2025 Virginia Attorney General election
This article documents a current election. Information may change rapidly as the election progresses until official results have been published. Initial news reports may be unreliable, and the last updates to this article may not reflect the most current information. |
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Jones: 50–60% 60–70% 70–80% 80–90% Miyares: 50–60% 60–70% 70–80% 80–90% | ||||||||||||||||
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| Elections in Virginia |
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The 2025 Virginia Attorney General election was held in Virginia on November 4, 2025, to elect the Attorney General of Virginia. The incumbent Republican attorney general, Jason Miyares, ran for re-election, but lost to Democratic nominee Jay Jones in a blue wave by a six percentage point margin.[1][2] The in-person early voting period ran from September 19 to November 1, 2025.[3]
Jones received widespread condemnation after text messages from 2022 surfaced in which he advocated violence against the then-state house speaker Todd Gilbert and wished death upon his children, while deriding a moderate Democrat who had received eulogies from Republicans.[4][5][6] Despite the controversy, Jones won the election in a blue wave by a six percentage point margin.[7][8] Jones will be the first African American to serve as the Attorney General of Virginia.[9]
Republican primary
[edit]Candidates
[edit]Nominee
[edit]- Jason Miyares, incumbent attorney general (2022–present)[10]
Endorsements
[edit]Statewide officials
- Glenn Youngkin, governor of Virginia (2022–present)[11]
Democratic primary
[edit]Teo Armus of The Washington Post described the primary as a proxy battle between Dominion Energy and Clean Virginia, an environmental group meant to counter Dominion's influence in Virginia elections. Shannon Taylor received over $800,000 from Dominion, its largest ever contribution in a single race.[12] Jay Jones received $579,000 from Clean Virginia.[13]
Candidates
[edit]Nominee
[edit]- Jay Jones, former Washington, D.C. assistant attorney general (2022–2023), former state delegate from the 89th district (2018–2021), and candidate for attorney general in 2021[14]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]- Shannon Taylor, Henrico County Commonwealth's Attorney (2012–present)[15]
Declined
[edit]- Steve Descano, Fairfax County Commonwealth's Attorney (2020–present) (endorsed Jones)[16]
Endorsements
[edit]- U.S. Senators
- Cory Booker, U.S. Senator from New Jersey (2013–present)[17]
- U.S. Representatives
- Bobby Scott, Virginia's 3rd congressional district (1993–present)[18]
- Suhas Subramanyam, Virginia's 10th congressional district (2025–present)[19]
- Eugene Vindman, Virginia's 7th congressional district (2025–present)[19]
- Statewide officials
- Terry McAuliffe, former governor of Virginia (2014–2018)[20]
- Ralph Northam, former governor of Virginia (2018–2022)[21]
- State legislators
- Lashrecse Aird, state senator from the 13th district (2024–present)[21]
- Alex Askew, state delegate from the 95th district (2020–2022, 2024–present)[21]
- Jeff Bourne, former state delegate from the 71st district (2017–2024)[21]
- Patrick Hope, state delegate from the 1st district (2010–present)[22]
- Adele McClure, state delegate from the 2nd district (2024–present)[22]
- Russet Perry, state senator from the 31st district (2024–present)[22]
- Atoosa Reaser, state delegate from the 27th district (2024–present)[22]
- Irene Shin, state delegate from the 8th district (2022–present)[22]
- Kannan Srinivasan, state senator from the 32nd district (2025–present)[22]
- Schuyler VanValkenburg, state senator from the 16th district (2024–present)[21]
- Local officials
- Andrea Bailey, Prince William County Supervisor[22]
- Parisa Dehghani-Tafti, Commonwealth’s Attorney of Arlington and Falls Church[22]
- Steve Descano, Fairfax County Commonwealth's Attorney[16]
- Karl Frisch, Fairfax County School Board chair[22]
