Trudy Berry is running to represent the 61st District in the House of Delegates. She grew up in Michigan and enlisted in the Air Force after graduating high school. After ending her military career, Berry moved to Lunenburg County in 1998 and earned a bachelor’s degree in sociology from Longwood College. She also holds a certificate in social policy and administration. While raising five children with her husband, Berry volunteered extensively in the community and church.
Berry sees reliable, high-speed Internet access as crucial to the economic and educational success of the region and wants to prioritize expanding affordable broadband access to every home in the district. She wants to bring jobs to the region by providing incentives to small business start-ups. Berry supports a living wage for working people and repealing Virginia’s right-to-work law. She wants to expand the minimum wage increase to include tipped workers and farmworkers. She also backs the right of workers to unionize.
Berry believes that strong schools are the backbone to thriving communities and wants to bridge the rural and urban educational gap. She supports fully funding the public education system and bringing equity to schools in the district. Berry wants to increase teacher pay to at least the national average to attract the best talent and prevent high turnover rates. She wants to bring more vocational training programs to the schools in the district.
Berry supports protecting the environment and wants to guarantee the right to clean air and water to all Virginians. She wants to curb carbon emissions by limiting the state’s reliance on fossil fuels. She will push for legislation that focuses on reducing waste and recycling. She wants to place a moratorium on mega landfills and the construction of new pipelines and ban single-use plastic. She promises to hold polluting industries accountable for the harm enacted on the environment and residents’ health.
Berry advocates for access to quality, affordable healthcare. She supports government measures to protect the health of communities from the COVID-19 pandemic like vaccinations and mask requirements. She wants to lower the cost of prescription medication and increase the number of mental healthcare providers in rural districts while boosting funding for substance abuse programs. She supports a person’s right to decide when and whether to become a parent and access to reproductive healthcare.
Berry is running against incumbent Delegate Tommy Wright (R) and Libertarian candidate Joseph Paschal, a construction manager. Paschal does not support keeping communities safe with common-sense measures aimed at preventing gun violence. He opposes raising revenue through property taxes and wants to guarantee access to broadband Internet for all of rural Virginia. He also supports the restoration of voting rights to returning citizens.
Wright has represented the 61st District since 2001. He voted against raising the minimum wage, collective bargaining rights for municipal employees, and abolishing the death penalty. He did not support expanding access to affordable health coverage to 400,000 Virginians in 2018. Wright opposed the Virginia Clean Economy Act and the Voting Rights Act of Virginia.
Due to her support of affordable healthcare, the environment, funding public education, broadband access, abortion access, and working families, Berry is the most progressive choice in this election.
Trudy Berry is running to represent the 61st District in the House of Delegates. She grew up in Michigan and enlisted in the Air Force after graduating high school. After ending her military career, Berry moved to Lunenburg County in 1998 and earned a bachelor’s degree in sociology from Longwood College. She also holds a certificate in social policy and administration. While raising five children with her husband, Berry volunteered extensively in the community and church.
Berry sees reliable, high-speed Internet access as crucial to the economic and educational success of the region and wants to prioritize expanding affordable broadband access to every home in the district. She wants to bring jobs to the region by providing incentives to small business start-ups. Berry supports a living wage for working people and repealing Virginia’s right-to-work law. She wants to expand the minimum wage increase to include tipped workers and farmworkers. She also backs the right of workers to unionize.
Berry believes that strong schools are the backbone to thriving communities and wants to bridge the rural and urban educational gap. She supports fully funding the public education system and bringing equity to schools in the district. Berry wants to increase teacher pay to at least the national average to attract the best talent and prevent high turnover rates. She wants to bring more vocational training programs to the schools in the district.
Berry supports protecting the environment and wants to guarantee the right to clean air and water to all Virginians. She wants to curb carbon emissions by limiting the state’s reliance on fossil fuels. She will push for legislation that focuses on reducing waste and recycling. She wants to place a moratorium on mega landfills and the construction of new pipelines and ban single-use plastic. She promises to hold polluting industries accountable for the harm enacted on the environment and residents’ health.
Berry advocates for access to quality, affordable healthcare. She supports government measures to protect the health of communities from the COVID-19 pandemic like vaccinations and mask requirements. She wants to lower the cost of prescription medication and increase the number of mental healthcare providers in rural districts while boosting funding for substance abuse programs. She supports a person’s right to decide when and whether to become a parent and access to reproductive healthcare.
Berry is running against incumbent Delegate Tommy Wright (R) and Libertarian candidate Joseph Paschal, a construction manager. Paschal does not support keeping communities safe with common-sense measures aimed at preventing gun violence. He opposes raising revenue through property taxes and wants to guarantee access to broadband Internet for all of rural Virginia. He also supports the restoration of voting rights to returning citizens.
Wright has represented the 61st District since 2001. He voted against raising the minimum wage, collective bargaining rights for municipal employees, and abolishing the death penalty. He did not support expanding access to affordable health coverage to 400,000 Virginians in 2018. Wright opposed the Virginia Clean Economy Act and the Voting Rights Act of Virginia.
Due to her support of affordable healthcare, the environment, funding public education, broadband access, abortion access, and working families, Berry is the most progressive choice in this election.
This election will be held on November 2, 2021, and shares a ballot with statewide offices of governor, lieutenant governor, and attorney general. Trudy Berry (D) is running against incumbent Delegate Tommy Wright (R) and Joseph Paschal (L). Del. Wright has held the seat since 2001.