Virginia sheriffs’ association urges Jay Jones to withdraw over violent texts
The Virginia Law Enforcement Sheriffs’ Association, representing 86 sheriffs, demanded Democratic AG nominee Jay Jones withdraw after resurfaced 2022 texts in which he wrote violent language—including the line “Gilbert gets two bullets to the head”; Jones issued public apologies, saying he is embarrassed, ashamed and takes responsibility. The revelations prompted bipartisan law‑enforcement condemnation and calls from Republicans (including Gov. Glenn Youngkin) and some media figures for him to quit, while many Democrats have so far stood by or declined to demand his withdrawal amid ongoing early voting and legal limits on removing or replacing a candidate on printed ballots.
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📌 Key Facts
- Resurfaced 2022 text messages from Jay Jones included explicit violent language — most notably the line "Gilbert gets two bullets to the head" — and Jones has publicly apologized, said he is "embarrassed, ashamed, and sorry," taken responsibility, reached out to Speaker Todd Gilbert and his family, and did not challenge the texts' accuracy.
- Virginia law‑enforcement groups — including the Virginia Sheriffs' Association (representing 86 sheriffs), the Virginia Fraternal Order of Police, and the Virginia State Police Association — publicly condemned the texts and sent letters urging Jones to withdraw from the attorney general race.
- Republican officials and campaigns sharply condemned the messages and called for Jones to drop out: Gov. Glenn Youngkin, AG Jason Miyares, Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle‑Sears and others criticized the remarks; President Trump weighed in urging withdrawal; GOP operatives and campaigns have run ads tying the texts to Democrats (Earle‑Sears ads) and the Miyares campaign launched a roughly $1.5 million ad buy attacking Jones.
- Democratic responses were mixed: some Democrats (including Sen. Tim Kaine and local party figures) continued to support or defend Jones while calling the texts "indefensible," several national Democrats declined to call for his withdrawal when pressed, and some high‑profile endorsers (e.g., Sen. Cory Booker) had not rescinded endorsements as of reporting.
- A separate allegation from former Del. Carrie Coyner surfaced that Jones once said more police deaths would reduce civilian shootings; Jones denied making that remark and said he supports law enforcement.
- Reporting and filings show major financial support for Jones: Everytown for Gun Safety gave $200,000 in August 2025 after endorsing him in June; Elizabeth "Liz" Simons is identified as his largest individual donor (about $750,000); and Sen. Mark Warner made a $25,000 contribution and was linked to Jones via a joint ActBlue fundraising page, drawing criticism.
- In the fallout Jones canceled a Thursday‑night fundraiser at novelist David Baldacci’s home and the campaign said donors would be refunded, while the Miyares campaign continued aggressive ad and media efforts against him.
- Practical election‑law constraints complicate any withdrawal: early voting had already begun with more than 420,000 ballots cast; under Virginia law a candidate may withdraw but, if ballots are printed or the withdrawal is within 60 days of the election, their name cannot be removed from ballots already printed and votes already cast for a withdrawn candidate remain recorded (with write‑ins being the primary replacement option).
📚 Contextual Background
- In Virginia, candidates for governor and lieutenant governor run for and are elected to their offices separately rather than on a single ticket.
📰 Sources (25)
Jay Jones scandal looms large over his hometown for Sears–Spanberger clash as area Dems vouch for AG nom
New information:
- Senior Virginia Democrat Don Scott Jr. publicly reaffirmed support for Jay Jones despite the resurfaced violent texts, calling GOP pressure on Spanberger a 'double standard.'
- Scott’s remarks included explicit references to Trump’s past rhetoric and a call for voters to focus on November rather than the scandal.
Can Jay Jones be replaced? Democrats' defense of scandal-plagued candidate draws questions
New information:
- Virginia Department of Elections says under Code §24.2-612.2 a candidate may withdraw, but if within 60 days of the election their name cannot be scrubbed from ballots already printed and no replacement can be placed on the ballot.
- Under Code §24.2-612.1, if a withdrawal occurs after ballots are printed, local election offices must post notices at polling places and include notices with mailed ballots; votes for the withdrawn candidate are tallied but not counted.
- Write-ins are permitted for the attorney general race, allowing Democrats to rally around a write-in if Jay Jones withdraws.
- Early voting has already begun and more than 420,000 ballots have been cast (VPAP), meaning votes already cast for Jones would still accrue to him even if he later withdraws.
Virginia top cop hopeful torched by police organization over 'reckless' remarks about officer deaths
New information:
- Virginia State Police Association (VSPA) President Tim Confroy issued a statement calling the reported remark 'profoundly reckless' and 'an affront to fallen officers,' noting 67 Virginia state troopers have died in the line of duty.
- Republican Del. Carrie Coyner alleged that in a 2020 discussion on qualified immunity, Jay Jones said, 'maybe if a few of them died, [police] would move on, not shooting people'—an allegation Jones denies.
- The Virginia Fraternal Order of Police sent a letter urging Jones to exit the attorney general race, condemning his 2022 violent texts.
- Article includes an image of a text message from Jay Jones and recaps bipartisan calls for him to withdraw.
