Virginia

Virginia's new AG joined lawsuits on day one after his predecessor refused. Abortion rights are on the November ballot.

Latest: June 30, 2026 Latest BriefVirginia Rights Vote Nov. 2026June 30, 2026

Virginia’s 2025 elections gave Democrats the governor’s office, attorney general, lieutenant governor, and a 64-36 House of Delegates majority. Governor Abigail Spanberger won by 15 points and the largest raw vote margin in state history. That mandate is already being tested by federal job losses, benefit cuts, and immigration raids.


Federal lawsuits

Attorney General Jay Jones announced seven federal lawsuits on his first day in office, January 17, 2026. No warm-up period. No quiet transition.

The suits target dismantling of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, illegal firing of 10,000 HHS workers, and a new rule stripping Public Service Loan Forgiveness eligibility. Other cases challenge USDA guidance that kicked lawful permanent residents off SNAP and efforts to block Medicaid reimbursements to Planned Parenthood.

Jones also reversed his predecessor’s position on Virginia Beach city council representation and restored in-state tuition for immigrant and undocumented students that the previous AG had bargained away.

TargetWhat Jones challenged
Consumer Financial Protection BureauJoined multistate suit against dismantling
HHS workforceChallenged illegal firing of 10,000 workers
Department of EducationChallenged dismantling and subsequent firings
Public Service Loan ForgivenessMoved to block rule stripping eligibility
SNAP eligibilityChallenged USDA guidance restricting lawful permanent residents
Planned ParenthoodSought to join cases protecting Medicaid reimbursements
Election interferenceJoined fight against Trump executive orders targeting elections

The previous AG, Jason Miyares, spent his final weeks ordering VCU and UVA Health to stop gender-affirming care for patients under 19, entering a consent decree to not enforce the conversion therapy ban, and leading a multistate effort against gender identity protections in Title IX. Jones inherited an AG’s office that had been pointed at Virginians instead of defending them.


Federal workforce

Virginia lost 23,500 civilian federal jobs in 2025. In a state where the federal workforce anchors entire regional economies from Northern Virginia to Hampton Roads, that number hits housing markets, school enrollments, and local tax bases all at once.

100,913 Virginians kicked off SNAP between July 2025 and January 2026

Medicaid enrollment dropped by 365,719 people compared to 2023. Starting January 2027, Medicaid expansion enrollees must prove 80 hours per month of work, education, or community service or lose coverage. That paperwork burden will knock more people off the rolls even when they qualify.

Senator Tim Kaine pointed out that $1 billion diverted to Trump’s ballroom could instead help Virginians, and criticized the $1.5 trillion military budget request paired with deep domestic cuts. The Trump budget is expected to cost Virginia hundreds of millions in the next state budget cycle.

Federal jobs lost 23,500 civilian positions eliminated in 2025
SNAP removals 100,913 people kicked off food assistance in 6 months
Medicaid decline 365,719 fewer enrollees compared to 2023
Work requirements 80 hours/month starting January 2027 or lose Medicaid

Immigration

Governor Spanberger signed Executive Order 16 in May 2026, restricting ICE activity on state property including schools, hospitals, courthouses, and polling places. She had already ordered state law enforcement to exit federal 287(g) immigration agreements in February.

”Kids in elementary school are afraid to get on the bus, neighbors fear being targeted based on their appearance at the grocery store, and workers are not showing up at their jobs.”

Governor Abigail Spanberger, on Executive Order 16

Spanberger also signed HB 1482 and SB 352 to back up the executive order with legislative authority. The laws limit how state and local law enforcement can cooperate with federal immigration operations.

Spanberger called out a specific failure. Federal agents wearing masks during enforcement operations in other states led to confusion, fear, and the murders of Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minnesota. Virginia’s order requires accountability and identification from federal officers operating on state property.

If Virginia enforces these protections

  • Schools, hospitals, courthouses, and polling places remain safe from ICE raids.
  • Local police departments rebuild community trust that 287(g) agreements damaged.
  • Other states with new Democratic leadership have a legislative model to follow.