- Koran Saines, Loudoun County supervisor[22]
- Organizations
- Statewide officials
- Mary Sue Terry, former Attorney General of Virginia (1986–1993)[25]
- Mark Herring, former Attorney General of Virginia (2014–2022)[26]
- State legislators
- Dick Saslaw, former majority leader of the Virginia State Senate (2020–2024) from the 35th district (1980–2024)[27]
- Eileen Filler-Corn, former Speaker of the Virginia House of Delegates (2020–2022) from the 41st district (2010–2024)[27]
- Labor unions
- International Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail and Transportation Workers and SMART Local 100[28]
- Organizations
Polling
[edit]| Poll source | Date(s) administered |
Sample size[a] |
Margin of error |
Jay Jones |
Shannon Taylor |
Undecided |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Global Strategy Group (D)[30][A] | March 11–13, 2025 | 600 (LV) | ± 4.0% | 15% | 25% | 60% |
Results
[edit]
- 50–60%
- 60–70%
- 70–80%
- 50–60%
- 60–70%
- 50%
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Democratic | Jay Jones | 252,976 | 51.11% | |
| Democratic | Shannon Taylor | 241,969 | 48.89% | |
| Total votes | 494,945 | 100.00% |
General election
[edit]Campaign
[edit]In October, a month before the election, a 2022 text conversation that Jay Jones had with Republican delegate Carrie Coyner following the death of former delegate Democrat Joe Johnson Jr. was made public by National Review. In the texts, Jones made disparaging remarks toward Republican members of the House, stating, "If those guys die before me I will go to their funerals to piss on their graves." Jones then followed up the remark by targeting then-Speaker of the House of Delegates Republican Todd Gilbert, giving a scenario in which Gilbert would be shot twice in the head. Jones said, "Three people, two bullets, Gilbert, Hitler, and Pol Pot. Gilbert gets two bullets to the head. Spoiler: put Gilbert in the crew with the two worst people you know, and he receives both bullets every time." Jones would then take his remarks further, targeting Gilbert's children, wishing death upon them, and stating that Gilbert and his wife were "evil" and "breeding little fascists."[32][33][34][35]
Jones has received bipartisan condemnation for his texts. His running mates Abigail Spanberger, the Democratic nominee in the 2025 Virginia gubernatorial election, and Ghazala Hashmi, the Democratic nominee in the 2025 Virginia lieutenant gubernatorial election, both issued statements condemning Jones. Spanberger stated that she had spoken with Jones regarding her "disgust". Meanwhile, Hashmi stated, "I condemn it at every turn, Jay must take accountability for the pain that his words have caused", along with U.S. Senator Mark Warner writing that Jones's comments are "appalling, unacceptable, and inconsistent with the person [he's] known."[36] Virginia Senate Majority Leader Scott Surovell called the texts "a serious lapse in judgment that cannot be defended," while current Virginia House Speaker Don Scott condemned the remarks but stated that "we can't get distracted, because they want us to get distracted by the text message here or something else. Stay focused."[35] Republicans, including Governor Glenn Youngkin, U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson, and Vice President JD Vance, have called for Jones to withdraw from the race.[37][38]
In Jones's initial statement following the publication, he accused his opponent of "dropping smears through Trump-controlled media organizations to assault my character and rescue his desperate campaign" and stated that his opponent "will continue to be accountable to Donald Trump, not the people of Virginia."[39] Prior to the article, it had come out that in the same year, Jones was charged with reckless driving after driving 116 miles per hour on Interstate 64 in New Kent County. Despite Virginia's mandatory one-year jail sentence for reckless driving, Jones was sentenced to 1,000 hours of community service, half of which he served working for his own PAC, Meet Our Moment, along with a $1,500 fine.[40] Jones would later issue a statement taking responsibility for the text messages and apologized to Gilbert and his family.[41]
