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2025 Virginia lieutenant gubernatorial election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2025 Virginia lieutenant gubernatorial election

← 2021
November 4, 2025 (2025-11-04)
2029 →
 
NomineeGhazala HashmiJohn Reid
PartyDemocraticRepublican
Popular vote1,900,1041,505,395
Percentage55.65%44.09%

County and independent city results
Congressional district results
Precinct results
Hashmi:     40–50%     50–60%     60–70%     70–80%     80–90%     >90%
Reid:     50–60%     60–70%     70–80%     80–90%     >90%
Tie:     40–50%     No votes

Lieutenant Governor before election

Winsome Earle-Sears
Republican

ElectedLieutenant Governor

Ghazala Hashmi
Democratic

Elections in Virginia
U.S. President
Presidential primaries
U.S. Senate
U.S. House
Governor
Lieutenant Governor
Attorney General
Senate
House of Delegates
State elections
Commonwealth's Attorney

The2025 Virginia lieutenant gubernatorial election was held on November 4, 2025, to elect thelieutenant governor of Virginia. The incumbentRepublican lieutenant governor,Winsome Earle-Sears, did not run for a second term in office, instead choosing torun for governor. Primary elections took place on June 17, 2025.[1] The in-personearly voting period ran from September 19 to November 1, 2025.[2] Hashmi won the general election and took office on January 17, 2026.[3]

The Republican nominee was formerWRVA radio host John Reid,[4] who would have been Virginia's firstopenly gay lieutenant governor if elected.[5] The Democratic nominee wasstate senatorGhazala Hashmi, who became Virginia's firstAsian andMuslim lieutenant governor.[6] She is also the first Muslim woman elected to statewide office in US history.[7]

Republican primary

[edit]
Reid (left) andGlenn Youngkin (right) speaking on June 25, 2025

In September 2024, Lieutenant GovernorWinsome Earle-Sears announced her candidacy forgovernor of Virginia.[8] In January 2025,Fairfax County supervisorPat Herrity and radio host John Reid announced their candidacies for the Republican nomination for lieutenant governor.[9][10]

On April 21, after the filing deadline, Herrity announced his withdrawal from the race due to health reasons.[11] This made Reid the Republican nominee by default.[11] Four days later,The Richmonder reported that GovernorGlenn Youngkin, also a Republican, had asked Reid to withdraw from the race, citing sexually explicit images and posts on a page on the microblogging platformTumblr which had a username that matched the name Reid uses on other social media accounts.[12] Reid denied making the posts and pledged to remain in the race, arguing the effort to remove him from the ticket was due to his sexual orientation. Reid is Virginia's first openly gay candidate from either the Democratic Party or the Republican Party for statewide office.[13][14]

Following backlash from within the Republican Party, Youngkin stated he would "support the nominees and their ticket".[14] Youngkin staffer Matt Moran, whom Reid's campaign accused of being behind the effort to remove him from the ticket, resigned as a result of the controversy.[15][16]

John Curran, a business consultant from James City County, did not qualify for the ballot. Following this, Curran filed as a write-in candidate for the general election and said "I decided to give the voters an option. It's a hard option for me because people actually have to know how to spell your name and write it in. If Virginia wants me, they'll do it."[17]

Candidates

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Withdrawn

[edit]

Failed to qualify

[edit]
  • John Curran, business consultant[19]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
John Reid

Statewide officials

Democratic primary

[edit]
See also:Levar Stoney § Loss

Six candidates appeared on the ballot for the Democratic primary.[23] Prior to the election, the race was viewed to have three favored frontrunners: state senatorsGhazala Hashmi andAaron Rouse, along with formerRichmond mayorLevar Stoney.[24] In a very tight race between the three, Hashmi narrowly secured the nomination over Stoney and Rouse.[25]

Hashmi speaking at a bus rally inFairfax, Virginia withJay Jones andAbigail Spanberger

Candidates

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Withdrawn

[edit]
  • Carl Eggleston, formerFarmville councilor (1984–1988)(endorsed Stoney)[33]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Ghazala Hashmi

U.S. representatives

State legislators

Individuals

Organizations

Babur Lateef

Statewide officials

Aaron Rouse

U.S. representatives

State legislators

Local officials

Levar Stoney

Executive branch officials

U.S. representatives

Statewide officials

State legislators

Newspapers

Individuals

Polling

[edit]
Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Ghazala HashmiBabur LateefAaron RouseLevar StoneyOtherUndecided
Garin-Hart-Yang (D)[54][A]February 25 – March 1, 2025600 (LV)± 4%8%2%10%16%63%
GBAO (D)[55][B]March 24–27, 2025600 (LV)± 4%13%2%15%15%3%46%

Debates

[edit]
2025 Virginia's Lieutenant Gubernatorial Democratic primary debate
No.DateHostModeratorLinkDemocraticDemocraticDemocraticDemocraticDemocraticDemocratic
Key:
 P Participant  A Absent  N Not invited  I Invited W  Withdrawn
BastaniHashmiLateefRouseSalgadoStoney
1May 22, 2025WJLA-TVKellye Lynn[56]PPPPPP

