
Virginia AG Jason Miyares wants Supreme Court to suspend due process
Jason Miyares, you would think, would have learned about due process in law school. Middle-school kids learn about due process in eighth-grade civics.
Jason Miyares, you would think, would have learned about due process in law school. Middle-school kids learn about due process in eighth-grade civics.
Twenty-one state AGs are suing to prevent the Trump administration from gutting the Department of Education. Jason Miyares, Virginia’s attorney general, and a loyal MAGA lieutenant, is not among them.
The FBI and Virginia State Police are investigating a “sophisticated cyberattack” that hit the offices of Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares on Wednesday.
Republicans like Jason Miyares pretend to fight against business regulation; and then they fire off a letter to a free-enterprise company telling its board of directors that it needs to follow a hollow-toothed Trump/Musk executive order, or else.
Shaun Kenney, the director of communications for Attorney General Jason Miyares, wrote me within a few minutes of the story hitting the interwebs to suggest a retraction to our article on the Office of the AG’s response to the Donald Trump funding freeze executive order.
On one side of the ban TikTok debate, we have 21 Republican state attorneys general, including Virginia AG Jason Miyares.
We got ourselves a 2025 Virginia politics cycle shocker on Monday: Jason Miyares is going to run for a second term as attorney general, ceding the Republican Party gubernatorial nomination to Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears.
A federal judge has issued an injunction ordering the Youngkin administration to restore the voting rights of more than 1,600 Virginia residents.
Virginia’s leading voice on sexual and domestic violence rebukes AG Jason Miyares for his lawsuit against LGBTQ+ student survivors.
Legislation introduced in Montana would prohibit the use of TikTok in the state unless it separates from its parent Chinese company.