We now have had several weeks to digest the city-initiated 207-page report on the July 8 and August 11-12, 2017, demonstrations in Charlottesville. While there are many nuances in the report of Timothy Heaphy and his team, and various ways by which it may be interpreted, the conclusions are clear — the city and law enforcement failed in two critical areas. First, the city and law enforcement were unable to ensure that citizens’ First Amendment rights of free speech were protected, whether that speech involved the hateful speech of the neo-Nazis and white supremacists, or the speech of counter demonstrators. Second, the city and law enforcement failed to protect citizens from the violent confrontations that occurred on August 11 and 12. Heaphy did a thorough job of reviewing the events, and we need to pay careful attention to it. [Read more…]
The Veto Session
The Marathon and Maelstrom of the Veto Session —
Democrats Sustain All Governor’s Vetoes
The legislative year ends with what’s called the “veto session.” This year’s was held Wednesday, April 5, 2017, the day when the legislature considers the Governor’s vetoes and his proposed amendments to various bills. It is typically one of the longest floor sessions of the year and, as the Democratic floor leader, one of the most intense, as every vote counts on almost every issue. This year, Governor McAuliffe vetoed an unprecedented number of House bills, 21 in total. [Read more…]
Budget Passage and Adjournment
On Saturday, February 25, 2017, we adjourned this year’s “short session” of the General Assembly with passage of a modified budget. The revised budget places total General Fund spending for FY2017 and FY2018 at $40.47 billion. [Read more…]
Crossover and Budget
We’ve hit the mid-point of session, marked by what we call “crossover,” the day that all bills from one body cross over to the other in order to be considered. Many of the most heavily-contested bills arrive on this day, leading to long hours and fierce debates.
My primary focus continues to be passing legislation to help build the New Virginia Economy. That means pushing bills that spur job creation and that provide Virginians a much-needed raise. It also means supporting investments in education at all levels. We have made progress in some areas, but not in others. [Read more…]
An Open Letter to Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives
Dear Friends and Colleagues:
As the Democratic Leader, and member of the minority party, in the Virginia House of Delegates, I know how you feel. While our Commonwealth has elected Democrats in all five of the statewide elected posts, Republican control of the redistricting process has given them a super majority in our House of Delegates. In Virginia, we have experienced how the Rules operate to prevent even the most popular public initiatives from getting to the floor. Virginia House Democrats have proposed a variety of common sense gun safety initiatives in the last 10 years, only to see them die in small subcommittees of five persons or less, often without any recorded vote. We have railed against Republican-sponsored initiatives that repealed Virginia’s “one-handgun-a-month” law and allowed guns in bars. We have fought initiatives that would allow guns in airports and guns in schools. And all of this has taken place in the context of our major gun tragedy at Virginia Tech, which, until Orlando, was the largest mass shooting of its type in American history, and the public execution of television reporter, Allison Parker, and her colleague, Adam Ward, on live television in August 2015.
Like you, we have participated in our “moments of silence” and expressed our sympathies for the victims of gun violence. Like you, we have prayed for the victims and their families. And like you, increasing numbers of us are now saying, “Our thoughts and prayers are no longer enough.” Like the American public, we are asking, “What will it take, and when will we act?”
With your courageous action, you have brought attention to this issue in a way that few of us would have thought possible. Like you, we are mindful of the rules, procedures, and history of our legislative bodies. Virginia is proud of asserting its claim to be the longest consecutively operated Democratic legislative body in the Western Hemisphere and we, therefore, respect institutional procedures. It is for that reason that we understand, more than most, the significance of your actions and why you have departed from established procedures.
Your efforts bring to mind the sentiments expressed by Dr. Martin Luther King’s famous “Letter from a Birmingham Jail.” You undoubtedly recall that King addressed his letter to his fellow clergymen who had expressed concern about the tactics of the civil rights movement in confronting racism. In Dr. King’s letter, which includes the often quoted phrase “injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere,” he challenges his colleagues and our citizens to embrace the “tension in society” created by protest “so that individuals could rise from the bondage of myth and half truths to the unfettered realm of creative analysis and objective appraisal (in order that we might) rise…to the majestic heights of understanding and brotherhood.”
This is what you are seeking to do – create a tension and insist that the voices of the majority are heard. And those voices speak loudly and clearly for common sense gun safety measures.
In the days and weeks to come, you will continue to hear the drumbeat of those who would seek to do nothing. They will wrap themselves in the blanket of the 2nd Amendment, failing to recognize that the rights set forth therein, as are the rights of the other amendments, are not unfettered; our right to free speech does not allow us to cry “fire” in a crowded theater and most realize that prohibitions against individuals owning bazookas and surface-to-air missiles are reasonable restrictions to the right to bear arms. You will be criticized for violating rules over which you have no control. You will be accused of participating in a “political stunt.” But with all of this criticism, I hope that you will continue to stand strongly and firmly for our great American tradition of political protest and our assertion that the will of the majority ought to be recognized and realized in promoting common sense gun safety measures in this country.
I speak for many Virginians in saying we are ready to help and to make the change necessary to help our country become a safer place.
Sincerely,
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