Results

[edit]
Results by county and independent city:
  Hashmi
  •   20–30%
  •   30–40%
  •   40–50%
  •   50–60%
  Stoney
  •   20–30%
  •   30–40%
  •   40–50%
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
  •   70–80%
  Rouse
  •   20–30%
  •   30–40%
  •   40–50%
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
  Lateef
  •   30–40%
  Bastani
  •   30–40%
2025 Virginia lt. governor Democratic primary[57]
PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticGhazala Hashmi136,71727.50%
DemocraticLevar Stoney131,76526.50%
DemocraticAaron Rouse130,48526.25%
DemocraticBabur Lateef42,0998.47%
DemocraticAlex Bastani28,4765.73%
DemocraticVictor Salgado27,5935.55%
Total votes497,135100.00%

Independents

[edit]

Declined

[edit]

General election

[edit]

Campaign

[edit]

Ghazala Hashmi, the Democratic nominee, had declined to participate in a debate with John Reid, the Republican nominee.[59] No debates had been held for lieutenant governor at the previous 2021 election.[59] In response, Reid held a 40-minute debate without the involvement of Hashmi.[59][60] Hashmi was represented by a computer monitor depicting her face, with responses delivered viaartificial intelligence speech synthesis.[60] The Reid campaign stated the responses delivered through speech synthesis were compiled and written by the Reid campaign, through information from interviews and Hashmi's website.The Virginian-Pilot noted that the on-screen attribution for the statements delivered occasionally listedfar-right websites such asThe Gateway Pundit.[60] Noah Jennings, Reid's campaign manager, stated that they had aimed for a debate that was "fair and accurate to [Hashmi], not campy and overdramatic", while Ava Pitruzzello, a spokesperson for the Hashmi campaign, called it a "failed use ofdeepfakes" that was "desperate" and "straight out ofDonald Trump’s playbook".[59]

Predictions

[edit]
SourceRankingAs of
State Navigate[61]Likely D(flip)August 15, 2025

Post-primary endorsements

[edit]
John Reid (R)

U.S. Representatives

Statewide officials

State legislators

Organizations

Ghazala Hashmi (D)

U.S. Representatives

Statewide officials

State legislators

Local officials

Organizations

Polling

[edit]

Aggregate polls

Source of poll
aggregation
Dates
administered
Dates
updated
John
Reid (R)
Ghazala
Hashmi (D)
Other/Undecided
[b]
Margin
Decision Desk HQ[79]through November 3, 2025November 4, 202544.3%48.9%6.8%Hashmi +4.6%
Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
John
Reid (R)
Ghazala
Hashmi (D)
OtherUndecided
Quantus Insights (R)[80]November 3, 20251,069 (LV)± 2.7%44%52%1%3%
The Trafalgar Group (R)[81]November 1–2, 20251,057 (LV)± 2.9%46%48%6%
Echelon Insights[82]October 28–31, 2025606 (LV)± 4.7%46%49%5%
AtlasIntel[83]October 25–30, 20251,325 (LV)± 3.0%46%52%1%[c]1%
SoCal Strategies (R)[84][C]October 28–29, 2025800 (LV)45%47%8%
State Navigate[85]October 26–28, 2025614 (LV)± 4.0%41%53%6%
Roanoke College[86]October 22–27, 20251,041 (LV)± 4.1%40%42%4%[d]14%
A2 Insights[87]October 24–26, 2025776 (LV)45%53%2%
Christopher Newport University[88]October 21–23, 2025803 (LV)± 4.1%45%47%1%7%
Suffolk University[89]October 19–21, 2025500 (LV)± 4.4%45%45%2%[e]8%
State Navigate[90]October 17–20, 2025694 (LV)± 4.0%42%53%5%
The Washington Post/Schar School[91]October 16–20, 2025927 (LV)± 3.5%44%51%3%[f]2%
927 (RV)42%48%8%[g]2%
Quantus Insights (R)[92]October 19–20, 20251,302 (RV)± 2.8%45%49%1%5%
Kaplan Strategies (R)[93]October 16–18, 2025556 (LV)± 4.2%41%48%11%
co/efficient (R)[94]October 15–17, 2025937 (LV)± 3.2%42%47%11%
Clarity Campaign Labs (D)[95][D]October 14–17, 2025958 (RV)± 3.2%44%48%8%
The Trafalgar Group/InsiderAdvantage (R)[96]October 13–15, 20251,039 (LV)± 2.9%46%46%8%
Virginia Commonwealth University[97]October 6–14, 2025842 (A)± 4.0%43%44%13%
The Trafalgar Group (R)[98]October 8–10, 20251,034 (LV)± 2.9%46%47%7%
Christopher Newport University[99]September 29 – October 1, 2025805 (RV)± 3.9%39%48%12%
The Trafalgar Group (R)[100]September 29 – October 1, 20251,034 (LV)± 2.9%44%48%8%
The Washington Post/Schar School[101]September 25–29, 20251,002 (LV)± 3.4%45%49%2%[h]3%
1,002 (RV)42%47%6%[i]4%
A2 Insights[102]September 16–28, 2025771 (LV)44%49%1%[j]6%
Christopher Newport University[103]September 8–14, 2025808 (RV)± 3.9%37%48%15%
Pulse Decision Science (R)[104][E]September 3–5, 2025512 (LV)± 4.4%45%42%13%
Virginia Commonwealth University[105]August 18–28, 2025804 (A)± 4.1%41%45%14%
SoCal Strategies (R)[106][F]August 31 – September 1, 2025700 (LV)41%46%14%
co/efficient (R)[107]August 23–26, 20251,025 (LV)± 3.1%43%43%14%
Roanoke College[108][109]August 11–15, 2025702 (LV)± 4.3%35%38%27%
American Directions Research Group/AARP[110]June 25 – July 8, 20251,001 (LV)± 3.1%32%47%9%[k]12%
Virginia Commonwealth University[111]June 19 – July 3, 2025764 (RV)± 4.2%36%45%4%[l]15%
Hypothetical polling