A criminal investigation was opened against Jones by the New Kent County Commonwealth's Attorney on October 9, stating that the documentation did not clearly indicate that Meet Our Moment was a political action committee and that community service must be performed at nonpolitical nonprofit organizations.[42] On October 21, a judge signed an order recusing the New Kent County Commonwealth's Attorney and appointing the Williamsburg-James City County Commonwealth's Attorney as a special prosecutor to oversee the investigation.[43]
Debates
[edit]There was one streamed debate, on October 16, hosted by the University of Richmond.[44]
| No. | Date | Host | Moderator | Link | Republican | Democratic |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Key: P Participant A Absent N Not invited I Invited W Withdrawn |
||||||
| Miyares | Jones | |||||
| 1 | October 16, 2025 | Virginia Bar Association University of Richmond |
Brett Marston | [45] | P | P |
Predictions
[edit]| Source | Ranking | As of |
|---|---|---|
| State Navigate[46] | Lean D (flip) | October 22, 2025 |
| Sabato's Crystal Ball[47] | Lean D (flip) | August 21, 2025 |
Post-primary endorsements
[edit]- Federal officials
- Donald Trump, 45th and 47th president of the United States (2017–2021, 2025–present)[48]
- Statewide officials
- Bob McDonnell, former governor of Virginia (2010–2014)[49]
- Larry Hogan, former governor of Maryland (2015–2023)[50][51]
- James Uthmeier, Attorney General of Florida (2025–present)[52]
- U.S. representatives
- Denver Riggleman, former U.S. Representative from VA-5 (2019–2021) (Independent)[53]
- State legislators
- Mark Earley Jr., state delegate from the 73rd district (2024–present)[54]
- Local officials
- Pat Herrity, Fairfax County supervisor from the Springfield district (2008–present)[55]
- Organizations
- U.S. Senators
- State legislators
- Lamont Bagby, state senator from the 14th district (2024–present)[60]
- Joe Morrissey, former state senator from the 16th district (2020–2024)[61]
- Local officials
- Shannon Taylor, Henrico County Commonwealth's Attorney (2012–present) (eliminated in primary)[62]
- Organizations
Polling
[edit]Aggregate polls
| Source of poll aggregation |
Dates administered |
Dates updated |
Jason Miyares (R) |
Jay Jones (D) |
Other/Undecided [b] |
Margin |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Decision Desk HQ[69] | through November 3, 2025 | November 3, 2025 | 47.4% | 45.5% | 7.1% | Miyares +1.9% |
| RealClearPolitics[70] | October 16–31, 2025 | November 2, 2025 | 47.0% | 45.4% | 7.6% | Miyares +1.6% |
| VoteHub[71] | through November 3, 2025 | November 4, 2025 | 46.9% | 45.8% | 7.3% | Miyares +1.1% |
| Average | 47.1% | 45.6% | 7.3% | Miyares +1.5% |
| Poll source | Date(s) administered |
Sample size[a] |
Margin of error |
Jason Miyares (R) |
Jay Jones (D) |
Other | Undecided |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quantus Insights (R)[72] | November 3, 2025 | 1,039 (LV) | ± 2.7% | 47% | 47% | 1% | 5% |
| InsiderAdvantage (R)[73] | November 2–3, 2025 | 800 (LV) | ± 3.5% | 47% | 49% | – | 4% |
| The Trafalgar Group (R)[74] | November 1–2, 2025 | 1,057 (LV) | ± 2.9% | 46% | 46% | – | 8% |
| Emerson College[75] | October 30–31, 2025 | 880 (LV) | ± 3.2% | 47% | 49% | – | 4% |
| Echelon Insights[76] | October 28–31, 2025 | 606 (LV) | ± 4.7% | 49% | 46% | 1%[c] | 4% |
| AtlasIntel[77] | October 25–30, 2025 | 1,325 (LV) | ± 3.0% | 48% | 47% | 3%[d] | 2% |
| SoCal Strategies (R)[78][B] | October 28–29, 2025 | 800 (LV) | – | 48% | 46% | – | 6% |
| State Navigate[79] | October 26–28, 2025 | 614 (LV) | ± 4.0% | 46% | 49% | – | 5% |
| Roanoke College[80] | October 22–27, 2025 | 1,041 (LV) | ± 4.1% | 46% | 38% | 4%[e] | 12% |
| A2 Insights[81] | October 24–26, 2025 | 776 (LV) | – | 49% | 48% | – | 3% |
