Showing posts with label House of Delegates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label House of Delegates. Show all posts

Sunday, September 6, 2015

Institute a comprehensive background check for all gun purchases in Virginia?

Just about all of the video on the so called Virginia shooting keep being taken down because when you play the video frame by frame, you see a lot of stuff that just does not add up.  The most often asked question is if this was a fake false flag event, why?  Gun Control or Gun grab is the simplest of answers.   Here is the proof of that.

Petition by Patrick Hope
Arlington, Virginia

Like many, I was shocked and deeply saddened to see the recent footage of the shooting of reporter Alison Parker and cameraman Adam Ward in Moneta, Virginia. As a member of the Virginia House of Delegates, I’ve seen gun control bills fail time and again in the state legislature, blocked by the power of the gun lobby.
That ends now. We need to put our politics aside and finally institute a comprehensive background check for all gun purchases in Virginia, to stop the next tragedy before it happens. 
Currently, Virginia has no law requiring a background check on the purchaser of a firearm when the seller is not a licensed dealer. That means that thousands of guns can be bought and sold without background checks by unlicensed dealers at gun shows and other events. The “gun show loophole” is a clear ploy to avoid taking common-sense precautions that can, and do, save lives.
Without universal background check for gun purchases, many people can circumvent the law and easily access a gun -- giving them the opportunity to take away a life in seconds. The great people of Virginia have persevered through the Virginia Tech tragedy in 2007, but we as elected officials haven’t done enough to do better for them since then. We must get this right.
Recent polling shows that more than 92 percent of voters in Virginia agree that background checks at gun shows are a good idea, but a small, vocal minority keeps them from becoming law.Governor McAuliffe is once again calling for the passage of this law in the wake of the tragedy. I know we can make a real, life-saving change if we work together right now to make our voices heard -- here in Virginia and across the country.


So who is Patrick Hope anyway? Turns out he is a left wing progressive delegate here in Virginia. Progressives do not believe that people have rights, only the government has rights. But he also believes in liberal policies that are designed to make you think that he supports the rights of people. That is a common trick of progressives that so many people fall for.  










































The above picture shows the female reporter's so called boyfriend's tweet about her death 12 minutes before the on air live incident.  Look at the time and date stamps on the two pictures here.  Something just does not add up.

  I suspect that the video at the top will be taken down as well as the pictures of the tweet from the reporters so called boyfriend.  I can't stop that, but you have to ask why do all the search engines keep doing this?  Well, the good news?  Gun sales are up in Virginia and everywhere else all across the nation.  People are not buying this stuff anymore.

  Its a fight for your rights.  The progressives don't think you should have any.  You decide if you think you should have rights.  If not and you own a gun, go turn it in.  You can always throw rocks but that too will become illegal.  What are you anyway, a child?  Remember, progressives are smarter than you and think they should control every aspect of your life.  Want to let them?  Its all part of the New Virginia Economy as Terry would put it.

Thursday, June 26, 2014

Statement of Governor Terence McAuliffe on 2015-2016 Budget Actions

Virginia General Assembly
Virginia General Assembly (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Good Morning.

Over the past six days, my finance team and I have carefully reviewed the Biennial Budget that was transmitted to my office last Sunday by the General Assembly.

This budget was completed almost three months late, after the Republican leadership of the House of Delegates stubbornly refused to take even the most modest steps toward closing the health care coverage gap. 

Virginians in every corner of the Commonwealth know that the lack of health care is hurting families, stunting economic growth, damaging hospitals and clinics, and causing too many of our citizens to suffer needlessly.

It is unconscionable that one of the wealthiest states in one of the wealthiest nations in the world does not provide health care to its needy citizens, particularly when we have already paid for it. 

Providing health care to people who are sick is a moral imperative.

Time and time again, a bipartisan coalition in the Senate and I offered the House Republicans the opportunity to compromise.  They had the chance to come to the table and help fix this serious problem, and every single time, they said NO.