John Reid vs. Generic Democrat

Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
John
Reid (R)
Generic
Democrat
OtherUndecided
co/efficient (R)[112][G]June 8–10, 20251,127 (LV)± 3.1%41%39%2%[m]18%

Results

[edit]
2025 Virginia lieutenant gubernatorial election[113]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
DemocraticGhazala Hashmi1,900,10455.65%+6.48%
RepublicanJohn Reid1,505,39544.09%−6.62%
Write-in8,6780.25%+0.13%
Total votes3,414,177100.00%N/A
Democraticgain fromRepublican

By county and independent city

[edit]

Caroline,Nelson,Prince Edward,Spotsylvania, andYork counties were won by Reid, despite voting Abigail Spanberger for governor.

Locality[114]John Reid
Republican
Ghazala Hashmi
Democratic
Write-in
Various
MarginTotal votes cast
#%#%#%#%
Accomack7,30356.31%5,65843.62%90.07%−1,645−12.68%12,970
Albemarle17,47731.48%37,93168.33%1040.19%20,45436.85%55,512
Alexandria11,78518.88%50,42280.79%2030.33%38,63761.91%62,410
Alleghany4,07970.93%1,66428.93%80.14%−2,415−41.99%5,751
Amelia4,58472.60%1,71227.11%180.29%−2,872−45.49%6,314
Amherst8,90568.20%4,12131.56%310.24%−4,784−36.64%13,057
Appomattox5,61276.66%1,67922.93%300.41%−3,933−53.72%7,321
Arlington18,30518.45%80,69481.32%2320.23%62,38962.87%99,231
Augusta24,72172.68%9,17726.98%1170.34%−15,544−45.70%34,015
Bath1,45176.33%44823.57%20.11%−1,003−52.76%1,901
Bedford29,46975.43%9,48424.28%1150.29%−19,985−51.15%39,068
Bland1,98582.98%40016.72%70.29%−1,585−66.26%2,392
Botetourt12,00371.81%4,66327.90%480.29%−7,340−43.92%16,714
Bristol3,13066.22%1,57533.32%220.47%−1,555−32.90%4,727
Brunswick2,67045.19%3,23054.66%90.15%5609.48%5,909
Buchanan4,37382.42%90817.11%250.47%−3,465−65.30%5,306
Buckingham3,67061.12%2,32838.77%70.12%−1,342−22.35%6,005
Buena Vista1,42969.23%63330.67%20.10%−796−38.57%2,064
Campbell16,97574.18%5,80525.37%1050.46%−11,170−48.81%22,885
Caroline6,81450.99%6,51748.77%320.24%−297−2.22%13,363
Carroll8,96379.59%2,27420.19%240.21%−6,689−59.40%11,261
Charles City1,52744.04%1,93555.81%50.14%40811.77%3,467
Charlotte3,22368.72%1,45731.07%100.21%−1,766−37.65%4,690
Charlottesville2,35712.58%16,33787.21%390.21%13,98074.63%18,733
Chesapeake43,70945.64%51,85754.15%2060.22%8,1488.51%95,772
Chesterfield72,70042.70%97,22057.10%3300.19%24,52014.40%170,250
Clarke4,32656.94%3,25042.77%220.29%−1,076−14.16%7,598
Colonial Heights4,17363.80%2,35435.99%140.21%−1,819−27.81%6,541
Covington1,02862.04%62837.90%10.06%−400−24.14%1,657
Craig1,80280.05%44119.59%80.36%−1,361−60.46%2,251
Culpeper13,01160.01%8,63339.82%380.18%−4,378−20.19%21,682
Cumberland2,65260.41%1,72839.36%100.23%−924−21.05%4,390
Danville4,79539.47%7,32060.26%320.26%2,52520.79%12,147
Dickenson3,43277.33%99722.47%90.20%−2,435−54.87%4,438
Dinwiddie7,18459.72%4,81039.98%360.30%−2,374−19.73%12,030
Emporia57134.52%1,08065.30%30.18%50930.77%1,654
Essex2,59753.61%2,24146.26%60.12%−356−7.35%4,844
Fairfax City3,08729.78%7,24969.94%290.28%4,16240.15%10,365
Fairfax County125,47028.18%318,49671.54%1,2170.27%193,02643.36%445,183
Falls Church1,36118.07%6,15781.74%140.19%4,79663.67%7,532
Fauquier20,37459.15%13,98540.60%860.25%−6,389−18.55%34,445
Floyd4,80465.04%2,54634.47%360.49%−2,258−30.57%7,386
Fluvanna6,89251.52%6,45448.25%310.23%−438−3.27%13,377
Franklin City1,11938.39%1,79261.48%40.14%67323.09%2,915
Franklin County16,60472.01%6,40127.76%530.23%−10,203−44.25%23,058
Frederick23,58460.76%15,15539.05%750.19%−8,429−21.72%38,814
Fredericksburg3,20730.71%7,21369.06%240.23%4,00638.36%10,444
Galax1,30169.72%56530.28%00.00%−736−39.44%1,866
Giles5,07675.40%1,64124.38%150.22%−3,435−51.02%6,732
Gloucester11,62967.41%5,59232.42%300.17%−6,037−35.00%17,251
Goochland10,14559.62%6,84140.21%290.17%−3,304−19.42%17,015
Grayson4,56278.48%1,19820.61%530.91%−3,364−57.87%5,813
Greene5,58158.95%3,85940.76%270.29%−1,722−18.19%9,467
Greensville1,48044.70%1,82855.21%30.09%34810.51%3,311
Halifax8,13261.39%5,09038.42%250.19%−3,042−22.96%13,247
Hampton12,63326.88%34,25372.88%1150.24%21,62046.00%47,001
Hanover37,43262.23%22,57237.52%1510.25%−14,860−24.70%60,155
Harrisonburg3,78128.90%9,28570.97%170.13%5,50442.07%13,083
Henrico49,34933.14%99,32266.70%2400.16%49,97333.56%148,911
Henry11,38365.47%5,95934.27%450.26%−5,424−31.20%17,387