| Christopher Newport University[82] | October 21–23, 2025 | 803 (LV) | ± 4.1% | 46% | 45% | 1% | 8% |
| Suffolk University[83] | October 19–21, 2025 | 500 (LV) | ± 4.4% | 46% | 42% | 2%[f] | 9% |
| Quantus Insights (R)[84] | October 19–20, 2025 | 1,302 (RV) | ± 2.8% | 49% | 42% | 2% | 7% |
| State Navigate[85] | October 17–20, 2025 | 694 (LV) | ± 4.0% | 45% | 50% | – | 5% |
| The Washington Post/Schar School[86] | October 16–20, 2025 | 927 (LV) | ± 3.5% | 46% | 46% | 5%[g] | 3% |
| 927 (RV) | 44% | 44% | 9%[h] | 3% | |||
| Kaplan Strategies (R)[87] | October 16–18, 2025 | 556 (LV) | ± 4.2% | 45% | 44% | – | 10% |
| co/efficient (R)[88] | October 15–17, 2025 | 937 (LV) | ± 3.2% | 46% | 42% | – | 11% |
| Clarity Campaign Labs (D)[89][C] | October 14–17, 2025 | 958 (RV) | ± 3.2% | 47% | 47% | – | 6% |
| The Trafalgar Group/InsiderAdvantage (R)[90] | October 13–15, 2025 | 1,039 (LV) | ± 2.9% | 50% | 45% | – | 6% |
| Virginia Commonwealth University[91] | October 6–14, 2025 | 842 (A) | ± 4.0% | 45% | 42% | – | 12% |
| The Trafalgar Group (R)[92] | October 8–10, 2025 | 1,034 (LV) | ± 2.9% | 49% | 43% | – | 8% |
| Cygnal (R)[93][D] | October 6–7, 2025 | 600 (LV) | ± 4.0% | 46% | 44% | – | 10% |
| Hart Research (D)[94][E] | October 4–6, 2025 | 600 (LV) | – | 45% | 46% | – | 9% |
| Jay Jones text messages leak | |||||||
| Christopher Newport University[95] | September 29 – October 1, 2025 | 805 (RV) | ± 3.9% | 43% | 49% | – | 8% |
| The Trafalgar Group (R)[96] | September 29 – October 1, 2025 | 1,034 (LV) | ± 2.9% | 45% | 49% | – | 6% |
| The Washington Post/Schar School[97] | September 25–29, 2025 | 1,002 (LV) | ± 3.4% | 45% | 51% | 1%[i] | 3% |
| 1,002 (RV) | 42% | 48% | 6%[j] | 3% | |||
| A2 Insights[98] | September 16–28, 2025 | 771 (LV) | – | 46% | 49% | 1%[k] | 5% |
| OnMessage Inc. (R)[99] | September 15–18, 2025 | 800 (V) | ± 3.5% | 46% | 46% | – | 8% |
| Christopher Newport University[100] | September 8–14, 2025 | 808 (RV) | ± 3.9% | 41% | 48% | – | 12% |
| Cygnal (R)[93][D] | September 7, 2025 | – | – | 43% | 46% | – | 11% |
| Virginia Commonwealth University[101] | August 18–28, 2025 | 804 (A) | ± 4.1% | 41% | 47% | – | 12% |
| SoCal Strategies (R)[102][F] | August 31 – September 1, 2025 | 700 (LV) | – | 41% | 46% | – | 12% |
| co/efficient (R)[103] | August 23–26, 2025 | 1,025 (LV) | ± 3.06% | 44% | 45% | – | 11% |
| Roanoke College[104][105] | August 11–15, 2025 | 702 (LV) | ± 4.3% | 38% | 41% | – | 21% |
| Wick Insights[106] | July 9–11, 2025 | 1,000 (LV) | ± 3.0% | 41% | 48% | – | 11% |
| American Directions Research Group/AARP[107] | June 25 – July 8, 2025 | 1,001 (LV) | ± 3.1% | 36% | 53% | – | 11% |
| Virginia Commonwealth University[108] | June 19 – July 3, 2025 | 764 (RV) | ± 4.2% | 37% | 46% | 3%[l] | 13% |
Results
[edit]| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Democratic | Jay Jones | 1,753,896 | 52.73% | |
| Republican | Jason Miyares (incumbent) | 1,559,110 | 46.87% | |
| Write-in | 13,356 | 0.40% | ||
| Total votes | 3,326,362 | 100.00% | ||
| Democratic gain from Republican |
By county and independent city
[edit]By congressional district
[edit]Jones won six of the 11 districts. He also flipped the 7th district, which was previously won by Jason Miyares in 2021.[112]
| District | Miyares | Jones | Representative |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | 54.3% | 45.7% | Rob Wittman |
| 2nd | 51.0% | 49.0% | Jen Kiggans |
| 3rd | 33.1% | 66.9% | Bobby Scott |
| 4th | 35.1% | 64.9% | Jennifer McClellan |
| 5th | 60.3% | 39.7% | John McGuire |
| 6th | 63.3% | 36.7% | Ben Cline |
| 7th | 46.8% | 53.2% | Eugene Vindman |
| 8th | 26.8% | 73.2% | Don Beyer |
| 9th | 72.7% | 27.3% | Morgan Griffith |
| 10th | 44.2% | 55.8% | Suhas Subramanyam |
| 11th | 31.7% | 68.3% | James Walkinshaw |
Notes
[edit]- ^ a b c Key:
A – all adults
RV – registered voters
LV – likely voters
V – unclear - ^ Calculated by taking the difference of 100% and all other candidates combined.
