Jim Moran Writes Letter to Cuccinelli on UVA Subpoena
Goodlatte Questions Holder on Soering Transfer
Federal Court of Appeals Hears Challenge to Virginia Stripper Laws
Port Authority Would Pay $800 Million Over 20 Years to Lease APM Terminal
Revenues Rise for Second Month, Though Still Forecasted to Be Down for Year
GOP Primary in NOVA 11 Sounds Familiar, But with a Twist
GOP Vets Take on Kagan Over Recruiting
8 of 25 Endangered Battlefields in Virginia
Verizon Request Could Cut Tax Revenues by Millions
Hanover Democrats Protest Arizona Immigration Law
Norfolk Makes Late Tweaks to Budget Plan
Albemarle Schools Cut 40 Positions
Snead Wants County Representation on Danville Utility Commission






It look like the contest between different kinds of Republicans in primary contests is going to be one of the salient aspects of the 2010 electoral campaign. But the two Republican candidates in Virginia’s 11th Congressional district do not seem as far apart as those elsewhere.
A sitting United States G.O.P. Senator from Utah has been knocked out in the primary there for not being conservative enough.
A larger question: Will the 2010 election lead to the remaking of the Republican party nationally?