Highland84771.18%33928.49%40.34%−508−42.69%1,190
Hopewell2,69340.77%3,89358.93%200.30%1,20018.17%6,606
Isle of Wight11,23558.83%7,81240.91%490.26%−3,423−17.93%19,096
James City19,92346.85%22,47152.84%1310.31%2,5485.99%42,525
King and Queen2,03062.19%1,23137.71%30.09%−799−24.48%3,264
King George7,09961.20%4,48038.62%210.18%−2,619−22.58%11,600
King William6,12968.01%2,86731.81%160.18%−3,262−36.20%9,012
Lancaster3,39556.63%2,58743.15%130.22%−808−13.48%5,995
Lee5,42784.88%95014.86%170.27%−4,477−70.02%6,394
Lexington73534.00%1,42665.96%10.05%69131.96%2,162
Loudoun63,08737.64%104,17562.15%3590.21%41,08824.51%167,621
Louisa11,57761.37%7,24438.40%420.22%−4,333−22.97%18,863
Lunenburg2,72661.34%1,70238.30%160.36%−1,024−23.04%4,444
Lynchburg13,69951.58%12,73847.96%1240.47%−961−3.62%26,561
Madison4,36566.21%2,21133.54%170.26%−2,154−32.67%6,593
Manassas4,24536.36%7,40663.43%240.21%3,16127.07%11,675
Manassas Park1,21330.50%2,75669.30%80.20%1,54338.80%3,977
Martinsville1,52338.71%2,40461.11%70.18%88122.39%3,934
Mathews3,32169.64%1,44230.24%60.13%−1,879−39.40%4,769
Mecklenburg7,28761.91%4,46237.91%220.19%−2,825−24.00%11,771
Middlesex3,54863.20%2,06236.73%40.07%−1,486−26.47%5,614
Montgomery15,58842.74%20,60556.49%2810.77%5,01713.76%36,474
Nelson3,93751.34%3,71548.44%170.22%−222−2.89%7,669
New Kent9,03765.12%4,82534.77%160.12%−4,212−30.35%13,878
Newport News18,24432.53%37,64567.13%1900.34%19,40134.60%56,079
Norfolk16,62126.01%47,15073.78%1370.21%30,52947.77%63,908
Northampton2,58347.04%2,89952.80%90.16%3165.75%5,491
Northumberland4,24462.51%2,53737.37%80.12%−1,707−25.14%6,789
Norton72269.56%31029.87%60.58%−412−39.69%1,038
Nottoway3,20959.99%2,12839.78%120.22%−1,081−20.21%5,349
Orange10,26559.56%6,92640.19%440.26%−3,339−19.37%17,235
Page7,03175.85%2,21623.91%230.25%−4,815−51.94%9,270
Patrick5,17778.82%1,38021.01%110.17%−3,797−57.81%6,568
Petersburg1,23412.51%8,56786.87%610.62%7,33374.36%9,862
Pittsylvania17,58871.58%6,94328.26%400.16%−10,645−43.32%24,571
Poquoson4,52472.52%1,70627.35%80.13%−2,818−45.17%6,238
Portsmouth8,97728.86%22,04270.87%850.27%13,06542.00%31,104
Powhatan12,11571.29%4,84328.50%350.21%−7,272−42.79%16,993
Prince Edward3,71150.26%3,64849.40%250.34%−63−0.85%7,384
Prince George8,12259.59%5,48040.21%270.20%−2,642−19.39%13,629
Prince William56,66934.25%108,43465.54%3480.21%51,76531.29%165,451
Pulaski8,73970.04%3,68429.52%550.44%−5,055−40.51%12,478
Radford2,04243.74%2,55154.65%751.61%50910.90%4,668
Rappahannock2,25555.93%1,75843.60%190.47%−497−12.33%4,032
Richmond City13,48914.88%77,01184.94%1640.18%63,52270.06%90,664
Richmond County2,04365.99%1,04733.82%60.19%−996−32.17%3,096
Roanoke City10,62834.62%19,99665.13%760.25%9,36830.51%30,700
Roanoke County25,40059.50%17,17940.24%1130.26%−8,221−19.26%42,692
Rockbridge6,71066.49%3,36533.35%160.16%−3,345−33.15%10,091
Rockingham24,66568.59%11,20731.16%900.25%−13,458−37.42%35,962
Russell6,99579.69%1,55417.70%2292.61%−5,441−61.98%8,778
Salem5,43857.77%3,95442.01%210.22%−1,484−15.77%9,413
Scott6,11284.14%1,13515.63%170.23%−4,977−68.52%7,264
Shenandoah12,64569.87%5,40729.88%460.25%−7,238−39.99%18,098
Smyth7,74377.97%2,12921.44%590.59%−5,614−56.53%9,931
Southampton4,60262.26%2,78037.61%90.12%−1,822−24.65%7,391
Spotsylvania30,05050.43%29,38649.32%1470.25%−664−1.11%59,583
Stafford28,88545.93%33,89753.90%1100.17%5,0127.97%62,892
Staunton4,35840.48%6,38659.31%230.21%2,02818.84%10,767
Suffolk16,57539.98%24,79659.81%870.21%8,22119.83%41,458
Surry1,74548.87%1,81850.91%80.22%732.04%3,571
Sussex1,83447.84%1,99251.96%80.21%1584.12%3,834
Tazewell10,37482.70%2,09616.71%740.59%−8,278−65.99%12,544
Virginia Beach78,93046.88%89,25853.01%1860.11%10,3286.13%168,374
Warren10,54765.45%5,48434.03%830.52%−5,063−31.42%16,114
Washington15,58974.90%5,03524.19%1880.90%−10,554−50.71%20,812
Waynesboro4,11048.62%4,32751.18%170.20%2172.57%8,454
Westmoreland4,50955.78%3,56244.07%120.15%−947−11.72%8,083
Williamsburg1,77326.55%4,88273.11%230.34%3,10946.56%6,678
Winchester3,59941.12%5,13258.63%220.25%1,53317.51%8,753
Wise8,76680.23%2,13619.55%240.22%−6,630−60.68%10,926
Wythe8,49877.57%2,41022.00%470.43%−6,088−55.57%10,955
York16,26951.82%15,02947.87%990.32%−1,240−3.95%31,397
Totals1,505,39544.09%1,900,10455.65%8,6780.25%394,70911.56%3,414,177

