Candidate Profile: Timothy Anderson (Virginia House District 97)
Timothy Anderson is a candidate for Virginia House District 97 and is running as a Republican. His name will appear on the June 17, 2025 ballot. Anderson is running against challenger Christina M. Felder in the June Republican primary. The winner will appear on the ballot for the General Election on Nov. 4.
If you are voting in this election, from May 2 through June 14 you can vote early at your On Election Day, polls in Virginia are open from 6 a.m. until 7 p.m. Don't forget to bring your ID. to see who is on your ballot.
10 On Your Side reached out to all of the candidates running in this race, with a request for a bio and a list of questions to answer. If you do not see the candidate listed with a profile, we did not receive one.
WAVY.com Candidate Profiles
Name: Timothy AndersonAge: 50Website: tim@timforva.com
Attorney for 26 years. Former House of Delegates member in District 83.
In 2022 I was redistricted out of the seat I maintained in the 83rd District. Virginia Beach lost a seat and I was paired with two Republican incumbents. I chose not to challenge either of those incumbents. Unfortunately, one of them lost their seat in the last election to the now Democrat incumbent. We must win the seat for the GOP in order to reclaim the majority in the House of Delegates.
Anderson announces run for Dist. 97 seat
I am a former member of the House of Delegates and a 26-year attorney in Hampton Roads.
To abolish the car tax for middle class Virginians. This can be accomplished by redirecting the multi billion dollar annual surplus that Virginia has to provide permanent tax relief to all middle-class Virginians.
Billionaires in Virginia are buying elections. The elections are becoming more of installations by the super elite. We must get our arms wrapped around campaign contributions that create a completely unfair advantage for anybody competing against the billionaires chosen candidate.
When I was recently in the House of Delegates, I voted against my party 17% of the time. I did so because some bills that mattered to my constituents did not align with bills that were passing through the House Of Delegates at the time. I also have one of the highest bipartisanship records in the two years I was previously in the House. I sponsored many Democrat bills and many Democrats sponsored bills that I carried. Passing laws in Richmond is about finding good ideas and getting partners from both sides of the aisle to create policy that benefits all Virginians.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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