If enforcement is blocked or rolled back

  • Federal agents operate without accountability on state property.
  • Immigrant families avoid schools, hospitals, and courthouses out of fear.
  • Local economies lose workers who stop showing up to jobs.

Public schools

Virginia school systems removed 223 book titles from library shelves between 2020 and 2025. Seventy-five percent of those removals were concentrated in just five school divisions. Hanover County alone pulled 125 titles.

A JLARC study found the majority of removals came from school systems incorrectly applying Youngkin’s 2022 book challenge law. The law did not require most of those removals. School administrators misread it, and students lost access to books they had a right to read.

$50 million+ in federal grants at risk for five Northern Virginia districts that refused to roll back transgender student protections

The Trump administration placed Fairfax County, Arlington, Alexandria, Prince William, and Loudoun on “high-risk status” in August 2025. Those districts refused to ban trans students from bathrooms and locker rooms matching their gender identity. The federal Department of Education says the policies violate Title IX. The districts are now required to pay expenses upfront and request reimbursement, a financial squeeze designed to force compliance.

Youngkin’s administration had already issued model policies allowing teachers to misgender trans students, prohibiting different names or pronouns without written parental permission, and barring trans students from sports teams matching their gender identity. The new state leadership has not yet reversed those model policies.

Book removals by the numbers

MetricDetail
Total titles removed223 across Virginia school systems
Concentration75% in just 5 school divisions
Top removerHanover County: 125 titles
Most banned bookGender Queer by Maia Kobabe (removed by 7 systems)
JLARC findingMajority of removals misapplied the 2022 law
National rank5th highest number of book bans in prior school year

Constitutional amendments

House Democrats advanced four constitutional amendments on the first day of the 2026 session. Spanberger signed bills sending three of them toward November 2026 ballots after the state Supreme Court struck down the redistricting measure.

The amendments cover reproductive rights (abortion, contraception, fertility treatment, pregnancy-related care), marriage equality (removing Virginia’s defunct same-sex marriage ban), and voting-rights restoration (automatic restoration after completing a felony sentence). These are not symbolic. If voters pass them, future governors and legislatures cannot undo the protections without another constitutional amendment.

Reproductive rights Protects abortion, contraception, fertility treatment, and pregnancy-related care
Marriage equality Removes Virginia’s defunct same-sex marriage ban from the constitution
Voting rights Automatic restoration after completing a felony sentence
Redistricting Approved by voters 50.7%-49.3%, then struck down by the state Supreme Court

Virginia is the only state that completely prohibits consecutive gubernatorial terms. That means every four years, political control can shift. Constitutional protections are the only way to lock in rights that survive the next governor.

Spanberger also signed laws raising the minimum wage to $15/hour and banning ghost guns. The legislative session showed what a 64-36 majority can do. The amendments test whether voters will make the results permanent.


Protect yourself right now

  1. Learn the three amendment questions. Reproductive rights, marriage equality, and voting-rights restoration will be on the November 2026 ballot. Read the actual ballot language before the campaign noise starts.

  2. Verify your registration. Use the Virginia Department of Elections voter portal and confirm your address, polling place, and ID requirements.

  3. Check your SNAP and Medicaid status. If you receive benefits, keep your contact information current and respond to every renewal notice. Missed paperwork is the fastest way to lose coverage.

  4. Contact your school board about book access and trans student policies. Ask whether your district correctly applied the 2022 law and whether Youngkin-era model policies on trans students have been updated.

  5. Tell your state legislators to fund the mandate. The $15 minimum wage, ghost gun ban, and immigration protections all need enforcement funding. Laws without budgets are press releases.

Call Your Senators
Mark Warner Democrat
202-224-2023 Senate profile →
Tim Kaine Democrat
202-224-4024 Senate profile →
Governor Abigail Spanberger (D) 804-786-2211
Events

Show Up Locally

July 4th Norfolk Democratic Committee Breakfast (RSVP Needed)

Community Event · Norfolk City Democratic Committee

5802 E Virginia Beach Blvd 140, Norfolk, VA, 23502

Celebrate our nation's 250th birthday with the Norfolk Democratic Committee! Please join the Norfolk Democrats for our monthly breakfast this Saturday, July 4th from 8:30 to 10:00 a.m. at Boss.

