logo
Gay Virginia GOP nominee accuses governor's team of extortion, says lewd photos not his

Gay Virginia GOP nominee accuses governor's team of extortion, says lewd photos not his

NBC News30-04-2025

Virginia's Republican nominee for lieutenant governor is accusing Gov. Glenn Youngkin's political advisers of extortion and says they're trying to force him to end his campaign.
John Reid is the first openly gay man to run on a Republican or Democratic statewide ticket.
In two videos he posted online, he went public with details of what he called Youngkin's efforts to get him to leave the race. Many Republicans continue to support Reid, a former Richmond radio talk show host who has been with his current partner for eight years.
Reid suddenly became the nominee for lieutenant governor a week ago, when the favorite and only other candidate, Fairfax County Supervisor Pat Herrity, stepped aside for health reasons.
Reid said before that, "a local religious activist" and two people he has "known for several years" threatened him with what they described as sexually explicit photos they claimed he had posted on a Tumblr account. Reid says the photos are not his and the account was fabricated.
Next came a call from the governor asking him to step down, Reid said. He said when he refused, his aides were contacted again.
'They were told if I dropped out of the race, they would purchase the opposition research and the lies and threat against me would suddenly stop. This is extortion, and it is illegal in Virginia,' Reid said on video. 'I am more outraged now.'
Reid said he has no intention of dropping out.
'I'm tougher than any of my detractors, and I'm not going anywhere,' he said in the defiant conclusion to a video he posted online Sunday.
On Tuesday, Youngkin defended his call to Reid, saying concerns about lewd photos distract from key topics.
'Explicit social media content like this is a distraction. It's a distraction for campaigns, and it's a distraction from people paying attention to the most important issues,' he said at an event on fentanyl awareness.
Youngkin said it's Reid's decision to remain in the race or not.
'The decision is John's and up to John,' he said.
GOP gubernatorial nominee Winsome Earle-Sears, the current lieutenant governor, also referred to distraction from core issues and left it to Reid to continue with his campaign or not.
'President Lincoln said, 'A house divided against itself cannot stand.' Those biblical words from Matthew 12:25 embody the positive mission of our campaign — to unite and inspire Virginians of all backgrounds. This week, focus on the lieutenant governor nominee distracted from that mission and cannot continue. John Reid is the Republican nominee for lieutenant governor. It is his race, and his decision alone to move forward. We all have our own race to run,' she said in a statement Tuesday.
Earle-Sears called for a focus on 'results, unity and winning in November.'
'The governor has brought this on the party'
Other Republicans said they're upset about what they're seeing unfold.
Matthew Hurtt is the chair of the Arlington County Republican Committee. He contacted his members over the weekend to gauge their reaction.
'More than two-thirds of my members who responded said we don't think John should drop out, and an even higher percentage of respondents said they would still vote for John in November as the Republican nominee,' he said.
Hurtt blamed the governor's political action team for the mess.
Youngkin's Spirit of Virginia PAC did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Reid's allegations.
Political analyst Bob Holsworth, a partner at the public policy consulting firm DecideSmart, said Republicans were already facing an uphill battle in November and this only deepens their challenge.
'Now you have this situation where the governor is largely being seen as an individual who is pushing out a gay man,' he said.
'Republicans have brought this on themselves. The governor has brought this on the party, and they don't have an easy way out of it,' he continued.
A unity rally with the three statewide candidates and Youngkin had been planned for Wednesday but was cancelled. A rally for Reid was held Monday night in Sterling.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'Incredibly petty': Sen. Rand Paul says he was 'uninvited' to White House picnic over breaks with Trump
'Incredibly petty': Sen. Rand Paul says he was 'uninvited' to White House picnic over breaks with Trump

NBC News

time4 hours ago

  • NBC News

'Incredibly petty': Sen. Rand Paul says he was 'uninvited' to White House picnic over breaks with Trump

Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., said he was "uninvited" to an annual White House picnic typically attended by members of Congress and their families, framing the move to reporters on Wednesday as retribution for his opposition to key components of President Donald Trump's agenda. 'They're afraid of what I'm saying, so they think they're going to punish me, I can't go to the picnic, as if somehow that's going to make me more conciliatory,' Paul said. 'So it's silly, in a way, but it's also just really sad that this is what it's come to. But petty vindictiveness like this, it makes you — it makes you wonder about the quality of people you're dealing with.' Paul, who said he attended picnics hosted by Presidents Biden and Obama, told reporters he called the White House earlier today to secure tickets to the annual picnic but was told he was not invited to the event. He said he had family members flying to Washington D.C. to attend the event, including son, daughter-in-law and six-month old grandson, whom he noted owns a "Make America Great Again" hat. 'I just find this incredibly petty,' Paul told reporters."I have been, I think, nothing but polite to the President. I have been an intellectual opponent, a public policy opponent, and he's chosen now to uninvite me from the picnic and to say my grandson can't come to the picnic." The White House did not immediately respond to a series of questions, including whether Paul was ever invited to the event and if Trump was directly involved in the decision to "uninvite" him. As Trump pushes Republicans to pass a package of measures to fund much of his domestic agenda by Independence Day, Paul is among the Senate Republicans poised to make that milestone unreachable, joining fiscal hawks in the party to balk at legislation the Congressional Budget Office estimates said would add $2.4 trillion to the national deficit. In addition to his belief that the funding package would "explode the debt," the three-term senator has criticized spending cuts in the bill as "wimpy and anemic," called planned Medicaid changes in the legislation "bad strategy" and proposed cutting billions in funding from the bill for Trump's border wall. 'In private, there's quite a few people in there who actually do think we could save some money and are open minded to it, and believe the administration should justify the numbers,' Paul told reporters after a two-hour meeting on the bill Wednesday. 'Even if you're supportive, and I am supportive of border security, but I'm just not supportive of a blank check.' Paul said this week he plans to vote "No" on the legislation and speculated today it may be among the reasons for the rescinded invitation. 'I'm arguing from a true belief and worry that our country is mired in debt and getting worse, and they choose to react by uninviting my grandson to the picnic,' Paul said. 'I don't know, I just think it really makes me lose a lot of respect I once had for Donald Trump.' Trump has frequently lashed out at Paul in response to the sustained opposition, deriding the senator on Truth Social for his criticisms. "Rand Paul has very little understanding of the BBB, especially the tremendous GROWTH that is coming. He loves voting 'NO' on everything, he thinks it's good politics, but it's not," Trump wrote last week. Paul has emerged as a chief critic to Trump's fiscal policy, and has intensely criticized his decision to place tariffs on major U.S. trading partners, arguing they will push the country into a recession. The libertarian conservative was one of four Republican senators to back a Democratic resolution to block the implementation of Trump's Canadian tariffs, predicting at the time that the import penalties would "threaten us with a recession" and calling Trump's decision to place tariffs on major U.S. trading partners "a terrible, terrible idea." The effort has so far stalled in the House. Paul also joined Democrats in introducing a bipartisan resolution to undo the reciprocal tariffs Trump placed on dozens of countries, this time by terminating the national emergency he declared to implement the global penalties, arguing that Trump had exceeded his presidential authority. 'Tariffs are taxes, and the power to tax belongs to Congress—not the president. Our Founders were clear: tax policy should never rest in the hands of one person,' Paul said in a statement on the bipartisan effort. 'Abusing emergency powers to impose blanket tariffs not only drives up costs for American families but also tramples on the Constitution. It's time Congress reasserts its authority and restores the balance of power.' That effort failed to pass the Senate. Paul's differences with Trump even extend to the military parade taking place on Saturday, which the lawmaker likened to parades in countries led by dictators. "I wouldn't have done it," Paul said on Tuesday. "The images you saw in the Soviet Union and North Korea. We were proud not to be that." But still, in the face of his criticisms of Trump, Paul appeared to view the rescinded invitation as a shock, noting that even Democratic lawmakers remain invited to the White House picnic. "I think I'm the first senator in the history of United States to be uninvited to the White House picnic,' Rand told reporters. "Literally, every Democrat is invited, every Republican is invited, and to say that my family is no longer welcome, kind of sad actually.'

