Trump announces tariffs: Get ready to pay a lot more for everything
Trump voters supposedly wanted prices to come down – egg prices, somehow, became a flash point in our 2024 election.
Trump voters supposedly wanted prices to come down – egg prices, somehow, became a flash point in our 2024 election.
The suits at UVA Health and VCU Health are cowering in the face of a questionable directive from Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares to stop providing gender-affirming healthcare to trans minors.
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.
Mark Warner said today his U.S. Senate office got a phone call from a domestic-violence shelter serving multiple counties in Virginia that “may have to close their doors if President Trump doesn’t reverse course” on the pause on federal grants and loans set to go into effect at 5 p.m. Tuesday.

The new Secretary of Defense, Pete Hegseth, was hired for the job because Donald Trump is a fan of the Fox News weekend show that the 44-year-old used to host.
Donald Trump is threatening the whole world with tariffs now, so that he can give his rich buddies another tax break. You’ll pay more for everything, but that’s OK – that’s what you voted for, and he told you ahead of time he was going to do this.
Your first indication that U.S. Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., is planning to run for re-election in 2026: he voted for the Laken Riley Act.
One of the two Republicans on the Waynesboro Electoral Board who sued the state because he didn’t want to certify the election seems to have broken into one of our election machines in Ward A on Election Day.
Jay Matthew Kenyon, 47, of Harrisonburg, was sentenced earlier this month to 15 months in prison for brandishing a knife at police during the Jan. 6, 2021, putsch that Kenyon and thousands of fellow self-styled citizen-patriots led on behalf of Donald Trump.
TikTok ended its hours-long political stunt on Sunday, with the Chinese company’s owner, ByteDance, making itself available to U.S. users again, after voluntarily taking the app down late Saturday night.