- ^ "I did not vote for this office" with 1%
- ^ "Would not vote" with 3%
- ^ "Refused" with 3%; "Some other candidate" with 1%
- ^ "Refused" with 2%
- ^ "Neither" with 4%; "Would not vote" with 1%
- ^ "Neither" with 6%; "Would not vote" with 3%
- ^ "None of these" with 1%
- ^ "Neither" with 4%; "Would not vote" with 2%
- ^ "Other" with 1%
- ^ "Wouldn't vote" with 2%, "Refused" with 1%, and "Someone else" with 0%
Partisan clients
- ^ Poll sponsored by Taylor's campaign
- ^ Poll sponsored by Red Eagle Politics, a conservative content creator
- ^ Poll commissioned by the Democratic Attorneys General Association, which supports Jones
- ^ a b Poll commissioned by the Republican Attorneys General Association, which supports Miyares
- ^ Poll sponsored by Jones's campaign
- ^ Poll sponsored by the Virginia Project
- ^ Poll sponsored by Founders Insight
References
[edit]- ^ "Virginia Attorney General Results 2025". NBC News. November 4, 2025. Retrieved November 4, 2025.
- ^ "2025 June Democratic Primary". Virginia Department of Elections. Retrieved June 28, 2025.
- ^ "Upcoming Elections". Virginia Department of Elections. Retrieved September 10, 2025.
- ^ Smith, John (October 4, 2025). "Virginia Elections: Jay Jones's Texts Spark Outrage". Politico. Retrieved October 26, 2023.
In October 2025, text messages were leaked showing Jay Jones wishing death for kids of his political opponents.
- ^ "Jones fallout". Politico. October 8, 2025. Retrieved October 9, 2025.
- ^ Manchester, Julia (October 6, 2025). "Pressure grows on Virginia Democratic candidate to quit after violent text messages".
- ^ "Democrat Jay Jones wins Virginia AG race, overcoming backlash to his violent texts". NBC News.
- ^ "Blue wave rebuilds the House: Democrats soar to at least 64 seats in Virginia • Virginia Mercury".
- ^ Murphy, Ryan (November 5, 2025). "Norfolk Democrat Jay Jones wins, will become Virginia's first Black Attorney General". WHRO Public Media.
- ^ Chen, Anna (April 3, 2025). "Republican Party of Virginia nominates Jason Miyares for Attorney General of Virginia". WJHL.
- ^ Diaz, Olivia (November 18, 2024). "Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares will seek reelection, quelling talk of a gubernatorial bid". Associated Press. Retrieved November 18, 2024.
- ^ Armus, Teo (June 18, 2025). "Analysis | 5 takeaways from Virginia's primary election results". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Archived from the original on June 18, 2025. Retrieved June 18, 2025.
- ^ Sledge, Matt (June 14, 2025). "Virginia AG Hopeful Was Outraising His Rival — Then Dominion Energy Tipped the Scale". The Intercept. Retrieved July 8, 2025.
- ^ Mirshahi, Dean (November 12, 2024). "Former Delegate Jay Jones launches bid for Virginia attorney general". WRIC-TV. Retrieved November 12, 2024.
- ^ Mirshahi, Dean (June 19, 2024). "Henrico's top prosecutor Shannon Taylor kicks off 2025 Virginia attorney general run". WRIC-TV. Retrieved June 20, 2024.
- ^ a b Jarvis, Brandon (May 6, 2024). "Descano opts to endorse Jones instead of running for attorney general". Virginia Scope.
- ^ Manchester, Julia (June 3, 2025). "Booker wades into Virginia attorney general race". The Hill. Retrieved September 25, 2025.
