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Tuesday, April 22, 2025

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Marco Rubio unveils massive State Dept. overhaul with reductions of staff and bureaus; Visas revoked, status changed for international students in TX; Alaska lawmakers work to improve in-school mental health care; Montana DEQ denies Big Hole River decision, cites law opposed by EPA; Indiana moves to regulate legal THC sales and branding.

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White House defends Secretary Hegseth amid media scrutiny, federal judges block efforts to dismantle U.S. international broadcasters, and major restructuring hits the State Department and rural programs.

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Schools in timber country face an uncertain future without Congress' reauthorization of a rural program, DOGE cuts threaten plant species needed for U.S. food security, and farmers will soon see federal dollars for energy projects unlocked.

VA bill would regulate frequency of voter roll purges

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Friday, March 21, 2025   

Legislation in Virginia would prohibit any systematic removals of people from voter rolls at least 90 days before an election.

Last August, Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin signed an executive order requiring daily updates to voter rolls, instead of monthly. The Department of Motor Vehicles found more than 6,000 people marked as noncitizens were registered to vote in Virginia.

Voting rights advocates countered people may accidentally check the box saying they are not a citizen or they have gained citizenship between DMV visits.

Sheila Herlihy Hennessee, director of faith organizing at the Virginia Interfaith Center for Public Policy, said purges so close to elections affect people across the Commonwealth.

"This affects rural areas. This affects new Americans. This affects a lot of people around Virginia, and I want to see our legislators protect those individuals," Herlihy Hennessee outlined. "This has the legs to be a bipartisan issue."

Youngkin has defended his executive order as necessary to protect election security. The Trump administration recently dropped a lawsuit against the daily updates initiated during President Joe Biden's tenure.

The legislation is one of a flurry of other election-related bills passed by the General Assembly. Others would extend deadlines to return mail-in ballots and extend voter registration periods. Herlihy Hennessee noted some people may just not vote if these purges take place too near an election, which makes a "quiet period" essential.

"Having these 'quiet periods' before an election gives folks time to double-check their registration, to prove their citizenship, to reregister if that's needed if they are accidentally taken off the rolls," Herlihy Hennessee explained. "That quiet period also ensures that registrars have accurate lists of eligible voters."

Youngkin has yet to announce whether he will veto the bill or sign it into law.

Support for this reporting was provided by The Carnegie Corporation of New York.


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