Lawyer and activist Bryan Stevenson discusses racial justice, leadership and resilience
By Bertie Azqueta | April 12, 2025Stevenson’s work has earned him numerous accolades.
Stevenson’s work has earned him numerous accolades.
Trump signed an executive order Jan. 28 stating that the federal government will no longer fund or support institutions which provide gender affirming care to minors.
Filed bills include a grant program to help end food insecurity on Virginia college campuses, an endowment to provide scholarships to students at 12 eligible Virginia public universities and various constitutional amendments.
Four states — Missouri, Mississippi, Oklahoma and South Dakota — require notarization to either receive an absentee ballot or have it be officially counted.
Youngkin called for these removals Aug. 7 — right before the 90-day “quiet period” mandated by the National Voter Registration Act.
City residents can vote early at the Voter Registration Office. Those who live in Albemarle County can vote early at the 5th Street County Office Building.
Both partisan and nonpartisan groups are engaging with students and Charlottesville residents to register them to vote prior to the Oct. 15 deadline in Virginia.
The Cavalier Daily assembled a focus group of undecided student voters to help take the temperature of young undecided voters.
Professors Mary Kate Cary and Jennifer Lawless come together in this class to offer a bipartisan perspective on current events with regard to the election cycle.
Restrictive voting laws are only one problem with voting today, according to King — the other is voter apathy. King even called the level of voter participation in U.S. elections “abysmal.”
In addition to on-the-ground work, interns must, as part of the program, take an American Politics course titled “Workshop in Contemporary American Electoral Politics.”
Informed by his experience predicting and analyzing past elections, Sabato noted that this presidential election has a number of firsts.
Hudson was first elected in 2019 and was reelected in 2021 with 77 percent of the vote against Republican Phillip Hamilton.
Gilbert graduated from the University in 1993 with a degree in government.
Two fourth-year students asked questions about new legislation for undocumented students and Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals recipients and how legislators would improve mental health services at the University.