When I took the oath of office in January, I had just come off a campaign in which I ran and won on a platform of expanding Medicaid services to 400,000 Virginians.  This was a program just like 27 other states have enacted. 

Some of the most conservative Governors in the nation have implemented this program.  Not only did the Republican leadership refuse to compromise, they refused to even discuss the issue.

My team and I then worked very closely with Republican members of the Senate on a compromise plan called Marketplace Virginia. 

As with any compromise, I didn’t like every part of Marketplace Virginia, but I knew that it was our best chance to get a plan through the House of Delegates, and to thereby help those Virginians who desperately need health care.

Presented with the idea of Marketplace Virginia, the Republican leadership of the House of Delegates responded with a resounding NO.

Again, they rejected compromise.

When the General Assembly failed to complete its work on time and adjourned March 8th without a budget, I offered yet another compromise.

I proposed to close the health care coverage gap with a two-year pilot program and received a written commitment from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services affirming that Virginia could withdraw from the expanded program at any point we wanted with no ongoing obligation to the beneficiaries.

Once again, the Republican leadership of the House of Delegates said NO and refused to compromise. 

They chose instead to subject our citizens to a protracted budget stalemate that was unfair to local governments, veterans, law enforcement officers, our state workforce and most importantly the vulnerable men, women and children who depend on state government for important human services.

Then, last Thursday night, after the Senate of Virginia acceded to the demands of the House to “decouple” health care from the budget, and to drop Marketplace Virginia completely, the House again said NO. 

Together with their new-found majority in the Senate, House Republicans demanded an amendment that effectively eliminated the Medicaid Innovation and Reform Commission or MIRC as a vehicle for closing the coverage gap.

By refusing any and all compromise, the House leadership has turned its back on people all over Virginia who were looking to us to help them and their families gain access to life-saving treatments and medicine.

By refusing any and all compromise, the Republican leadership has elected to forfeit more than $5 million per day in funding that our people have already sent to Washington.

We have already lost $852 million as of this morning.

This is the context in which I had to evaluate this budget. 

It was long overdue. 

It failed to address health care – one of the most pressing needs of our people. 

And it contained reductions in spending that were much deeper than necessary because the General Assembly refused to accept Medicaid funding.

Frankly, if it were not June 20th – with only 10 days left in this fiscal year, I may well have vetoed the entire budget.  But given the severe difficulties the General Assembly had in getting even this weak budget to me, I seriously doubt that they could have prepared a budget in the next week without disrupting or imperiling critical services or jeopardizing our AAA Bond Rating.

Let me be crystal clear, I am moving forward to get Virginians health care.   

I intend to sign this legislation, but not without using my constitutional authority to make several line item vetoes.  Today, I am announcing that I will be vetoing several items in this budget:

First, I am vetoing the MIRC entirely.  It is increasingly clear to me that the MIRC is merely a sham to pretend that the legislature is serious about Medicaid reform and expansion. Even the former Attorney General questioned its constitutionality. 

My administration will continue to press for and achieve greater efficiency in Medicaid and other health care delivery programs.  My administration has demonstrated time and time again that we will work with anyone in the General Assembly – Democrat or Republican – to advance these goals. 

What we will NOT do is waste any more time on a process in which:
·         the needs of real people are not even discussed;
·         the metrics of reform are ignored; and,
·         the goal posts are moved or even uprooted constantly.

I have instructed Secretary Hazel and Secretary Brown and their teams not to attend or assist with any more meaningless MIRC meetings.

Second, I am vetoing the Stanley floor amendment because it is unnecessary given that there is no appropriation for expanded Medicaid pursuant to the Affordable Care Act. 

It restricts something that doesn’t exist.

With respect to health care, I am moving forward. There are several options available to me.

I have directed Secretary Hazel to work with our federal partners in Washington, the insurance industry, health care providers, our university medical centers, non-profit organizations, our local health departments, and the hospital industry to extend the promise of health care to our people.