DNC will redo party elections for David Hogg and Malcolm Kenyatta's posts after procedural error
DNC will redo party elections for David Hogg and Malcolm Kenyatta's posts after procedural error

NBC News

time7 hours ago

  • NBC News

DNC will redo party elections for David Hogg and Malcolm Kenyatta's posts after procedural error

The Democratic National Committee has voted to hold new elections for two of its vice-chair positions after a procedural challenge, meaning Florida activist David Hogg and Pennsylvania state Rep. Malcolm Kenyatta, who were elected to the party's executive committee in February, have to run again in order to keep their positions. They won't have to wait long: A new, virtual, election between Hogg and Kenyatta begins Thursday. And the loser will be able to run in a subsequent election for the final vice-chair slot. The challenge that triggered the new election isn't directly related to Hogg's public spat with the DNC and its chairman, Ken Martin, over Hogg's decision to support primary challenges to Democratic incumbents. But the weeks-long episode, with Martin and other leaders backing a neutrality pledge for party officers, has inflamed tensions among members and kept the debate between Hogg and the party in the headlines. Last month, the DNC's Credentials Committee voted to recommend that the party hold two new vice-chair elections because it found that the DNC mistakenly created an advantage for the two male candidates, Hogg and Kenyatta, as it managed the internal elections at the end of a marathon February party meeting in Washington, D.C. Wednesday evening the DNC announced that 75% of the votes cast in a virtual election by its members voted in favor of approving that recommendation. Because DNC rules require equal gender representation on its executive committee, not including the party chair, the results of previous elections in February meant the DNC had to elect at least one man to its final two vice-chair slots. But instead of holding individual votes for each position, one to be filled by a man and one by a candidate of any gender, the party decided to hold one single vote to decide who took the final two slots. Oklahoma Democratic Committeewoman Kalyn Free, who unsuccessfully ran against Hogg and Kenyatta in the February vice-chair race, petitioned the DNC for a redo, claiming the decision to combine the ballots unfairly benefitted Hogg and Kenyatta over the female candidates who were eligible to win the final vice-chair slot. Though Free's challenge was filed well before his public spat with Martin, Hogg framed the decision last month as proof the party was trying to strip him of his title over his support for primary challenges to Democratic incumbents. Both Martin and Kenyatta vehemently disagreed with his framing: Martin blamed a 'procedural error' from 'before I became chair' for the episode, and Kenyatta criticized Hogg for distracting from the party's work by arguing the vote amounted to personal retribution. Tensions between Hogg and the party have been brewing for months, since the activist telegraphed his decision to back Democratic primary challenges. Ahead of the vote, Politico published a short clip of an internal Democratic Party call on which Martin vented his frustration with Hogg, saying the fight has 'essentially destroyed any chance I have to show the leadership that I need to.' The leak prompted another round of finger-pointing, with prominent DNC members accusing Hogg or his allies of orchestrating the leak. Hogg vehemently denied that and published a screenshot he said showed his text messages with the reporter who published the story. An election for the first vice-chair position between Hogg and Kenyatta will run virtually from Thursday morning through Saturday afternoon. Then, the party will hold another virtual vote Sunday morning through Tuesday afternoon featuring the four remaining candidates who were eligible at the end of the February elections.

Meet the Press NOW — June 11
Meet the Press NOW — June 11

NBC News

time7 hours ago

  • NBC News

Meet the Press NOW — June 11

Rep. Adam Smith (D-Wash.), the ranking member on the House Armed Services Committee, responds to President Trump's decision to send troops to Los Angeles amid ongoing protests over the administration's immigration enforcement actions. NBC News National Political Correspondent Steve Kornacki analyzes the New Jersey gubernatorial primary results, setting the stage for a contest between Republican Jack Ciattarelli and Democrat Mikie Sherrill. Francesca Chambers, Ameshia Cross and T.W. Arrighi weigh in on how the public is responding to the 11, 2025

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store