Virginia House budget targets campaign audit law

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1–2 minutes
aerial view of virginia state capitol in richmond

Summary

A Virginia House budget proposal would repeal a law requiring campaign finance audits, stopping several ongoing reviews.

Why this matters

The proposal could end required audits of statewide candidates’ campaign finance reports. Voters watching ethics, transparency, and budget negotiations in Richmond may see the measure as significant.

A Virginia House of Delegates budget proposal included language to repeal a law requiring audits of campaign finance reports for statewide candidates and certain elected officials, 7News reported.

If approved, the change would stop ongoing audits of Gov. Abigail Spanberger, Attorney General Jay Jones, Lt. Gov. Ghazala Hashmi, and others selected by the Virginia Board of Elections.

Reform groups, including Clean Virginia and BigMoneyOutVA, criticized the proposal, saying it would reduce transparency in a state they said already has limited campaign finance rules.

The proposal prompted debate in Richmond. Some lawmakers supported the audits as a way to provide accountability, while others questioned using the budget process to make the change.

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