Secretary Hazel will have a plan on my desk by no later than September 1st detailing how we can move Virginia health care forward even in the face of the demagoguery, lies, fear and cowardice that have gripped this debate for too long.

Third, I am vetoing funding for all new judgeships in which confirmation is limited to a regular or special session of the General Assembly.  This language is plainly an attempt to significantly limit the power of the Governor and is thus unacceptable.

Fourth, I am vetoing an appropriation that will allow Chesterfield County to partner with the City of Petersburg to address challenges confronted by the Petersburg schools.  This presents a number of legal problems and bad precedents, and was not requested by either locality.

Fifth, I am vetoing the item that would take $4.6 million from the Federal Action Contingency Trust (FACT) fund.  My intent would be to use some or all of this money to protect our interests in military facilities that may otherwise be at risk of federal cut backs.

I will not sit idle and allow the General Assembly to cripple our military assets. 

Sixth, I am vetoing the appropriation for the newly created Virginia Conflicts of Interest and Ethics Advisory Commission.  The ethics reform bill passed by the General Assembly was far weaker than what Virginians deserve of proper ethics reform. 

I plan to present revised legislation to the 2015 General Assembly session on this topic, and the creation of a new bureaucracy beforehand would be unwise and premature.  I also question the constitutionality of the commission given its scope of responsibilities. 

My Administration and their families live under a $100 gift band.  Virginians deserve a General Assembly that gets closer to that standard. 

Seventh, at the request of the Attorney General, I am vetoing language dealing with asset forfeiture settlements. 

The Attorney General has indicated that while they are willing to continue to work on a possible resolution of issues, the adopted language will cause the Commonwealth difficulty in executing future settlements of this type.  Put simply, the language is half baked and needs more work.

While not a veto, I have also directed the Department of General Services and other staff to suspend all activities to advance the replacement of the General Assembly building, the renovation of Old City Hall or the construction of the new parking deck near Capitol Square. 

In my view, it simply sends the wrong signal to our people to be constructing expensive new facilities in Richmond at a time when we can’t find $10 million to decrease homelessness.

My staff and I will continue to examine the budget through the weekend, and it is likely that we will have additional vetoes or amendments. 

I appreciate the work that the money committee staffs have done and will continue to do on this budget during the weekend.

Finally, I want to thank Virginia’s dedicated state workforce for their patience and continued hard work during this period of uncertainty.

It is our workforce that makes state government so effective and I am grateful to them for all they do.

Thank you.



Governor McAuliffe’s Announced Budget Actions:
1.      Governor McAuliffe intends to veto language authorizing the Medicaid Innovation and Reform Commission to Approve Medicaid reforms as a requirement for Medicaid Expansion (MIRC). The General Assembly made the Commission irrelevant by removing their appropriations authority from the budget. The MIRC has also consistently allowed partisan political considerations prevent action despite the criteria for Medicaid expansion having been fulfilled.

2.      Governor McAuliffe intends to veto the amendment limiting any appropriation or expenditure of funds in the State Treasury to address the health care coverage gap without specific authorization or an appropriation bill enacted by the General Assembly on or after July 1, 2014. The amendment is unnecessary given its intent to restrict an appropriation that does not exist anywhere in the budget.

3.      Governor McAuliffe intends to veto funding for all new judges to which the General Assembly has attached language limiting the Governor from making appointments when the legislature is out of session. The Governor’s right to fill judicial vacancies when the General Assembly is out of session is key to keeping the judiciary running efficiently.

4.      Governor McAuliffe intends to veto an appropriation that will allow Chesterfield County to partner with the City of Petersburg to improve the quality of Petersburg schools. The Governor is committed to improving underperforming schools, but he is concerned about the constitutionality of the legislation and neither locality requested the change.
5.      Governor McAuliffe intends to veto an item that would revert $4.6 million away from the Federal Action Contingency Trust (FACT) Fund. This money is needed to help protect Virginia’s military installations from federal cuts or potential actions of the Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) Commission.

