by Madison Hirneisen

 

Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin announced Monday a special election following the death of U.S. Rep. Donald McEachin (D-VA-04), will be February 21.

The election will fill Virginia’s 4th Congressional District, which was held by McEachin from 2017 until his death November 28. McEachin died from complications of colorectal cancer less than three weeks after winning re-election, as previously reported by The Center Square. McEachin’s funeral was in Richmond last week.

The district, which stretches from Richmond to the North Carolina border, was labeled as a “solid democratic” district by Cook Political Report leading up to the November election. McEachin defeated his opponent, Republican Leon Benjamin Sr., after winning nearly 65 percent of the vote.

Benjamin announced last week he plans to run in the special election.

“[Rep. McEachin] will be remembered for his service to our community, and now I’m running to continue his service to VA-4 in DC,” Benjamin wrote in a tweet last week.

Virginia Delegate Lamont Bagby, a Democrat from Henrico, is expected to announce his plan to run in the special election Monday afternoon. Another Democrat, state Sen. Jennifer McClellan, D-Richmond, is also expected to formally announce her campaign this week. Both have filed paperwork to run.

Joseph Preston, a former Democratic member of the House of Delegates who served for one year, also announced his campaign for the vacant seat Monday, according to the Virginia Public Access Project.

Virginia’s 4th Congressional District is home to more than 629,000 voters – roughly 30% of which live in Richmond, according to VPAP.

The deadline for candidates to file for the special election is December 23.

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Madison Hirneisen is a staff reporter covering California for The Center Square. Madison has experience covering both local and national news.
Photo “Glenn Youngkin” by Glenn Youngkin. Background Photo “Election Day” by Phil Roeder. CC BY 2.0.