Joshua Devamithran

Jefferson Forum
April 13, 2026

New “Jefferson Forum” launches as state faces major fights over taxes, energy, labor, and education  RICHMOND, VA — Two Virginia public policy organizations announced Monday that they are merging to form a new think tank aimed at influencing key policy debates in the Commonwealth at a pivotal political moment.  The Thomas...

Christian Braunlich
April 9, 2026

Tuesday’s column discussed some of the reasons Governor Spanberger should amend or veto the public employee collective bargaining bill headed to her desk:  the local and state taxpayer costs, the creation of new bureaucracies, the opposition of local Democrats and a majority of local government and school board leaders and, perhaps...

Christian Braunlich
April 7, 2026

There are many reasons why Governor Abigail Spanberger should veto the collective bargaining bill headed to her desk, a bill requiring local and state governments to bargain with union bosses even if less than a majority of public employees want the union or the bargaining. There is the fact that...

Derrick A. Max
March 19, 2026

By Ali Ahmad and Derrick A. Max  Conservatives across the country are salivating at the idea that Virginia’s new governor may sign a bill that opens her to the charge that she is siding with school bullies and delinquents over teachers and principals.  House Bill 298, patroned by Delegate Delores McQuinn, is...

Derrick A. Max
March 17, 2026

Virginia parents should be alarmed that the Virginia General Assembly just passed House Bill 355  which mandates annual mental health screenings for all public school students in grades 6 through 12. While framed as a compassionate response to a very real “mental health crisis,” it represents a fundamental shift in the mission of public education: from academic instruction to clinical surveillance.  By institutionalizing mandatory mental...

Stephen D. Haner
March 16, 2026

The 2026 Virginia General Assembly has passed at least nine separate new laws that will increase the cost of your electricity. Not one of the bills creates a single megawatt of additional energy for our use. Most of the bills create new ways for the utilities to take money from...

Christian Braunlich
March 13, 2026

Unless Virginia voters reject the constitutional amendment on the ballot April 21, gerrymandering will return to Virginia. Five years ago, 66% of Virginia voters — 2.8 million Virginians — approved a bipartisan redistricting constitutional amendment ending gerrymandering. The result was a map that is widely regarded as one of the fairest in the...

Derrick A. Max
March 11, 2026

Cardinal News ran my guest column this morning warning that collective bargaining at Virginia’s public universities will only further depen the political divides that are undermining Virginia’s once esteemed system of higher education. The push to unionize university workers in Virginia is not about increased pay, better working conditions, or...

Derrick A. Max
March 3, 2026

The Richmond Times-Dispatch ran my guest column this morning that warns of the significant learning loss that will likely occur from the Paid Family and Medical Leave bill (SB2) that is quickly winding its way to the Governror’s desk for her promised signature. As I have written previously, the Virginia General Assembly is...

Stephen D. Haner
March 1, 2026

Building Virginia into the leader of the data center industry for the United States and the world has been a bipartisan goal of several recent governors and General Assemblies. The golden egg laying goose they nurtured is now in danger of being butchered. What is happening to this one industry...