What happens when you roll out an education plan, and no one cares?

Virginia's Public Square
Virginia's Public Square
What happens when you roll out an education plan, and no one cares?
I have to say, this is a remarkably positive, sober, and case-making first ad from an Adams campaign that continues to impress — and quite the contrast from a shrill and panicked Herring campaign that knows it has screwed up.
So here is the major theme, and it’s not hard to figure this one out. Mark Herring literally violated his oath of office — not once, but several times — in order to be an activist rather than Virginia’s Attorney General.
Adams is literally the anti-Herring.
This race is really going to come down to several themes:
One could go on, but you get the point. Herring has that creepiness factor that puts everyone on edge. Adams is just an all-around great American.
Can’t beat that match-up.
With shipping up 8.2% this year, it is all the more reason why energy concerns must be addressed in the Hampton Roads area.
In the short-term, there remains a great deal of elasticity between the United States and China that will offer the latitude for relations to worsen considerable.
So it’s personal after all for Herring.
Destroying Confederate memorials would cost the City of Richmond $3 million in property tax revenue, according to the Richmond Times-Dispatch.
Isn’t a “time for reconciliation” the perfect time to issue a pardon?
One thing is for sure. Papering over the canyon that separates progressives and liberals in Virginia doesn’t do the public discourse any good.
Herring has now shifted the conversation away from Confederate memorials and towards Democratic abuse of office in pursuit of a narrow political agenda.
Even with a $15 hourly wage, those jobs will be reserved for a handful, with the majority of skilled workers dropped on the wrong side of Moore’s Law.