6.      Governor McAuliffe intends to veto the appropriation for the newly created Virginia Conflicts of Interest Advisory Commission out of his concern over the weakness of the ethics legislation passed by the General Assembly. He intends to introduce stronger legislation in the next session, making the creation of a new bureaucracy premature and unwise.

7.      Governor McAuliffe intends to veto budget language dealing with asset forfeiture settlements at the request of the Office of the Attorney General. The Attorney General has indicated that while they are willing to continue to work on a possible resolution of issues, the adopted language will cause the Commonwealth difficulty in executing future settlements of this type.

8.      The Governor also announced that, in addition to his actions on the budget, he has directed the Virginia Department of General Services to suspend any actions on the new $300 million General Assembly Building in Richmond. He believes building new expensive offices for legislators to use part time is wrong when the General Assembly could not even find additional money to fight homelessness in Virginia.

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Governor McAuliffe Statement Following Senate Passage of His Budget Bill

English: VIrginia State Senate
English: VIrginia State Senate (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Governor Terry McAuliffe released the following statement following the Virginia Senate’s vote to pass Senate Bill 5003, the budget bill the Governor introduced at the beginning of this special session:

“Today the Virginia Senate acted in bipartisan fashion to pass a balanced, responsible budget that funds a number of priorities that will make life better for the Virginia families we serve. When I introduced this bill, I asked members of the General Assembly to put politics aside, offer their ideas for compromise and pass a budget. That is what the Senate did, and the budget they passed offers Virginia state employees a two percent raise, funds payments to families that lose a loved one in the line of duty, and includes a market-based plan to use our federal tax dollars to close the health care coverage gap.

“Now it is the responsibility of the House of Delegates to take this budget bill up, make their amendments and pass it so that legislators from both chambers can get to work negotiating a final product in a conference committee. As House leaders have said repeatedly over the past few weeks, Virginians are awaiting a budget. It is now up to the House of Delegates to put politics aside and act on the bill that is before them so that we can get Virginians the budget they deserve.”
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Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Statement of Governor Bob McDonnell on Retirement of Delegate Onzlee Ware

English: Governor of Virginia at CPAC in .
English: Governor of Virginia at CPAC in . (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
RICHMOND – Governor Bob McDonnell issued the following statement this afternoon following the news that Delegate Onzlee Ware (D-Roanoke) will retire from office.

“Over the past ten years, I’ve gotten to know Onzlee Ware very well. I know him as someone who always puts Virginia first. And I know him as a leader who will always tell you, directly and without nuance, just where he stands.

“Those two traits were on full display when Onzlee took the floor of the House of Delegates during the final debate on this year’s historic transportation bill. Onzlee rose to let the body know why he, a Democratic representative from Roanoke, was voting for this measure. He made it clear he didn’t love the bill. That’s the nature of any compromise. But he said he was voting for the legislation because, ‘I always tell people it’s easy to do nothing, because you don’t have to think, just say no.’ And he noted, ‘I intend on voting on this bill because in my opinion, it’s the right thing to do for all Virginians.’ And he did the same thing when he also took to the floor to support the creation of the Opportunity Educational Institution that will help turnaround failing schools in our Commonwealth. Onzlee always put policy ahead of party; he put results ahead of rhetoric. He strove to do the right thing for all Virginians. We’re all better for it.

“Onzlee has always sought out common ground in the service of our Commonwealth, and now our Commonwealth will greatly miss his service to our people. I know that personal reasons have made this decision necessary, and Maureen and I extend our thoughts and best wishes to Onzlee, his mother, and their family. I hope his involvement in the life of our Commonwealth will extend far beyond this day. Virginia needs more individuals like Onzlee Ware in public service.”
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