- ^ "Thursday News: Youngkin's Buddy Kari Lake Turns VOA Into Far-Right-Propaganda Network; "Trump picks conspiracy theorist with no medical license" for Surgeon General; "GOP Plans To Cut Medicaid Would Kick Millions Off Health Insurance"; "Salacious Saga…revealed a stunning lack of political juice from Mr. Youngkin"". May 8, 2025. Retrieved May 8, 2025.
- ^ a b Jarvis, Brandon (May 8, 2025). "Rep. Scott endorses Jay Jones in the AG primary". Virginia Political Newsletter. Retrieved September 25, 2025.
- ^ Feld, Lowell (May 21, 2024). "Former Gov. Terry McAuliffe (and, btw, we'd all be a LOT better off if he were govenror NOW!), endorses Jay Jones for AG 2025". Blue Virginia. Retrieved May 21, 2024.
- ^ a b c d e Jarvis, Brandon (January 4, 2024). "Northam spearheads movement to encourage Jones to run for attorney general". Virginia Scope. Retrieved April 3, 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Feld, Lowell (April 1, 2024). "Virginians for Jay Jones supporters announced today". Blue Virginia. Retrieved April 3, 2024.
- ^ "Largest Federal Employee Union Endorses Jay Jones for Virginia Attorney General". AFGE.org. May 20, 2025. Retrieved May 25, 2025.
- ^ Jarvis, Brandon (April 17, 2025). "Clean Virginia and Dominion Energy face off again in statewide primary". Virginia Scope. Retrieved May 24, 2025.
- ^ Nir, David; Singer, Jeff (April 11, 2025). "Morning Digest: Don't sleep on these two major races happening in Virginia this year". The Downballot. Retrieved April 11, 2025.
- ^ "Fmr. Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring Endorses Shannon Taylor for Attorney General". Blue Virginia. May 2025. Retrieved May 9, 2025.
- ^ a b Barthel, Margaret (May 15, 2025). "Meet the two Democrats running in the primary for Virginia Attorney General". WAMU.
- ^ Jarvis, Brandon (April 5, 2025). "Shannon Taylor announces Q1 fundraising haul". Virginia Scope. Retrieved April 22, 2025.
- ^ "EMILYs List Endorses State Sen. Ghazala Hashmi for Lieutenant Governor and Shannon Taylor for Attorney General of Virginia". Blue Virginia. December 12, 2024. Retrieved January 3, 2025.
- ^ "New "Internal" Poll by Shannon Taylor for AG Campaign Finds Taylor Leading Jay Jones 25%-15%, with 60% Undecided". Blue Virginia. March 27, 2025. Retrieved April 25, 2025.
- ^ "2025 June Democratic Primary". Virginia Department of Elections. Retrieved June 28, 2025.
- ^ @NRO (October 3, 2025). "National Review" (Tweet). Retrieved October 4, 2025 – via Twitter.
- ^ Seltzer, Kate (October 3, 2025). "Jay Jones texts from 2022 describe wanting to shoot former Virginia House speaker". The Virginian-Pilot. Archived from the original on October 3, 2025. Retrieved October 4, 2025.
- ^ Bryson, Anna (October 3, 2025). "In 2022, Jay Jones texted about shooting House Speaker Todd Gilbert". Richmond Times-Dispatch. Archived from the original on October 3, 2025. Retrieved October 4, 2025.
- ^ a b Schmidt, Markus (October 5, 2025). "'Beyond disqualifying': Jay Jones controversy jolts Virginia's pivotal 2025 elections". Virginia Mercury. Retrieved October 6, 2025.
- ^ Lusso, Katie; Sopher, Ittai (October 3, 2025). "Virginia politicians condemn attorney general nominee over violent texts". WUSA9. Retrieved October 4, 2025.
- ^ Dan McCaleb (October 4, 2025). "Youngkin, Johnsion calll for AG candidate to withdraw after violent texts emerge". The High Point Enterprise.
- ^ Mike Bedigan (October 4, 2025). "JD Vance piles on Democratic candidate who likened rival to Hitler and said he should be shot". The Independent.
- ^ Charles Creitz (October 3, 2025). "Virginia AG candidate once referenced putting 'two bullets to the head' of GOP leader, texts show". Fox News. Retrieved October 4, 2025.
