When Virginia legislators passed a bipartisan measure to rein in negligent landlords, proponents were delighted. After too many horror stories about slumlords, policymakers in the commonwealth came up with a solution that was backed by both the Virginia Poverty Law Center and the Virginia Apartment and Management Association.
By all appearances, it was a reform package that would benefit many Virginians. Even 16 Republican lawmakers in Richmond voted with Democrats to advance the legislation.
But as the local NPR affiliate reported, the bill was nevertheless vetoed by Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin. The report quoted Democratic Del. Cia Price saying, “I don’t know what the governor was thinking.”
That’s been a fairly common sentiment lately.
In fact, just last week, the GOP governor also vetoed 26 other bills, many of which were approved with broad bipartisan support.
In a piece that was published before Youngkin vetoed the anti-slumlord bill, the editorial board of The Washington Post marveled at the governor’s petty divisiveness.
On taking office, the governor pledged to unify Virginians. In fact, he has done the opposite, stoking cultural wars and picking small fights.
The editors added that Youngkin has stooped to levels of pettiness unseen in the history of the office — and it’s an office that dates back to 1776.
That’s hardly an unreasonable assessment. The governor’s first three months in office have been difficult to watch, as Youngkin careens from one political mess to the next. When he’s not picking unnecessary fights with school boards, his political operation is picking unnecessary fights with teenagers.
Youngkin also pulled Virginia out of the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, which will benefit no one — except polluters — while also trying (and failing) to make Donald Trump’s favorite coal industry lobbyist the steward of Virginia’s natural resources.
He’s also touted a tip line parents can use to report school teachers who reference “divisive” subjects in classrooms, but when asked to share the concerns raised via the tip line, Youngkin has insisted that the submissions must remain hidden from the public.









