Letters for Oct. 7: PAC money pouring into Virginia Beach referendum

Deceiving mailers

I got another of those lying mailers claiming I wouldn’t be able to vote in every Virginia Beach election unless I vote “no” in the referendum. But I live in District 8 which, like Districts 2, 4, 6, 9 and 10, will vote for our City Council member in 2026 and for the mayor in 2028.

We’ve had two elections with the current 10-1 system, which gives us an accountable City Council member representing a modest 1/10th of the whole city. No one seemed to feel left out of an election, any more than every sixth year when Virginia doesn’t elect a U.S. senator.

Then I wondered about all the money being poured into this campaign to make Virginia Beach give up its 10-1 system. Who is paying and why? I looked on the Virginia Public Access Project and learned that the PAC behind the “no” campaign has amassed more than $500,000: $280,500 from real estate/construction, $206,000 from retail services, and the rest scattered across nine other categories.

My neighbors and I cannot afford to donate $25,000 to a political campaign. I believe these deep-pocket donors want to claw back three at-large seats on the City Council so they can use the same financial advantage to elect people who will support their wishes, instead of listening to community voters.

The 10-1 system has finally given the people of Virginia Beach a real voice in local elections. I hope we vote “yes” to keep it.

Carolyn Caywood, Virginia Beach

Military meeting

Every day, President Donald Trump and his hateful band of marauders do at least one thing to make our country less safe and less like a democracy. Last week our tax dollars were used to bring top military officers from all over the world to a single place to listen to political speeches.

Trump’s and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s messages to our senior military leaders left them with an impossible choice by telling them to use U.S cities as training grounds and U.S. citizens and residents as their targets or to “do the honorable thing and resign” if they don’t agree. I worked alongside military members long enough to know that this will not go down well with them. Unlike Hegseth and Trump, military officers respect the power they hold in their hands and are only willing to use it when necessary and certainly not on America’s own citizens.

Also, what a message we send to potential recruits that they can expect to be bullied and hazed. This administration has been a disaster for our military services.

Denise Murden, Suffolk

Regulations

It’s time. Maybe it’s past time to reevaluate one of the Democratic Party’s traditional “planks.” I am referring to its emphasis on regulations. This word has become a “hot potato” issue for Republicans and independents alike.

We all favor the regulation of capitalism. Unregulated capitalism leads to all kinds of evils: income inequity (not the same as inequality, which is not an evil), environmental abuses and limitations on industrial development. But there is a huge gap between moderate regulation and excessive regulation.

This emphasis on regulation is one more instance of one of the earmark clashes in modern America, which I have alluded to many times: the notion of absolute rights. Republicans feel any regulation is contrary to freedom; Democrats insist regulation is necessary to constrain greed and injustice.

If this issue is dividing us, it’s becoming an all or nothing reason to vote for one party and not another, then I believe it’s time to sit down and reason together. Supporters of U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders will never agree, but it has obviously become a fatal flaw for Democrats to take absolutist positions. Wake up and smell the coffee.

Dave Boraks, Onancock

https://www.pilotonline.com/2025/10/06/letters-for-oct-7-pac-money-pouring-into-virginia-beach-referendum/