Home Ken Mitchell | In 2025, we bring change to Virginia with our votes in November
Local/Regional News, State/National News

Ken Mitchell | In 2025, we bring change to Virginia with our votes in November

Letters
ken mitchell
Photo: Ken Mitchell for Virginia

My name is Ken Mitchell, and I reside in Rockingham County. Early voting for this November’s election has already begun, voters are heading to the polls, and campaign signs are on the sides of streets and in front of our homes. This election is important for a number of reasons. When I ran for Congress in Virginia’s Sixth District in 2024, I had the distinct privilege of shaking hands with Virginians from all manner of different backgrounds and beliefs. Though I’m focused right now on supporting good candidates running for office across the Shenandoah Valley in 2025, I have continued to meet, greet, and share a seat with a whole host of neighbors and friends as I work towards running again for Congress in the 2026 midterms.

Let me tell you why I am focused now on Virginia in 2025. I know the importance of these state races, and I know that I can help support these candidates. This election matters to every Virginian in the Sixth Congressional District, the whole of Virginia, the whole of the country, and the rest of the wide world. This election matters because of the people that I have met and what I have heard them say.

I am writing to you while families in the Sixth District are reeling from headlines and change after disastrous change, wondering what will happen to their ability to access, receive, and pay for healthcare. Augusta Health has had to consolidate three offices into other practices as a direct result of “The Big Beautiful Bill” that our elected congressman eagerly signed. Cuts to Medicaid and the rising costs of premiums have some families facing hard choices.

I have had the privilege to get to know a resident of the Sixth District who has voiced her fears and worries that her family will be one of many to have to make these hard choices. This neighbor, now a friend of mine, is a small business owner who pays for her family’s plan through the Marketplace. Her premium may go up by as much as 75 percent in the near future. She has two young children, the youngest was diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder at the beginning of this calendar year. His medically necessary services aren’t fully covered by insurance, so his healthcare is supplemented with Medicaid. The implications of losing this coverage and paying higher premiums are catastrophic. This family will struggle, at a time when the struggle is already great. We cannot allow this to stand. Our government needs to serve people like my friend and her family, not work against them.

Her story, sadly, is not an isolated one. It’s one that I’ve heard repeated many times, in many different ways, as I’ve traveled across the Sixth District. Behind each story are individuals, children, spouses, and loved ones, each facing new and unique challenges; some frightening, all unwelcome.

So, in 2025, we vote. We volunteer. We shake hands, have hard conversations, we listen, and we bring change to Virginia in November. And then, when we go back to the ballot boxes in 2026, we give the Sixth District of Virginia the congressional representation that it deserves. Representation that cares about healthcare, and families, and affordability. We vote so that our current representative can no longer inflict harm onto our friends, our families, and our neighbors.

We must vote.

Marketplace




Support AFP



 

Latest News

uva baseball max stammel
Baseball

UVA Baseball: #10 ‘Hoos show ‘grit’ in come-from-behind win over Liberty

sam lewis uva basketball
Basketball

UVA Basketball: Rumor mill has ‘Hoos hooking up with UConn in MSG

There’s some smoke on the interwebs about a Virginia-UConn game at Madison Square Garden next season, which, if it happens, we’re headed to Midtown Manhattan, who’s coming with us? UConn just played in a national title game for the third time in four seasons, losing this time, 69-63, to Michigan, to wrap a 34-6 season....

robin von seldeneck
Schools, Arts, Media

Robin von Seldeneck to step down from Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library

Robin von Seldeneck is leaving her post as president and CEO at the Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library & Museum to take over as executive director of the Frontier Culture Museum.

police court law
Politics

Bumfart MAGA judge issues another injunction trying to block referendum

government money
Politics

Dominion Energy CEO makes Top 10 list of most overpaid power utility guys

billy strings
Schools, Arts, Media

Billy Strings broke his leg at end of JPJ show: Staff at UVA are ‘angels’

missing person
State/National News

Good news: Authorities locate missing Richmond man with dementia