About the Race
The election for Rose Hall’s seat on the Virginia Beach City Council occurs on November 3, 2020, as part of the general election. Former progressive lobbyist, Conrad Schesventer, running against conservative incumbent Michael Berlucchi, who was appointed in 2019, and Navy veteran Garry Hubbard. This race is nonpartisan.
About the District
Rose Hall is located in the center of the city, and borders the Beach district. Virginia Beach is an independent city located in Hampton Roads on the southeastern coast of the Commonwealth. It is the most populous city in Virginia, with a population of 1.2 million. Virginia Beach is politically split and is considered a toss-up. Donald Trump won the city with 48% of the vote, to Hillary Clinton’s 44%, in 2016. However, in 2018, Democrat Elaine Luria earned 51% of the vote in her election to Congress.
Recommendation
Conrad Schesventer is the co-host of a business and political talk show called Beach Brothers, who has lived in Virginia Beach for just over a year. He worked as a progressive lobbyist at the General Assembly in 2018 and was a consultant on Richelle Wallace’s campaign for mayor in Hampton.
Schesventer believes that the best way to diversify Virginia Beach’s economy is to focus on the significant role that agriculture already plays in the economy and support its expansion. He also sees the potential for big tech to take off in the city, due to its access to ultra-high-speed internet cables. He suggests giving new businesses an incentive to come to Virginia Beach to access the cables, allowing them a start-up time of one year with no initial property taxes.
On issues of police reform and racial justice, Schesventer believes that Virginia Beach’s Civilian Review Board needs to have more power to hold police officers accountable for misconduct. He also advocates for using automation and cameras to reduce interactions with the police by having citations for mild speeding, broken tail-lights, and expired registration automated and flagged by cameras. He believes pulling a car over for minor offenses opens the door to invasions of privacy and civil asset forfeiture.
Schesventer believes that the City Council must take a proactive approach to zoning issues, make sure that developments are environmentally friendly, designed with flood mitigation in mind, and ideally come with an affordable housing piece.
Schesventer has a record of being outspoken on gun legislation and personally addressed the Virginia Beach City Council and other city councils in Hampton Roads in opposition to second amendment sanctuary resolutions. Schesventer has been endorsed in his run for City Council by the Virginia Beach Democratic Committee.
Republican incumbent Michael Berlucchi is the former president of Hampton Roads Pride and voted to increase funding for schools and flooding mitigation. He advocated for the Virginia Values Act and to ban conversion therapy on minors during the 2020 legislative session. He is a supporter of small government and is generally opposed to regulations and tax increases. Berlucchi has not made any statements on police reform or affordable housing.
Schesventer’s other opponent, Garry Hubbard, is a US Navy veteran and construction contractor. According to the questionnaire he completed for the Virginia Beach Democratic Committee, Hubbard is strongly opposed to offshore drilling. Hubbard also told the Committee that he supports the demilitarization of the police. However, he has not put forward police reform policies as detailed as Schesventer’s. Hubbard is also less progrssive than Schesventer on affordable housing. He believes that the solution to communities being displaced by new developments and gentrification is to create more jobs. Due to his opinions on housing, we cannot be sure that Garry Hubbard would make progressive policy choices.
Conrad Schesventer is a progressive choice for this race.
About the Race
The election for Rose Hall’s seat on the Virginia Beach City Council occurs on November 3, 2020, as part of the general election. Former progressive lobbyist, Conrad Schesventer, running against conservative incumbent Michael Berlucchi, who was appointed in 2019, and Navy veteran Garry Hubbard. This race is nonpartisan.
About the District
Rose Hall is located in the center of the city, and borders the Beach district. Virginia Beach is an independent city located in Hampton Roads on the southeastern coast of the Commonwealth. It is the most populous city in Virginia, with a population of 1.2 million. Virginia Beach is politically split and is considered a toss-up. Donald Trump won the city with 48% of the vote, to Hillary Clinton’s 44%, in 2016. However, in 2018, Democrat Elaine Luria earned 51% of the vote in her election to Congress.
Recommendation
Conrad Schesventer is the co-host of a business and political talk show called Beach Brothers, who has lived in Virginia Beach for just over a year. He worked as a progressive lobbyist at the General Assembly in 2018 and was a consultant on Richelle Wallace’s campaign for mayor in Hampton.
Schesventer believes that the best way to diversify Virginia Beach’s economy is to focus on the significant role that agriculture already plays in the economy and support its expansion. He also sees the potential for big tech to take off in the city, due to its access to ultra-high-speed internet cables. He suggests giving new businesses an incentive to come to Virginia Beach to access the cables, allowing them a start-up time of one year with no initial property taxes.
On issues of police reform and racial justice, Schesventer believes that Virginia Beach’s Civilian Review Board needs to have more power to hold police officers accountable for misconduct. He also advocates for using automation and cameras to reduce interactions with the police by having citations for mild speeding, broken tail-lights, and expired registration automated and flagged by cameras. He believes pulling a car over for minor offenses opens the door to invasions of privacy and civil asset forfeiture.
Schesventer believes that the City Council must take a proactive approach to zoning issues, make sure that developments are environmentally friendly, designed with flood mitigation in mind, and ideally come with an affordable housing piece.
Schesventer has a record of being outspoken on gun legislation and personally addressed the Virginia Beach City Council and other city councils in Hampton Roads in opposition to second amendment sanctuary resolutions. Schesventer has been endorsed in his run for City Council by the Virginia Beach Democratic Committee.
Republican incumbent Michael Berlucchi is the former president of Hampton Roads Pride and voted to increase funding for schools and flooding mitigation. He advocated for the Virginia Values Act and to ban conversion therapy on minors during the 2020 legislative session. He is a supporter of small government and is generally opposed to regulations and tax increases. Berlucchi has not made any statements on police reform or affordable housing.
Schesventer’s other opponent, Garry Hubbard, is a US Navy veteran and construction contractor. According to the questionnaire he completed for the Virginia Beach Democratic Committee, Hubbard is strongly opposed to offshore drilling. Hubbard also told the Committee that he supports the demilitarization of the police. However, he has not put forward police reform policies as detailed as Schesventer’s. Hubbard is also less progrssive than Schesventer on affordable housing. He believes that the solution to communities being displaced by new developments and gentrification is to create more jobs. Due to his opinions on housing, we cannot be sure that Garry Hubbard would make progressive policy choices.
Conrad Schesventer is a progressive choice for this race.
About the Race
The election for President of the United States is on Tuesday, November 3, 2020. Former Vice President and Senator from Delaware Joe Biden (D) is running against the current president, Donald J. Trump (R), a businessman and former reality television star.
About the State
Every eligible voter may cast a ballot in the presidential election. The majority of the U.S. population has voted Democratic for the last twenty-eight years, except 2004. However, the allocation of electoral college votes led to Republicans taking the White House in two of those seven elections. Turnout is typically higher during presidential election years, though 2018 saw the highest record turnout for a non-presidential election since 1914, with 50.3% of the electorate turning out to vote. Turnout for the 2016 election was at 55.7%. In 2008, when the nation elected President Barack Obama (D), turnout was 58.2% but dropped to 54.9% in 2012.