- ^ Anna Young (October 1, 2025). "Dem Virginia AG candidate Jay Jones dodged jail for reckless driving with 500 community service hours at his own PAC: report". New York Post. Retrieved October 4, 2025.
- ^ Graham, Chris (October 4, 2025). "AG nominee Jay Jones releases statement on Todd Gilbert texts". Augusta Free Press. Retrieved October 4, 2025.
- ^ Minock, Nick (October 9, 2025). "Prosecutor investigates Jay Jones' community service after reckless driving conviction". ABC7. Retrieved October 22, 2025.
- ^ Harper, Jane (October 22, 2025). "Special prosecutor appointed to investigate Jay Jones 2022 reckless driving case in New Kent". Yahoo / The Virginian-Pilot.
- ^ 12 On Your Side Digital Team (October 7, 2025). "Virginia attorney general candidates set for debate". 12OnYourSide. Retrieved October 8, 2025.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ "LIVE: Virginia Attorney General debate FOX 5 DC". YouTube. October 16, 2025.
- ^ "2025 VA Forecasts". projects.statenavigate.com. Retrieved October 13, 2025.
- ^ Jacobson, Louis (August 21, 2025). "State Attorneys General: The Top Races to be "Top Cop"". Sabato's Crystal Ball. Retrieved August 22, 2025.
- ^ The Associated Press (October 5, 2025). "President Trump weighs in on Jay Jones' 'two bullets to the head' text message". CBS6. Retrieved October 6, 2025.
- ^ "Northam, McDonnell share vision for Virginia's future in election". 13newsnow.com. October 29, 2021. Retrieved August 22, 2023.
- ^ It was a great pleasure to headline an event for my friend, Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares. – Larry Hogan via Facebook.
- ^ Jason Miyares Fundraiser with Larry Hogan. – Fairfax GOP.
- ^ https://www.newsmax.com/newsmax-tv/james-uthmeier-newsmax-jason-miyares/2025/11/04/id/1233147/
- ^ Fahlberg, Audrey (October 10, 2025). "This Anti-Trump Ex-Congressman Abandoned the GOP After January 6. Now, He's Ruling Jay Jones Out of Bounds". National Review.
- ^ Lee, A. K. (October 4, 2025). "Mark Earley voices support for Jason Miyares re-election in recent social media posts". Richmond Leader. Retrieved October 6, 2025.
- ^ Schmidt, Markus (April 22, 2025). "Herrity bows out of LG race, setting Virginia’s GOP ticket for 2025". Virginia Mercury. Retrieved October 9, 2025, from Virginia Mercury.
- ^ "The National Right to Life Committee endorses the following candidates in vitally important races in Virginia!" (PDF). National Right to Life Committee, Inc. Retrieved October 6, 2025.
- ^ "NRA's Political Victory Fund Endorses Lieutenant Governor Winsome Sears, Attorney General Jason Miyares and John Reid". NRA-PVF. August 6, 2025. Retrieved August 19, 2025.
- ^ Manchester, Julia (August 13, 2025). "Virginia police group splits ticket, backing Spanberger and downballot Republicans". The Hill. Retrieved August 14, 2025.
- ^ John, Arit; McKend, Eva (October 6, 2025). "Virginia Democrats criticize AG candidate Jay Jones for violent texts but aren't demanding he quit race". CNN.
- ^ https://www.politico.com/news/2025/11/01/jay-jones-virginia-democrats-texting-00632600
- ^ Schmidt, Markus (September 23, 2025). "Morrissey breaks with Democrats, backs GOP's John Reid for lieutenant governor". States Newsroom. Retrieved September 23, 2025.
- ^ Cooper, Tracy (June 17, 2025). "Jay Jones wins Democratic primary for Virginia Attorney General, will face Miyares in November". WVEC. Retrieved July 10, 2025.
- ^ "People For the American Way Releases First Slates of Political Endorsements for 2025 | People For". People For the American Way. September 15, 2025. Retrieved October 26, 2025.
- ^ "End Citizens United Endorses Jay Jones for Virginia Attorney General". endcitizensunited.org. August 11, 2025. Retrieved September 8, 2025.
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External links
[edit]Official campaign websites