Mobilize

Fight for Democracy - Stop the War / Out with ICE [Tysons VA]

Visibility Event · Indivisible

Gosnell Rd, Tysons, VA, 22102

Third Act and Indivisible are sponsoring this weekly Fight for Democracy - Stop the War - Out with ICE protest. We are grassroots groups in all 50 states that believe in the possibility of change and.

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Signs of Democracy Arlington

Rally · Indivisible

2710 S Glebe Rd, Arlington, VA, 22206

[PLEASE REPLACE THE TEXT BELOW WITH YOUR SPECIFIC EVENT DETAILS BUT LEAVE THE NON-VIOLENCE CLAUSE IN THE DESCRIPTION - THANK YOU] We've been showing up every Saturday since February 2025 to protest.

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Peninsula Indivisible Stand Up Sundays

Rally · Indivisible

Jefferson Avenue & Oyster Point Road, Newport News, VA, 23602

This a Peninsula Indivisible event! Theme is Your Choice Bring a sign with a message that is near to your heart. This is a peaceful protest. Please do not bring weapons of any kind. please no.

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Signs of Democracy Arlington

Rally · Indivisible

2710 S Glebe Rd, Arlington, VA, 22206

We have been meeting here every Sunday since February 2025 to protest the growing authoritarianism in our country and the increasing threat to our rights. We have fabulous music and creative signs .

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WofA Sunday Bridge Brigades

Visibility Event · Indivisible

2100 21st St N, Arlington, VA, 22201

Join us for our Sunday Bridge Brigades, sharing important messages to vehicles below and on the bridge roadway. We provide the message, you provide the energy. You may bring your own signs if you.

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Knock Your Block: Coastal Virginia Canvass

Working Families Party

This event’s address is private. Sign up for more details, Norfolk, VA, 23504

Join Working Families Power and our Virginia Wolf Pack for a Hear America canvass , part of a national project to listen to working-class people about what’s getting harder and what they’re ready to.

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Arlington Democrats Picnic and Straw Poll

Community Event · Arlington Democrats

850 N Lexington St, Arlington, VA, 22205

LINK TO TICKETS: Join the Arlington Democrats for an afternoon of food, games, community, and grassroots energy at our Picnic and Straw Poll on Saturday, July 11th from 1:00, 3:30 PM at the Bon Air.

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Briefs

What Changed Recently

Reproductive Rights June 30, 2026

Virginia's November Ballot Will Decide Abortion, IVF & Contraception Rights

Virginia voters will decide in November 2026 whether to permanently embed abortion, IVF, and contraception protections into the state constitution, four

Gun Safety Updated June 25, 2026

13 Virginia Prosecutors Say They Won't Enforce the State's New Assault Weapons Ban.

Virginia's assault weapons ban takes effect July 1. Thirteen prosecutors say they won't enforce it. The NRA and Gun Owners of America filed suit within hours. 20-30 million AR-15s are in American hands.

Environment June 24, 2026

BOEM Is Soliciting Seabed Mining Off Virginia. The Zone Is Larger Than Delaware.

The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management is seeking industry interest in mineral mining leases off Virginia's coast, covering a zone larger than Delaware.

Reproductive Rights June 17, 2026

Virginia Signed Two Contraception Bills. Spanberger Joins 24-State Reproductive Alliance.

Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger signed the Right-To-Contraception Act and Contraception Equity Act on June 17, 2026, and joined a growing coalition of

Voting May 27, 2026

Virginia Passed an Assault Weapons Ban, Put Abortion Rights on the Ballot, and Banned Police From Working With ICE

Governor Spanberger signed 25 bills including the 11th state assault weapons ban, marijuana sentencing reform, and immigrant worker protections. Abortion rights amendment goes to voters November 3.

Rule of Law April 2, 2026

Your State Attorney General Might Be the Most Important Person Fighting Trump Right Now

Democratic AGs have filed 100+ lawsuits against the Trump administration and won 82% of resolved cases. Here are the results by state.

Voter Tools

Voter Registration and Resources

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