South Hampton Roads Indivisible

South Hampton Roads Indivisible Our mission is to encourage people to advocate for issues to support their families, communities and our Commonwealth.

From "The Hill"
05/29/2026

From "The Hill"

The “No Kings” movement announced a nationwide event set for June 14, which is President Trump’s 80th birthday. “The next 250 starts with us. As America approaches its anniversary about what story …

VA Dems Announce Official List of Candidates for the 2026 August Democratic Primaries (VA01, VA02, VA05, VA08 and VA09 W...
05/29/2026

VA Dems Announce Official List of Candidates for the 2026 August Democratic Primaries (VA01, VA02, VA05, VA08 and VA09 Will Have Contested Primaries)

From DPVA (see below for their press release); here’s the official list of US House candidates for the August 4, 2026 Democratic primaries. As you can see, there will not be competitive primaries in VA03 (Rep. Bobby Scott), VA04 (Rep. Jennifer McClellan), VA06 (Beth Macy is the nominee), VA07 (Rep...

The 50 Million: Gen Z’s Power, Priorities, and ParticipationApril 23, 2026In a major survey conducted in partnership wit...
05/18/2026

The 50 Million: Gen Z’s Power, Priorities, and Participation
April 23, 2026
In a major survey conducted in partnership with When We All Vote, over 5,000 young people shared their political values, priorities, and inflection points ahead of the 2026 midterms.
Authors: CIRCLE Team, When We All Vote Team

Ahead of the 2026 midterm elections, CIRCLE partnered with When We All Vote to release a national survey of 5,549 18- to 29-year-olds.

While over 40 million members of Gen Z were eligible to vote in 2024, more than 21 million did not cast ballots. Almost 50 million Gen Zers will be eligible to vote in 2026, prompting this representative survey of youth ages 18-29. Fielded between January 26 and February 12, the survey captured the opinions of over 5,000 young people, oversampling young Black and Latino voters whose voices are often underrepresented.

Read the Full Report

Authors: CIRCLE Team, When We All Vote Team Ahead of the 2026 midterm elections, CIRCLE partnered with When We All Vote to release a national survey of 5,549 18- to 29-year-olds.

Should Democrats fire the Virginia Supreme Court that ruled against them? 8 things to know about an idea making the roun...
05/11/2026

Should Democrats fire the Virginia Supreme Court that ruled against them? 8 things to know about an idea making the rounds
by Dwayne Yancey, Cardinal News | May 11, 2026

1. This is not a serious proposal.

7, 8. This is an opportunity for Macy, Spanberger.

The New York Times reports that the idea came up in a conversation that U.S. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries had with some Virginia Democrats.

Editorial: Ruling on redistricting leaves Virginia at a disadvantageBy THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT AND DAILY PRESS EDITORIAL BOA...
05/11/2026

Editorial: Ruling on redistricting leaves Virginia at a disadvantage
By THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT AND DAILY PRESS EDITORIAL BOARD
May 9, 2026

An amendment to the Virginia Constitution that would temporarily change how the commonwealth draws congressional districts twice passed the General Assembly, with an intervening election separating those votes.

The measure was put before the voters, 1.6 million of whom cast ballots in favor, compared to 1.5 million against. It earned nearly as many votes as Glenn Youngkin received in 2021 and, for all the talk of a narrow victory, enjoyed a more decisive win than Virginia’s former governor.

Yet, on Friday, all of that was undone by the Virginia Supreme Court in a 4-3 ruling that struck down the amendment for violating the state constitution. While it is in the court’s power to do so, nullifying the public’s will means Virginians will participate in a November election unfairly tilted by actions outside the commonwealth’s control.

Last year, as President Donald Trump ordered Republican-led states to redraw congressional districts to maximize the likelihood of protecting a GOP majority in the U.S. House, Virginia Democrats moved in response. On Oct. 29 and again on Jan. 14, the General Assembly approved a referendum to suspend the commonwealth’s redistricting commission for four years in order to create new maps.

In between, on Nov. 4, a statewide election saw voters expand the Democratic majority in the state House. An intervening election is required between legislative votes on proposed amendments, so while the timeline was tight, that should have satisfied the legal requirement for changing the state constitution.

Not so, said the state Supreme Court on Friday. In a 30-page opinion, the majority ruled that because early voting began prior to the amendment’s legislative approval on Oct. 29, the measure violated Article XII, Section 1 of the state constitution and should be nullified.

In a dissent, three justices took issue with the majority’s definition of “election,” contending that the inclusion of the early-voting period contradicts the state and federal constitutions as well as volumes of legal precedent that an “election” is defined only as Election Day.

The opinion notes that broadening what constitutes an “election” could have sweeping implications for the judicial system, due to limits on what voters can be compelled to do “during an election,” and the qualifications for state senators and delegates, since the Virginia Constitution includes age requirements of legislative eligibility “at the time of the election.”

Virginia waded into the fetid waters of mid-decade redistricting reluctantly. The commonwealth, as every proud resident will remind you, is not like other states and, in 2020, voters here embraced the nobility of a bipartisan redistricting commission in the hope of bringing transparency and fairness to that opaque and often crooked process.

Flawed though that commission may be, its approach remains a superior way to draw maps for representation, allowing everyone to have a seat at the table. Looking at the national landscape, however, one cannot help but think that Virginia has tied its hands amid a larger fight about how a 435-member House of Representatives can best reflect the popular will of 350 million Americans.

The redistricting wars — in Virginia, California, Texas, North Carolina and other states — have been supercharged by the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision in Louisiana v. Callais. That ruling effectively cleared the way for Republican-led legislatures to wipe away majority-minority districts and approve maps that lock in a durable Republican advantage throughout the South.

The same voices who decried the Virginia process, which put the question to the people, are now cheering these unilateral and undemocratic choices by GOP legislatures elsewhere. There may be no better argument for overarching national parameters for redistricting, though it’s no certainty that the U.S. Supreme Court would allow those to stand.

Nullifying the public’s will means Virginians will participate in a November election unfairly tilted by actions outside the commonwealth’s control.

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