Counties and independent cities that flipped from Republican to Democratic

By congressional district

[edit]

Hashmi won seven of 11 congressional districts, including one held by a Republican.[115]

DistrictReidHashmiRepresentative
1st51.0%48.8%Rob Wittman
2nd48.4%51.4%Jen Kiggans
3rd29.6%70.1%Bobby Scott
4th30.7%69.1%Jennifer McClellan
5th55.1%44.6%John McGuire
6th59.6%40.1%Ben Cline
7th44.0%55.8%Eugene Vindman
8th22.0%77.7%Don Beyer
9th69.2%30.3%Morgan Griffith
10th41.8%58.0%Suhas Subramanyam
11th28.5%71.3%James Walkinshaw

Exit poll

[edit]

CNN exit poll

[edit]
2025 Virginia lieutenant gubernatorial election voter demographics (CNN)[116]
Demographic subgroupHashmiReid% of
total vote
Ideology
Liberals95533
Moderates663333
Conservatives89235
Party
Democrats98236
Republicans69431
Independents564433
Donald Trump job approval
Approve59539
Disapprove91959
Most important issue facing Virginia
Economy613948
Health care802021
Education524811
Immigration118911
2024 presidential vote
Kamala Harris97351
Donald Trump59542
Another candidate53462
Did not vote61393
Gender
Men465447
Women633653
Income
$200,000 or more623814
$100,000-$199,999514928
$50,000-$99,999564431
Less than $50,000604026
Race/ethnicity
White455571
Asian78214
Latino65355
Black901016
White born-again or evangelical Christian?
Yes198128
No693172
Race by gender
White men366434
White women534736
Black men84167
Black women9559
Latino men52482
Latina women75252
All other voters69309
Age
18–29 years old683213
30–44 years old613920
45-64 years old524735
65 and older505032
Area type
Urban643619
Suburban574357
Rural445624
Education
College graduate613952
No college degree495148
Education by race
White college graduates554538
Non-white college graduates772314
Whites without college346633
Non-whites without college821715
Education by gender and race
White women with college degrees643620
White women without college degrees396116
White men with college degrees455518
White men without college degrees287217
Voters of color802030
Educational attainment
Advanced degree653523
Bachelor's degree584229
Associate's degree524810
Some college534717
Never attended college455521

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^abcKey:
    A – all adults
    RV – registered voters
    LV – likely voters
    V – unclear
  2. ^Calculated by taking the difference of 100% and all other candidates combined.
  3. ^"Would not vote" with 1%
  4. ^"Refused" with 3%; "Some other candidate" with 1%
  5. ^"Refused" with 2%
  6. ^"Neither" with 2%; "Would not vote" with 1%
  7. ^"Neither" with 5%; "Would not vote" with 3%
  8. ^"None of these" with 2%
  9. ^"Neither" with 4%; "Would not vote" with 2%
  10. ^"Other" with 1%
  11. ^Marlow Jones with 9%
  12. ^"Wouldn't vote" with 2%, "Refused" with 2%, and "Someone else" with 0%
  13. ^Marlow Jones with 2%

Partisan clients

  1. ^Poll conducted for Stoney's campaign
  2. ^Poll conducted for Hashmi's campaign
  3. ^Poll sponsored by Red Eagle Politics, a conservative content creator
  4. ^Poll commissioned by theDemocratic Attorneys General Association
  5. ^Poll sponsored by Reid's campaign
  6. ^Poll sponsored by the Virginia Project
  7. ^Poll sponsored by Founders Insight

