Rep. Eric Cantor talks jobs in Virginia
The Hill - Mon Nov 23, 8:46 pm ETRep. Eric Cantor (Va.) took business into his own hands and tried to help his constituents find jobs on Monday. Read more...
818 Stories, most recent news story added Thu Nov 26, 12:00 am ET
Rep. Eric Cantor (Va.) took business into his own hands and tried to help his constituents find jobs on Monday. Read more...
Del. Dave W. Marsden (D-Fairfax) of Burke said he will seek his party's nomination for the 37th District seat in the Virginia Senate.
Virginia’s new governor hasn’t even been sworn in, and already there’s speculation about 2013, with former Gov. George Allen, a Republican, and former gubernatorial candidate Terry McAuliffe, a Democrat, topping some whispered gossip betting pools.
A nonprofit group has until December 3 to identify the source of voter information it planned to use in a mass mailing to 350,000 Virginia households.
RICHMOND, Va. — A nonprofit group has until Dec. 3 to identify the source of voter information it planned to use in a mass mailing to 350,000 Virginia households.
The results stayed the same, but the turnout grew after a certification of the Nov. 3 elections by the State Board of Elections yesterday.
Among others, the president didn't invite his 2008 campaign rival, Sen. John McCain of Arizona, even though Obama the candidate pledged a post-partisan presidency.
While the White House is mum about who will be among the 300 or so lucky invitees to President Obama's first state dinner Tuesday night, word is already leaking out about who's not going to be there. Chief among the non-attendees: top Republican lawmakers. House Minority Leader John A. Boehner was invited but won't be there; he's on Thanksgiving break and home in Ohio. His deputy, Rep. Eric ...
Cantor blasts stimulus; Dems call him a hypocrite
Oceanside Councilman Rocky Chavez was sworn in as undersecretary for the California Department of Veterans Affairs yesterday in Sacramento and will resign from his council seat Dec. 18, a state official said.
On Saturday, the day the U.S. Senate voted to move health-care legislation to the floor, Sen. Jim Webb’s office received 1,200 calls at the front desk. That’s compared with an average of 1,000 phone calls per week. The story was similar in Sen. Mark R. Warner’s office, as Virginians anxious about a sweeping health-care overhaul have been lighting up the switchboards to voice their opinions.