Spanberger refuses to urge Jay Jones to exit race, dodges questions after ‘two bullets’ texts
New information:
- At Thursday’s Virginia gubernatorial debate, Abigail Spanberger declined to say whether she still endorses AG candidate Jay Jones or to urge him to exit the race.
- Spanberger said, "as of now, it's up to every voter to make their own individual decision," and noted she condemned Jones’ rhetoric when she learned of it.
- Winsome Earle-Sears pressed Spanberger onstage to call for Jones to withdraw, citing Jones’ 'two bullets' text referencing then–Speaker Todd Gilbert and his children.
- Spanberger accused Earle-Sears of selectively condemning violent rhetoric; Earle-Sears said she would not personally use certain rhetoric attributed to President Trump but did not condemn it.
AG-turned-senator lambasts Democrats' silence on Jay Jones as sheriffs call for ouster: 'We will not follow'
New information:
- The Virginia Law Enforcement Sheriffs' Association (representing 86 sheriffs) sent a letter to Jay Jones demanding he withdraw from the AG race over his violent text messages.
- Association president Sheriff Richard Vaughn and officials from Campbell, Mecklenburg, and Wise counties signed the letter, calling Jones’ remarks 'disgusting' and 'unacceptable.'
- The letter asserts Jones advocated violence against a family, including children, and allegedly said more police deaths would reduce civilian shootings.
- Sen. Eric Schmitt (R‑Mo.), a former state attorney general, publicly condemned Jones’ texts and criticized Democrats’ silence.
- Sen. Tim Kaine defended Jones’ candidacy, while Sens. Mark Warner, Adam Schiff and Chris Coons declined to comment in encounters with reporters.
- Smyth County Sheriff Chip Schuler and the local commonwealth’s attorney also criticized Jones, adding to law‑enforcement pushback.
- Virginia AG Jason Miyares highlighted additional negative reactions from law enforcement around the state.
Who is Elizabeth Simons? Meet the largest individual donor to Virginia's disgraced Dem AG nominee
New information:
- Identifies Elizabeth 'Liz' Simons as the largest individual donor to Jay Jones, giving $750,000 to his campaign in four payments.
- Details that Simons gave $250,000 in August to a super PAC aligned with Zohran Mamdani.
- Notes Simons' broader giving: millions to Senate Majority PAC, substantial gifts to House Majority PAC, and over $800,000 to a PAC backing Kamala Harris.
Joe Scarborough tells Dem candidate Jay Jones to leave race over violent comments against GOP lawmaker
New information:
- MSNBC host Joe Scarborough publicly urged Jay Jones to withdraw from the Virginia attorney general race in an X thread, calling the 2022 texts 'disqualifying.'
- Scarborough's direct quoted appeal: he wrote Jones 'should [withdraw] from the Attorney General’s race at once' for the good of Virginia.
- Article reiterates specific text excerpts from 2022 and notes Del. Carrie Coyner's campaign confirmed the texts' authenticity.
Scoop: Virginia AG candidate Jay Jones cancels fundraiser amid "two bullets" backlash
New information:
- Jay Jones cancelled a Thursday night fundraiser scheduled at novelist David Baldacci’s home.
- Democratic donors were told by a Jones campaign memo that their donations for the event would be refunded.
- The Miyares campaign is running a $1.5 million ad buy attacking Jones over the resurfaced texts.
- Sen. Tim Kaine was still scheduled to attend the fundraiser and has called Jones 'indefensible' while remaining a supporter; Kaine declined further comment via his spokesperson.
Mark Warner silent when pressed on whether Jay Jones should drop out over violent texts
New information:
- Sen. Mark Warner was approached by reporters and declined to comment when asked whether Jay Jones should drop out of the Virginia attorney general race.
- The article reports Warner was specifically pressed about whether he would demand Jones return a $25,000 donation and notes a joint ActBlue fundraising page linking Warner and Jones was discovered.
- Provides on‑the‑ground detail about Warner avoiding comment (location: Philip Hart Senate Office Building, en route to a Senate Intelligence Committee briefing) and contrasts Warner's silence with Sen. Tim Kaine's public defense of Jones.
‘Staggering’ silence: Democrats knocked for keeping mum about candidate who fantasized about murder
New information:
- On‑the‑record reporting that multiple Democratic U.S. senators (Wyden, Blumenthal, Coons, Warner, Welch) were asked about Jones and largely declined to call for him to drop out or resign, with specific reactions documented (Wyden: 'horrifying' but would not call for withdrawal; Blumenthal: unfamiliar; Coons: smiled and walked away; Warner: ignored; Welch: not familiar).
- Compilation of the senators who were approached by Fox News Digital and the verbatim or behavioral responses recorded in the interview attempts.
- Republican reaction quote from Sen. Ted Cruz labeling Democrats' silence 'staggering' in light of political violence, tying the candidate's texts to broader concerns about political rhetoric and violence.
Winsome Earle-Sears releases ‘Two Bullets’ ad scathing opponent for failing to demand Jay Jones’ ouster
New information:
- Virginia Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle‑Sears released a new campaign ad titled 'Two Bullets' attacking Abigail Spanberger for not demanding Jay Jones withdraw from the attorney‑general race.