References

[edit]
  1. ^"§ 24.2-515. Presidential election year primaries".lis.virginia.gov.
  2. ^"Upcoming Elections".Virginia Department of Elections. RetrievedSeptember 10, 2025.
  3. ^Schneider, Gregory S.; Cox, Erin (January 17, 2026)."Abigail Spanberger sworn in as Virginia's first female governor".The Washington Post. RetrievedJanuary 17, 2026.
  4. ^Staff, Cardinal (April 21, 2025)."Herrity drops out of lieutenant governor race; Republican ticket is now set".CardinalNews.org. RetrievedApril 21, 2025.
  5. ^WTVR CBS 6 Web Staff (March 10, 2025)."Former Richmond radio host turned political candidate John Reid shares untold story with Catie Beck".WTVR.com. RetrievedApril 21, 2025.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  6. ^"Democrats rally around Hashmi as winner of dem. Nomination for Lt. Gov". June 18, 2025.
  7. ^"Virginia's Ghazala Hashmi becomes the first Muslim woman elected statewide in the U.S."NBC News. November 5, 2025. RetrievedNovember 7, 2025.
  8. ^abVozzella, Laura; Schneider, Gregory S. (September 5, 2024)."Virginia Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears announces her candidacy for governor".The Washington Post. RetrievedSeptember 5, 2024.
  9. ^Minock, Nick (January 2, 2025)."Pat Herrity to run for lieutenant governor, aims to boost GOP ticket in 2025".WJLA. RetrievedApril 25, 2025.
  10. ^abBryson, Anna (January 27, 2025)."Richmond radio host John Reid announces LG candidacy".Richmond Times-Dispatch. RetrievedJanuary 27, 2025.
  11. ^abSchmidt, Markus (April 22, 2025)."Herrity bows out of LG race, setting Virginia's GOP ticket for 2025".Loudoun Times-Mirror. RetrievedApril 25, 2025.
  12. ^Moomaw, Graham (April 25, 2025)."Youngkin asks Richmond radio host John Reid to withdraw from LG race over alleged sexually explicit posts Reid denies are his".The Richmonder. RetrievedApril 25, 2025.
  13. ^Woods, Charlotte Rene; Willis, Samantha (April 25, 2025)."'I will not back down': Reid says he has no plans to exit Va. LG race, despite governor's request".Virginia Mercury. WTOP News. RetrievedApril 27, 2025.
  14. ^abJacobs, Ben; Howard, Andrew; Crampton, Liz (May 3, 2025)."Virginia GOP roiled by controversy over sexually explicit photos".POLITICO. RetrievedMay 4, 2025.
  15. ^Schmidt, Markus (May 1, 2025)."Top Youngkin strategist steps aside in wake of GOP turmoil and infighting".Virginia Mercury. RetrievedMay 4, 2025.
  16. ^Sopher, Ittai (May 2, 2025)."Youngkin aide resigns as accusations fly within Virginia GOP over lieutenant governor race".wusa9.com. RetrievedMay 4, 2025.
  17. ^Kate Seltzer (May 12, 2025)."Virginia Lt. Gov. race: Republican John Curran announces write-in campaign".The Virginian-Pilot. RetrievedAugust 3, 2025.
  18. ^Minock, Nick (April 21, 2025)."EXCLUSIVE: Pat Herrity drops out of the race for Virginia Lieutenant Governor".WJLA. RetrievedApril 21, 2025.
  19. ^Vucci, Evan (April 2, 2025)."Virginia Politics Insider: Making history".Richmond Times-Dispatch. RetrievedApril 7, 2025.The Republican Party of Virginia has not yet announced which candidates made the ballot for lieutenant governor. The party said Saturday that Fairfax supervisor Pat Herrity is in and James City County businessman John Curran is out.
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  21. ^Feld, Lowell (July 19, 2024)."Audio: On MAGA Radio, LG Winsome Sears Desperately Grovels to Get Back in "Changed Man" (LOL!) Trump's Good Graces; Says She's "Exploring" a 2025 Run for Governor, Definitely Will NOT Run for Reelection as LG".Blue Virginia. RetrievedJuly 19, 2024.
