
Virginia Democrats troll Youngkin, Republicans ahead of rally
The party is highlighting Youngkin's previous call for Republican lieutenant gubernatorial nominee John Reid to suspend his campaign on a mobile billboard outside of Reid's first event with the governor, gubernatorial nominee Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears (R ) and Attorney General Jason (R).
The Hill was the first outlet to report on the billboard, which will travel through Northern Virginia throughout the day.
The billboard features pictures of Reid and Youngkin in the shape of a broken heart, with the caption quotes 'step down' from Youngkin, as well as Reid telling Youngkin to 'cease and desist from publishing lies.'
The event on Tuesday in Vienna, Va., marks the first time Youngkin, who is term-limited, and the Republican ticket will appear publicly with each other on the campaign trail ahead of November's election.
Questions about Republican unity in the race were raised in April when Youngkin called for Reid to suspend his campaign after a report that Republican researchers came across sexually explicit photos on Tumblr posted by an account with the same username Reid uses on other sites. Reid has adamantly denied the allegations and went as far as to accuse Youngkin's team of extortion. Reid, who is openly gay, has also said the reason he is being targeted is because of his sexuality.
'It's a distraction for campaigns and it's a distraction from people paying attention to the most important issues. And here we are today talking about fentanyl and saving lives, and the distraction is present,' Youngkin said at a press conference. 'That's why I called him on Friday morning.'
'And the decision is John's and up to John,' he said.
A lawyer representing Reid sent a cease and desist letter to the then-executive director of Youngkin's Spirit of Virginia PAC Matt Moran, who later stepped down from his post.
Virginia Republicans were quick to come to Reid's defense in the face of the controversy, calling Youngkin's move 'an unforced error' and laying blame on the Spirit of Virginia PAC.
Last month Youngkin acknowledged Reid as the party's lieutenant gubernatorial nominee, telling reporters 'he has clearly made up his mind that he's going to stay in.'
Sears echoed Youngkin's comments in her own statement.
'This week, focus on the lieutenant governor nominee distracted from that mission and cannot continue,' Earle-Sears said, referring to the mission 'to unite and inspire Virginians of all backgrounds.'
'John Reid is the Republican nominee for lieutenant governor. It is his race, and his decision alone to move forward. We all have our own race to run.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
44 minutes ago
- New York Post
Dems plan for ‘Project 2029' met with skepticism as party continues to divide: Report
New York Times political correspondent Shane Goldmacher detailed the mixed opinions among political strategists on the Democratic Party's plan for Project 2029 — a ready-made agenda for the party's next presidential nominee. Goldmacher revealed on Monday that while many Democratic strategists are on board with the project's vision, some are skeptical that the agenda set forth could upset the left's 'interest-group Borg' and deepen the divide within the party. The creator of Project 2029, former Chair of the Arizona Democratic Party Andrei Cherny, is working on organizing Democratic thought leaders to ensure there is a set-in-stone agenda ready. 'The title is an unsubtle play on Project 2025, the independently produced right-wing agenda that Mr. Trump spent much of last year's campaign distancing himself from, and much of his first few months back in power executing,' Goldmacher noted in the piece. Cherny's plan takes more inspiration from the Heritage Foundation's Project 2025 than just its name. Similar to Project 2025, the goal of Project 2029 is to turn Cherny's publication, 'Democracy: A Journal of Ideas,' into a book — and rally the party's presidential candidates behind those ideas during the 2028 primary election season. 3 CEO of Aspiration Andrei Cherny attends a special Washington, DC screening of 'An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power' at The Newseum on July 19, 2017 in Washington, DC. Getty Images for Paramount Pictures 'The undertaking, which has not previously been reported, strikes at the heart of a raging debate consuming Democratic lawmakers, strategists and policymakers: whether the root of the party's problems is its ideas or its difficulty in persuading people to embrace them,' Goldmacher stated. According to Celinda Lake, a prominent Democratic pollster quoted in the story, the party 'didn't lack policies,' but rather 'lacked a functioning narrative to communicate those policies.' She criticized the Democratic Party for offering voters 'agencies and acronyms and statistics' rather than presenting a clear story about 'what we're going to fight for.' On the other hand, some Democrats contend that the party has been faltering due to stale ideas that fail to inspire voters to get behind them. 3 Mallory McMorrow, Michigan State Senator, makes remarks on Project 2025 at the 2024 Democratic National Convention in Chicago, Illinois, USA, at the United Center on Monday, August 19, 2024. Ron Sachs – CNP for NY Post Neera Tanden, CEO of the Center for American Progress and advisor to Project 2029, argued that liberals 'underestimate the power of Trump's ideas' and that the focus has been his personality. 'We get wrapped up in his personality. But he puts forward an idea like 'No tax on tips,' and that's an important signifier that he is championing working-class people,' Tanden told the New York Times. Cherny's plan to assemble 'the Avengers of public policy' — a coalition of Democrats aiming to set the agenda for their party's next presidential candidate — did not sit well with some who believe that coalitions are to blame for the party's current predicament. 3 A scoreboard displays 'DNC 2024' ahead of the Democratic National Convention (DNC) at the United Center on August 16, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois. The United Center will host the DNC, which is officially scheduled to kick off on Monday, August 19 and run through Thursday, August 22. Getty Images 'Developing policies by checking every coalitional box is how we got in this mess in the first place,' stated Adam Jentleson in the piece, the former chief of staff for Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa. 'There is no way to propose the kind of policies the Democratic Party needs to adopt without pissing off some part of the interest-group Borg. And if you're too afraid to do that, you don't have what it takes to steer the party in the right direction.' Even though Democrats were successful in rallying their base against Project 2025, Michael Tomasky, editor of The New Republic, claimed that those efforts will not have a negative effect on Project 2029 because — unlike the Heritage Foundation — their 'ideas aren't radical or extreme.' Tomasky stated that he hoped the project would help rejuvenate the public's view of the Democratic Party among the less fortunate.


E&E News
an hour ago
- E&E News
How two Republican senators saved the hydrogen credit
A push from two high-ranking Republican senators, paired with a last-second report from a congressional scorekeeper, appears to have saved the hydrogen industry from disaster in the GOP megabill. Hydrogen energy developers were facing a nightmare scenario in late June, when the Senate followed the House in releasing budget reconciliation text that would phase out the Inflation Reduction Act's 'clean hydrogen' tax credit by year's end. It effectively meant almost no projects could capitalize on the incentive meant to help commercialize the development of hydrogen fuel made with limited carbon emissions. Advertisement But text released over the weekend showed lawmakers had reversed course. The Senate approved the bill Tuesday and the House may clear it as soon as Wednesday.

Wall Street Journal
an hour ago
- Wall Street Journal
No One is ‘Gutting' the Safety Net
Democrats and their media collaborators always distort GOP policy, but the coverage about the big budget bill has kicked free of the earth. Allow us to temper the histrionics about 'gutting the social safety net' with a few facts about Medicaid, food stamps and Republican priorities. By now you've seen the headline in every outlet: The Republican law will soon toss millions from Medicaid and cut the program to the bone. But annual spending on the health entitlement will grow over the next decade even with the bill's roughly $1 trillion in estimated savings. Medicaid spending has risen by roughly 60% since 2019, and the bill's intent is to try to bend Medicaid's trajectory closer to the bad old days of 2020.