Virginia House of Delegates Republican Caucus
Campaigns & Elections
VA Republicans Ready to Build House Majority
Oct 29th
With the largest number of candidates for Delegate in many years Virginia Republicans are set to build on our majority in the House of Delegates.
See all of our candidates for the House of Delegates here.
Our friends at Bearing Drift have been doing an excellent job keeping track of all the advances Republican candidates have been making. They are also featuring House of Delegate candidates they have interviewed over the last several months. Be sure to jump there and check them out.
Martinsville Bulletin: Economic Development No. 1 for Delegate Danny Marshall
Sep 29th
Delegate Danny Marshall was profiled in the Martinsville Bulletin in which Delegate Marshall’s job creation and economic development efforts were highlighted:
Marshall: Economic development is No. 1
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
By DEBBIE HALL – Bulletin Staff Writer
Spurring economic development through a number of initiatives is at the top of Del. Danny Marshall’s list of priorities, he said Monday.
In an hourlong tele-town hall meeting Monday evening, Marshall, R-Danville, vowed to concentrate his efforts on job development if he is re-elected to the 14th District seat on Nov. 3. Marshall also answered questions about the economy and his efforts to attract companies and jobs to Southside.
Laura McGee, Marshall’s campaign manager, estimated that between 1,000 and 2,000 constituents took part in the conference call, in which listeners could ask questions of Marshall and listen as he answered the questions of others.
Marshall cited several efforts to spur economic development in the region, including his support in 2007 of legislation to lower the thresholds for the Governor’s Opportunity Fund, so that companies locating to areas hard hit by job losses could more easily meet the requirements and qualify for funds.
The fund was created to allow governors discretionary funds with which they can provide incentives to attract businesses to the commonwealth.
In a break with other Republican candidates, including gubernatorial hopeful Bob McDonnell, Marshall said he does not support adding money to the fund.
After researching the amount spent with the House Appropriations Committee, Marshall said he found that about half of a $12 million appropriation, or $6.2 million, remained in the fund at the end of the last fiscal year.
“Why put additional money in” the fund if it is not being spent? Marshall asked.
Although he does not support adding more funds, Marshall said he has asked for more information about McDonnell’s proposal to add money to the fund and earmark additional funding for areas with high unemployment.
“I’m not trying to take money out” of the fund, Marshall said, adding he wants to ensure that money added for hard-hit areas, such as Henry and Pittsylvania counties as well as the cities of Danville and Martinsville, would indeed go there.
He also sponsored legislation to fund the construction of Interstate 73, which would begin in Henry County and follow the U.S. 220 corridor north to Roanoke. The measure passed in the House of Delegates but was defeated in the Senate, Marshall said. He plans to reintroduce the proposal during the upcoming session in January.
He also supports allowing out-of-state insurance companies to sell health insurance in Virginia to make the market more competitive, he said.
There is “a lot to do in Southside,” Marshall said, but his efforts in 2010 will concentrate on job creation.
One way to make that happen is through his service on the Tobacco Indemnification and Community Revitalization Commission, an entity formed in 2000 with funds from a tobacco settlement. Half of Virginia’s share of tobacco funds is earmarked for projects that will help revitalize tobacco regions, he said. Counties such as Henry and Pittsylvania and others have benefited and received millions from the fund already, he said.
On the commission, Marshall serves on three committees, including Special Projects, which works on projects that are large in scope, such as funding a $1.7 million water and sewer project for an industrial park in Henry County.
He also serves on the Southside Economic Development Commission, a committee that works to spur economic development by partnering with the Governor’s Opportunity Fund, Marshall said.
Marshall also is a charter member of the Research and Development Committee, which will hold its first meeting in about two weeks. That committee, he said, has a budget of $100 million for projects that will create jobs.
“This is about jobs,” not research and development, he said. Those interested will submit proposals, and if those proposals are approved, projects will be funded according to pre-set limits.
In order for a project to be considered, Marshall said, the research will have to be completed and commercialized into a product within three years. The product also will have to be produced in the region, he added, and invited anyone with ideas to contact his office.
In addition to questions about jobs and economic development, several people on the call asked about energy.
Marshall said there are a number of opportunities for the nation to achieve energy independence. He supports drilling off the shore of Virginia because it would be a “win, win, win situation,” creating jobs while lowering the cost of natural gas and providing revenue to the state, he said.
Marshall, who has served in the House for eight years, is facing Democrat Seward Anderson, former mayor of Danville, in the November contest.