  22. ^abVozella, Lauren (April 30, 2025)."Audio clip adds fuel to dispute between Youngkin aide and GOP nominee".The Washington Post. RetrievedMay 3, 2025.
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  24. ^Becker, Jenna (May 25, 2025)."Which Democratic candidate for Lieutenant Governor is the most electable?".StateNavigate.org. RetrievedJune 19, 2025.
  25. ^abWillis, Samantha (June 18, 2025)."With official results pending, Hashmi is apparent victor in Democratic lieutenant governor primary".VirginiaMercury.com. RetrievedJune 19, 2025.
  26. ^abcdefghijklmFeld, Lowell (May 2, 2024)."VA Sen. Ghazala Hashmi Launches Her Campaign for the 2025 Democratic Nominationụughdgfsds 24".Blue Virginia.
  27. ^Bryson, Anna (January 29, 2025)."7 Virginia Democrats now vying for party's lieutenant governor nomination".The Daily Progress. RetrievedJanuary 30, 2025.
  28. ^Schneider, Gregory S.; Vozzella, Laura (May 26, 2025)."6 Democrats want to be Va.'s lieutenant governor. Here's what to know".The Washington Post. RetrievedJanuary 2, 2026.
  29. ^Palermo, Jill (December 20, 2023)."Prince William County School Board Chair Babur Lateef to run for lt. governor".Prince William Times. RetrievedJanuary 4, 2023.
  30. ^abcdefghijklFeld, Lowell (April 23, 2024)."BREAKING: VA State Senator Aaron Rouse (D-Virginia Beach) announces candidacy for Lt. Governor".Blue Virginia. RetrievedApril 23, 2024.
  31. ^Bryson, Anna (December 21, 2024)."DOJ prosecutor running for Virginia Democratic lieutenant governor nomination".The Daily Progress. RetrievedJanuary 3, 2025.
  32. ^abcVozzella, Laura (April 22, 2024)."Richmond Mayor Stoney drops Va. governor bid, seeks lt. governor post".The Washington Post. RetrievedApril 23, 2024.
  33. ^abCarlton, Brian (May 20, 2025)."Eggleston issues endorsement in lieutenant governor's race".The Farmville Herald. RetrievedJune 7, 2025.
  34. ^Beyer, Elizabeth (September 27, 2024)."Del. Rasoul declines to run for lieutenant governor in 2025". Cardinal News. RetrievedSeptember 30, 2024.
  35. ^"Thursday News: "President" Musk "fueled backlash to spending plan with false and misleading claims"; Musk "Demands Shutdown Until Trump Is Sworn In"; "Johnson revolt explodes over spending deal anger"; Youngkin "echoes Trump in Va. budget proposals"".Blue Virginia. December 19, 2024. RetrievedApril 22, 2025.
  36. ^abKassel, Matthew (April 3, 2025)."Virginia LG candidate raising Jewish community concerns over her record on Israel and antisemitism".Jewish Insider. RetrievedApril 10, 2025.
  37. ^"Ghazala Hashmi Campaign "Internal" Poll of the 2025 VA Democratic Lt. Governor Primary Has 46% Undecided; Prior to Bios, It's Aaron Rouse (15%)-Levar Stoney (15%)-Ghazala Hashmi (13%)".Blue Virginia. March 31, 2025. RetrievedJune 7, 2025.
  38. ^"The Office of Senator Saddam Azlan Salim Senate Spotlight".EveryAction. April 30, 2025. RetrievedJune 7, 2025.
  39. ^"Thursday News: "The sweeping federal court order blocking Trump's tariffs"; "The MAGA War on Science Is Deadly"; Trump Has Pardoned "230 individuals, including violent rioters and extremists"; "Musk Exits DOGE Leaving Threadbare Agencies and Strained Workers"".Blue Virginia. May 29, 2025. RetrievedJune 7, 2025.
  40. ^"Thursday News: "World leaders now enter the White House at their own risk"; "2 Israeli Embassy staff shot and killed in front of Capital Jewish Museum in DC"; GOP Moves to Pass "Monstrous" Bill Which "steal[s] from the poor and give[s] to the rich"".Blue Virginia. May 22, 2025. RetrievedJune 7, 2025.
  41. ^"EMILYs List Endorses State Sen. Ghazala Hashmi for Lieutenant Governor and Shannon Taylor for Attorney General of Virginia".Blue Virginia. December 12, 2024. RetrievedJanuary 3, 2025.