- The ad intercuts a narrator saying 'Jay Jones says he wants to put two bullets in a political opponent' with a widely circulated clip of Spanberger saying 'Let your rage fuel you.'
- Spanberger campaign responded with a spokesperson statement condemning comments that justify violence and defending her record and continued support for Jones as a candidate.
Dem senator's hefty donation to disgraced AG candidate's campaign comes back to haunt him
New information:
- Disclosure that Sen. Mark Warner personally (via his campaign) made a $25,000 contribution to Jones’ campaign in August.
- Identification of an ActBlue joint fundraising page linking Jones and Warner for fundraising purposes.
- Public Republican response quoting NRSC regional press staffer Samantha Cantrell criticizing Warner for donating, endorsing, and fundraising with Jones despite the texts.
Kaine defends Jay Jones amid AG candidate’s texts envisioning murder of top Republican: ‘Still a supporter’
New information:
- Sen. Tim Kaine publicly defended Jay Jones and said he remains a supporter despite calling Jones's resurfaced texts 'indefensible.'
- Kaine quoted: 'Jay has apologized' and said the remarks appear 'not in character,' urging that Jones explain himself to Virginia voters.
- Kaine said the controversy is a 'significant challenge' for Jones but indicated he does not expect it to affect other statewide Democratic races.
Jay Jones said if more police were killed it would reduce shootings of civilians, according to VA lawmaker
New information:
- Former Del. Carrie Coyner alleges a 2020 conversation in which Jay Jones said 'Well, maybe if a few of them died, that they would move on, not shooting people, not killing people,' referring to police.
- This allegation is separate from the previously reported 2022 text messages that included 'Gilbert gets two bullets to the head.'
- Jones has issued a denial to Virginia Scope, saying he 'did not say this' and expressing support for law enforcement.
- Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin publicly called on Jones to abandon his campaign in response to the resurfaced messages and new allegation.
Democrats stand by Virginia AG hopeful who fantasized about killing GOP lawmaker
New information:
- Sen. Cory Booker has not rescinded his June endorsement of Jay Jones (office did not respond to inquiry).
- Offices of Reps. Eugene Vindman, Robert Scott and Suhas Subramanyam did not respond to requests about whether they are rescinding endorsements.
- Rep. Eugene Vindman publicly reaffirmed his support for Jones in a post on X after the National Review report.
- Abigail Spanberger condemned Jones' messages and said he must take responsibility but did not call for Jones to withdraw from the race.
- The Virginia Beach Democratic Committee issued a statement explicitly reaffirming support for Jones and urging voters to 'line up behind' him.
Democratic Virginia AG candidate apologizes for violent, inflammatory texts
New information:
- Jay Jones issued an on‑camera apology over resurfaced 2022 text messages containing violent language.
- CBS News aired a video segment (includes 'The Takeout' discussion) reporting the apology and contextualizing the resurfaced texts.
- The segment names reporters Julia Manchester (The Hill) and Sophia Cai (Politico) as contributors to the discussion.
Gun control group gave six-figure donation to Dem candidate who fantasized about shooting GOP lawmaker
New information:
- Campaign finance records show Everytown for Gun Safety gave Jay Jones $200,000 in August 2025.
- Everytown had formally endorsed Jones in June 2025 and its president John Feinblatt issued an endorsing statement.
- The article quotes Feinblatt's endorsement language and notes Fox News Digital sought comment from Everytown (no response reported).
Liberal MSNBC panelist calls for Virginia AG candidate to drop out over violent text messages
New information:
- MSNBC 'Morning Joe' panelist John Heilemann publicly urged Jay Jones to drop out of the Virginia AG race over the resurfaced violent texts.
- On‑air reactions from MSNBC co‑host Mika Brzezinski (calling the texts 'horrible') and reporting that Neera Tanden also condemned the messages on NBC's 'Meet the Press' were documented.
- The Fox News article reiterates the texts' content (including the line 'Gilbert gets two bullets to the head') and confirms Jones has apologized and said he is 'deeply ashamed.'
Youngkin presses Dems to push Jay Jones off Virginia AG ticket after 'beyond disqualifying' messages surface
New information:
- Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin publicly doubled down and urged Democrats to push Jay Jones off the attorney general ticket in an on‑air Fox & Friends interview.
- Youngkin said on Fox & Friends: 'This is beyond disqualifying' and urged Democrats to 'figure out where their moral compass is.'
- Article notes Jones did not deny the texts, blamed his opponent for planting stories, apologized and said he reached out to Todd Gilbert and his family.
Former Biden official calls Virginia AG candidate Jay Jones' violent texts part of a 'private conversation'
New information:
- Neera Tanden publicly responded on Meet the Press, condemning Jay Jones' violent text messages but characterizing them as part of a 'private conversation.'
- Tanden framed the texts as 'awful and disgusting' while pressing for equivalent condemnation of incendiary language by Republicans (including President Trump) in the same segment.
- The article includes a direct pushback quote from a spokesperson for Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares criticizing national Democrats for excusing Jones.
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