Virginia senators disagree over public access as P&E desk meeting called for constitutional amendments
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Summary
Senators objected when leadership scheduled a quick Privileges & Elections desk meeting to process three constitutional-amendment cognates for the November ballot, arguing the public should have a chance to speak despite sponsors saying the measures had already had public hearings; the dispute ended with the desk meeting scheduled at recess.
A dispute over public access broke out on the floor of the Virginia Senate Jan. 30 after leadership moved to recess so the Committee on Privileges and Elections (P&E) could meet at the chair’s desk to consider three cognate bills that place constitutional amendments on the November ballot. The sponsor, identified on the floor as the senator from Eastern Fairfax, said the measures had already received full public hearings in both chambers and characterized the quick desk meeting as routine.
"These bills are given a full public hearing previously in the Senate," the senator from Eastern Fairfax said, urging colleagues to take up the matter efficiently and proceed with the calendar. He said the desk meeting would consider three bills placing constitutional amendments on the ballot and that a fourth amendment’s language had been handled in the budget process.
Other senators pressed back. A senator who rose for a question said the public should have the opportunity to speak and questioned doing the work "on a Friday afternoon with no public comment," given the measures’ significance as ballot questions. "The public should have at least the ability to be able to speak," that senator said, urging that, at minimum, a committee meeting be open to the public and allow testimony.
Supporters responded that identical cognates often do not receive additional public testimony at desk meetings because they previously had hearings in both chambers. The sponsor framed the desk meeting as a procedural step, not a substitute for a public hearing: "These bills are given a full public hearing previously in the Senate. Public was allowed to come. They were also given full public hearings in the House," he said.
The clerk then announced that the Committee on Privileges and Elections would meet immediately upon recess at the chair’s desk. The motion to recess and hold the P&E desk meeting was agreed to and the Senate recessed to allow the committee to convene.
The dispute highlights a recurring friction over when and how formally scheduled public comment is combined with short, procedural desk meetings that leadership sometimes uses to expedite the calendar. Senators who raised the concern argued that voters deserve a clear opportunity to speak when proposed constitutional changes are expedited toward the ballot.

