing for surges of patients. Free clinics, long considered public health safety nets, are also preparing for people to rely on them more.

    “We have yet to feel the pain (of the bill) but it’s coming,” King William resident Garrett said on Tuesday’s call.

    After absorbing unpaid or under-paid care from uninsured patients, health systems will eventually negotiate insurance rates with private insurers. This may lead to higher premiums for people with private insurance down the line, health systems have warned.

    Sentara chief administrative operator Aubrey Layne said in a recent phone call that the hospital chain has become “more purposeful lately about getting the public to understand” the challenges.

    That chain has facilities around the state, with its Sentara Halifax Regional Hospital on the new at-risk list.

    Still, Virginia Hospital and Healthcare Association spokesman Julian Walker said hospitals will continue to adapt rather than close overnight or forever.

    “We will see what other measures might have to be taken to continue to sustain hospitals longterm,” he said.

    Those efforts are already playing out in some cases. Citing Congress’ bill as a contributing factor, Valley Health changed staffing contracts and trimmed services this spring. Last winter, Centra closed its labor and delivery unit at a hospital in Farmville. Last fall, Shenandoah Valley’s Augusta Health closed three clinics.

    House Health and Human Services chair Del. Rodney Willett, D-Henrico, emphasized that the federal government placed heavy burdens on state and local governments, calling it a “situation no one wants to be in.”

    The state’s pending budget has proposals to help the state comply with additional requirements for Medicaid and Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program verifications and could support a state-level ACA subsidy to plug some holes.

    Favola and Willett said the efforts cannot fully heal what federal actions have created but are a reflection of bipartisan assistance.

    As both lawmakers have served on bipartisan health-focused committees and commissions, Willett said Congressional Republicans should be held accountable for pushing through the reconciliation bill but that going forward, both parties will have to work together to create lasting solutions.

    “This report is a nonpartisan report done by the joint commission, we all sit on that — Republicans and Democrats,” Willett said. “The facts are the facts and what’s being done to us by Washington is unconscionable.”

  • Congress nears major bipartisan housing bill with support from Virginia lawmakers

    Congress nears major bipartisan housing bill with support from Virginia lawmakers

    Last summer, U.S. Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., criticized Congress for often “kicking the can” on federal housing policy. One year later, federal lawmakers are close to sending a large bipartisan housing bill to President Donald Trump’s desk.

    Dubbed the 21st Century ROAD To Housing Act, the effort is led by Sens. Tom Scott, R-S.C., and Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass. along with U.S. Reps. French Hill, R-Ark., and Maxine Waters, D-Calif.

    A key provision of the bill aligns with one of Trump’s goals to restrict large investment firms from buying up too many single-family homes. The practice has stifled first-time homebuyers, and state lawmakers from both parties in Virginia have previously introduced similar restrictions.

    Trump’s administration has expressed it “strongly supports” the federal bill — a clue that he would likely sign it.

    Other provisions in the bill encourage housing development in underused or vacant commercial properties like strip malls.

    “They can be converted to housing because they’ve already got power, parking and utilities around,” said Warner, who spearheaded that portion of the bill.

    The concept, along with incentives to build manufactured homes, drew inspiration from legislation also introduced in Virginia.

    A “housing near jobs” bill by Sen. Schuyler VanValkenburg, D-Henrico, and Del. Dan Helmer, D-Fairfax, did not become law, but its similarity to Warner’s proposal could give supporters hope to try again, VanValkenburg said. The bill would encourage multifamily and mixed-use development by right in certain commercial corridors so more people can live closer to where they work and reduce suburban sprawl.

    VanValkenburg’s manufactured homes bill, which was recently signed into law by Gov. Abigail Spanberger, can help bring those types of homes onto the market in areas that need or want them. Likewise, Congress’ pending bill would treat the factory-built style of home the same as a site-built home when it comes to zoning and financing.

    Slate of new Virginia laws address health care and housing affordability

    “Housing is tricky because a lot of it is local, but of course state and federal governments play a role too,” VanValkenburg said.

    To guide local governments, which typically control land use decisions like housing, the federal bill would also direct the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development to publish model zoning guidelines for states and localities to explore in their communities.

    “We also have to be honest that zoning is a local prerogative — too often, it’s a local prerogative to say ‘no,’” Housing Opportunities Made Equal Director Thomas Okuda Fitzpatrick said. “That’s why we need strong state actions and policy solutions in parallel with the 21st Century Road to Housing Act.”

    All of Virginia’s congressional representatives from both parties voted to advance the bill. But with differences between the House and Senate versions still unresolved, lawmakers cautioned that final passage — and Trump’s signature — are not guaranteed yet.

    ‘Devil’s in the details’

    U.S. Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., speaks on the patio of Legend Brewing Co. in Richmond on April 9, 2026. (Photo by Charlotte Rene Woods/Virginia Mercury)

    One major sticking point involves a provision the House stripped from its version of the bill that would have required developers of build-to-rent housing to sell properties within seven years of construction completion.

    Build-to-rent developments allow tenants to rent single-family homes instead of apartments and can serve people who are not ready to buy or cannot yet afford home ownership but need more space. Supporters of the original provision argued it could help create a path to homeownership for renters, while developers warned the time limit could discourage investment in that type of housing altogether.

    The National Association of Home Builders praised the House changes and said it hopes the Senate accepts them.

    In a statement, Chairman Bill Owens said that keeping the original provision would have “reduced supply.”

    The House version of the bill also includes provisions to streamline examinations for smaller banks, which Owens called “meaningful relief to community banks.”

    “We urge the Senate to move quickly to send a once-in-a-generation housing bill to President Trump to expand housing supply and address America’s housing affordability challenges,” Owens wrote.

    Warner said he is cautiously optimistic the Senate can get the legislation across the finish line.

    “Never underestimate the ability of Congress to screw up a sure thing,” Warner said in a recent phone call.

    He added that the compromise feels “fairly reasonable, so I think we’ll get it done, but there are some strong personalities involved.”

    Fitzpatrick said corporate ownership has long concerned his organization, particularly when investors target low-income neighborhoods to “change the ownership landscape there.” But he described build-to-rent housing as “more nuanced” because “they provide a housing option.”

    “As with so many things, the devil’s in the details,” he said.

    Still, Fitzpatrick said his organization is pleased to see federal lawmakers exploring solutions to the country’s housing shortage. He also praised provisions aimed at boosting federal funding streams local governments and housing groups rely on, even as some of those programs face proposed cuts from Trump.

    Community Development Block Grants, for example, have long provided funding for local governments to build affordable housing, revitalize neighborhoods and support economic development projects in low-and-moderate-income communities.

    Warner’s fellow Democratic Virginia senator, Tim Kaine, said Congress has repeatedly blocked Trump’s attempts to eliminate the grants because lawmakers hear how “enormously popular” they are with local governments across the country. Kaine, a former Richmond mayor, said he saw their impact firsthand.

    Overall, Kaine said he does not view the differences between the House and Senate bills as insurmountable and is prepared to help colleagues “get this done.”

    With congressional midterm elections later this year expected to intensify partisan fights, lawmakers may soon return to attacking one another over policy differences.

    But VanValkenburg said the housing bill shows bipartisan cooperation is still possible.

    “In a day and age where we all have, rightfully, a lot of cynicism about Congress and its ability to act, this seems like a bipartisan action on an issue that needs action,” VanValkenburg said.