  42. ^ab"2025 Endorsed Candidates". RetrievedJune 7, 2025.
  43. ^"Ghazala Hashmi endorsed by progressive groups for Lt. Governor". May 9, 2025. RetrievedJune 7, 2025.
  44. ^"UNITE HERE Endorses State Sen. Ghazala Hashmi for VA Lt. Governor". April 3, 2025. RetrievedApril 22, 2025.
  45. ^Jarvis, Brandon."Former congresswoman from VA-02 Elaine Luria is endorsing Aaron Rouse for LG".X. RetrievedApril 10, 2025.
  46. ^Bryson, Anna (May 5, 2025)."Rep. Bobby Scott endorses Aaron Rouse in Lt. Gov primary".Richmond Times-Dispatch. RetrievedMay 5, 2025.
  47. ^"VA State Sen. Aaron Rouse, a Democratic Candidate for Virginia Lt. Governor in 2025, Announces He Raised $450k in 1H24".Blue Virginia. July 12, 2024. RetrievedJanuary 14, 2025.
  48. ^Vakil, Caroline (June 2, 2025)."Buttigieg endorses Levar Stoney for Virginia lieutenant governor".The Hill. RetrievedJune 2, 2025.
  49. ^abcdefgCain, Andrew (April 23, 2024)."In dropping gubernatorial run, Levar Stoney enters growing lieutenant governor field".Richmond Times-Dispatch. RetrievedJune 6, 2025.
  50. ^"Former Virginia First Lady endorses Levar Stoney as next Lieutenant Governor". December 2, 2024.
  51. ^VanValkenburg, Schuyler [@ScVanValkenburg] (March 18, 2025)."I've worked with Levar for almost a decade in RVA. In that decade Richmond, Henrico and the rest of the region has become among the most dynamic places in the country. People want to live here. And they want to do business here. Excited to see what comes next!" (Tweet) – viaTwitter.
  52. ^Benton, Nicholas (June 5, 2025)."N-P Endorses Stoney in Primary".Falls Church News-Press. RetrievedJune 7, 2025.
  53. ^Bryson, Anna (May 28, 2025)."LeVar Burton endorses Levar Stoney in LG race".Richmond Times-Dispatch. RetrievedMay 28, 2025.
  54. ^"Levar Stoney Campaign 'Internal' Poll of the 2025 VA Democratic Lt. Governor Primary Has Stoney Up 16%–10%-8%-2% Over Aaron Rouse, Ghazala Hashmi and Babur Lateef; 63% of Voters 'Not Sure'".Blue Virginia. March 11, 2025. RetrievedJune 13, 2025.
  55. ^"Ghazala Hashmi Campaign 'Internal' Poll of the 2025 VA Democratic Lt. Governor Primary Has 46% Undecided; Prior to Bios, It's Aaron Rouse (15%)-Levar Stoney (15%)-Ghazala Hashmi (13%)".Blue Virginia. March 31, 2025. RetrievedJune 13, 2025.
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  57. ^"2025 June Democratic Primary".Virginia Department of Elections. RetrievedJune 19, 2025.
  58. ^"Fmr. Rep. Riggleman's Outlook For Trump's Next Term".Bloomberg News. December 30, 2024. RetrievedDecember 31, 2024.
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  64. ^Balow, Graham Moomaw (June 30, 2025)."Miyares breaks silence, says he will campaign with LG nominee John Reid".Virginia Scope. RetrievedJuly 2, 2025.
  65. ^Schmidt, Markus (July 1, 2025)."At Northern Va. rally, GOP statewide ticket shows unity after months of party turmoil".Virginia Mercury. RetrievedJuly 2, 2025.
  66. ^Schmidt, Markus (September 23, 2025)."Morrissey breaks with Democrats, backs GOP's John Reid for lieutenant governor".States Newsroom. RetrievedSeptember 23, 2025.
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  72. ^"Maryland Lt. Gov. Aruna Miller Rallies Behind Ghazala Hashmi In Virginia Race". India West Journal. October 8, 2025. RetrievedOctober 9, 2025.
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  74. ^McMillan, Nia."Former Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney concedes race for Lt. Governor".WRIC. RetrievedJuly 23, 2025.
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