House GOP Caucus Members and Candidates on VPAP Honor Roll
Aug 21st
Congratulations to the following House GOP Caucus members and 2009 Candidates that have been named to the VPAP.org Honor Roll
Albo, David B
Amiral, John N
Anderson, Richard L
Bell, Robert B
Bird, Troy
Bolognese, Kerry
Brescia, Eric
Bury, Joseph G
Byron, Kathy
Call, Jason
Carrico, Charles W, Sr
Cleaveland, William
Cline, Ben
Cole, Mark L
Comstock, Barbara J
Cosgrove, John A
Cox, John A
Cox, M Kirkland
Creed, Edward
Crockett-Stark, Anne B
Edmunds, James E, II
Fralin, William H, Jr
Frederick, Jeffrey
Funkhouser, Terry J
Gage, Michael
Garrett, T Scott
Gear, Thomas D
Gilbert, Todd
Greason, Thomas
Griffith, H Morgan
Hamilton, Phillip A
Hargrove, Frank D
Hogan, Clarke N
Howell, William J
Hugo, Timothy D
Hyland, James E
Iaquinto, Salvatore R
Ingram, Riley E
Janis, William R
Jones, S Chris
Kilgore, Terry G
Knight, Barry D
Landes, R Steven
Lee, Jennifer
LeMunyon, James M
Lingamfelter, L Scott
Lohr, Matthew J
Loupassi, Manoli
Marshall, Danny W, III
Marshall, Robert G
Massie, James P, III
May, Joe T
McCammon, Susan
McConville, James
Merola, Christopher
Merricks, Donald W
Miller, Jackson H
Morefield, James
Morgan, Harvey B
Nank, Timothy D
Nixon, Sam
Nutter, Dave
O’Bannon, John M, III
Oder, G Glenn
Orrock, Robert D, Sr
Peace, Christopher K
Pogge, Brenda F
Poindexter, Charles D
Purkey, Harry R “Bob”
Putney, Lacey E
Ringel, Aaron E
Rust, Thomas D
Sampson, Ernesto
Saxman, Christopher B
Scalley, Melody
Scott, Edward T
Sherwood, Beverly
Smith, Danny R
Stolle, Christopher
Tata, Robert M
Vasques, Victoria L
Whited, Mark
Wright, Thomas C, Jr
Republican Candidates for the House of Delegates
Aug 21st
The Republican Caucus has fielded candidates in 63 contested races across the Commonwealth.
Republicans have 84 candidates in total on the ballot this year. That includes incumbents in uncontested races, incumbents in contested races, open seats and Republican candidates challenging Democrat incumbents.
Examiner.com profiles Ernesto Sampson – Candidate for the 69th District
Aug 11th
Meet Ernesto Sampson – Candidate for the 69th District
More jobs. Better schools. Public safety – Ernesto Sampson
Who could disagree with that?
All politicians want to create employment, improve education and ensure that we are safe in our homes, workplaces and streets. The real question is, when we go to the polls, who do we vote for to ensure that these promises are delivered at a federal, state and local level?
Ernesto Sampson, a Richmond financial adviser and mentor to area youth in the Richmond community is running for public office in the 69th District for the Virginia House of Delegates this November 3rd and espouses the above policies.
I followed Mr. Sampson on the campaign trail Saturday knocking on doors and speaking to local area residents about the issues that concern them. No surprise that jobs, health care, law and order and education were the top of most people’s lists. Nary a word about Iraq or global warming. People are hungering for someone who is looking out for them on a local level.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JS4b-f-nOlI
There is much chatter around water coolers and web sites about the rejuvenation of interest in politics in recent months.
Out on the streets of the Fan District this weekend with Ernesto it was palpable.
Running for election as Delegate for the 69th District is hardly comparable to running for the Oval Office and leader of the free world, but it’s running for elective office all the same. And it’s infectious; just ask his team of over 30 enthusiastic supporters who turned out in force to knock on well over 2000 doors and introduce the candidate to the community when they could have been doing something else on a sunny Saturday. But they were there and happy to be supporting Sampson.
Ernesto Sampson will be on the ballot in November 3rd as a candidate for a district that straddles both sides of the James River from Floyd Ave in Cary Town down Hull Street Road into the heart of Chesterfield.
On a political, personality, policy and historical level the result of the 69th District will be under the psehological microscope.
If voters turn out in areas of Richmond and Chesterfield Counties in a certain way; is this sending a message to the current Administration or are they voting for a candidate who has their best interests at heart? I say both.
Given his career as a financial adviser who graduated from the Virginia Military Institute with a B.A. in economics and finance, Sampson sees daily the ramifications of the current economic climate and is disturbed with the trend in unemployment and high-school drop outs, which correlates directly with an increase in crime.
Ernesto Sampson is passionate about creating and saving jobs. In his own personal career he is qualified to understand both the intricacies and the basic current economic climate and how it affects the average ‘Joe’ and his 401K and other investments. He also advises small business owners in the community on how to navigate the economic cycle by giving them the tools they need to grow their business, maintain revenues in fluctuating economic markets and increase staff as their company expands.
As former Speaker of the House Tip O’Neill famously said “All politics is local.”
We worry about the potholes in our streets, our children’s schools, our garbage collection and more importantly, our safety. We also worry about whether we will wake up tomorrow to our job or, if we have been laid off recently, whether we can find some semblance of employment to provide for ourselves and our families.
Ernesto Sampson says “The needs of our community are many. But through my upbringing, my work, and my involvement in my home community, I have learned that waiting for politicians to solve our problems just doesn’t work.”
As a resident, mentor of youth, and a proponent of small business interests in the 69th District Community, Ernesto is eager to support, represent and be the Voice his Community. According to campaign staff, Ernesto and his ‘Street Team’ have visited over 8,000 residences within his district since the beginning of June, with plans to visit every residence before the election.
This will be an interesting contest to watch; not just for those voters in the 69th District but those in the Commonwealth and the rest of the country.
Link to Examiner.com
Speaker Bill Howell on WTOP – Discusses House of Delegate 2009 Races
Aug 11th
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Speaker Bill Howell on WTOP with Mark Plotkin – August 7, 2009
