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Falls Church News-Press 10-4-2023

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October 5 - 11, 2023

Falls Church, Virginia • w w w . fc n p . c o m • Free

Founded 1991 • V o l . X X X III N o . 34

The City of Falls Church’s Independent, Locally-Owned Newspaper of Record, Serving N. Virginia

Contested F.C. Council Race’s 1st Debates

Honoring the Moon

1 Down, 2 Weeks to Go; Almost 350 Voted So Far by Nicholas F. Benton

Falls Church News-Press

With voting now underway and Election Day just a month off, candidates vying for three seats (out of seven) on the Falls Church City Council held their first face-to-face public encounter of the season last Thursday in the Senior Center room at the Falls Church Community Center that was uncommonly well attended. This is due to the fact that the Council election is the only seriously contested race on the ballot in the City of Falls Church this fall. The three open seats are being fought over by four candidates, and the two-yearlong battle over revisions to the City’s transitional areas zoning rules has heightened the competition. That issue, per se, having been determined by a 5-2 vote of the whole City Council last week, more or less erased it as an explicit issue for this fall. But remnants of its frequent acrimony have spilled over to some other issues that the four candidates spoke to at the forum last week. The City’s chapter of the League of Women Voters (LWV), principle leaders of which have hardly been silent during the t-zones fight, hosted the event, along with leaders of the Village Preservation and Improvement Society (VPIS) Key LWV and VPIS members sided with the opposition to the

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EDEN CENTER HOSTED their annual Tết Trung Thu celebration this past Sunday October 1st . The Traditional Vietnamese festival is held as a Mid-Autumn Moon Festival. ( Photo: Courtesy Eden Center )

Rep. Beyer Assails Collapse of House Speakership by Nicholas F. Benton

Falls Church News-Press

“It goes in Political 101 textbooks going forward as maybe one of the most crushingly stupid things somebody could do on the eve of your survival vote.” This comment came from Northern Virginia U.S. congressman Gerry Connolly Tuesday evening concerning a taped interview in which embattled House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) whose ouster was being voted on at the time of the interview, blasted Congressional Democrats, lying that they were responsible for the current governing gridlock instead of the half dozen radical GOP congressmen led by Rep. Matt Goetz.

Connolly said that any chance McCarthy had to salvage his role of House Speaker under assault from the GOP radical right was torpedoed by the replaying of his remarks in the Democratic caucus Sunday morning. As it turned out, all the House Democrats voted his ouster with those pivotal Republicans, and he was unceremoniously booted out. In an exclusive interview with the News-Press yesterday, U.S. Rep. Don Beyer of Falls Church and Northern Virginia said that while he “does not rejoice in the misfortune” of McCarthy, the man had a history of being untrustworthy in dealing with Democrats, very frequently reneging on negotiated deals. Something he has done repeatedly from Day One.

So now, Beyer says he is worried that it is only 41 days until the temporary funding of the federal government faces another deadline and threat of a government shutdown. With so many federal workers in his 8th District, he is already focused on that issue. But as for the House leadership, he said he’s currently locked into backing the Democratic leader, Hakeem Jeffereys, for speaker, though he concedes that would be a long shot now, given how locked in Republicans, and not just the fringe crazies, are on the issue of abortion. “This is a dividing line very difficult to overcome,” Beyer said, even though centering on that issue is generally considered to represent the Democrats’

best shot at regaining control of the House of Delegates in Richmond in next month’s elections. Beyer concurred. He said he’s seen results of “focus group after focus group” from around the country “in the rural areas as well as among the ‘costal elites,’” that affirm the abortion issue is very strong for Democrats. “The issue of women having control of their own bodies is extremely important no matter where the opinions are being taken from,” he said. Beyer said he is hopeful that Congressional Republicans will avoid reverting to a radical to lead the House. In particular, he said that Ohio Rep. Jim Jordan, who

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