Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 2 days 2 hours 12 minutes
Governor Glenn Youngkin released budget amendments and issued vetoes just hours before Monday night’s deadline. Some of Youngkin’s strikes hit education spending and funding plans crafted by Democrats. Brad Kutner has more from Richmond.
Lawmakers will return to Richmond next week to consider next steps on a number of important bills. Michael Pope reports that they’ll need to make a decision on what to do about skill games.
Governor Glenn Youngkin offered more than 200 amendments to the General Assembly’s proposed budget Monday. The governor struck a more conciliatory tone, opening up the upcoming budget fight on a positive note, but Democratic leadership remained wary, as Brad Kutner found out.
Senator Tim Kaine is out with a new book this week. And as Michael Pope tells us, it’s not the standard Washington memoir.
Abortion remains a key topic as the governor takes his final actions on bills from the General Assembly. Michael Pope has the latest.
Among Governor Glenn Youngkin’s education reforms was the development of a lab school program, linking colleges with local school systems to innovate new education models. But as Democrats seek increased resources for the rest of the state’s public schools, they’re looking to reduce funding for that experiment in education. Brad Kutner has more.
Time is running out for the governor to act on bills from this year’s General Assembly session. Jeff Schapiro, political columnist for the Richmond Times-Dispatch, and Michael Pope recap the week in politics and state government.
Republican Governor Glenn Youngkin is setting new records for vetoing more bills than any other governor in recent years. Michael Pope has details about one vetoed bill that would have encouraged teaching climate change in public schools.
After some justices of the U.S. Supreme Court suggested they should reconsider precedent protecting access to contraceptives, Virginia Democrats passed a law that would protect such access. But the governor has yet to sign it, and advocates want him to act, as Brad Kutner reports from Richmond.
Governor Glenn Youngkin Thursday morning signed a bill that increases punishments for those who manufacture pressed pills that include fentanyl. Brad Kutner has more from Richmond.