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Dorothy McAuliffe Enters Democratic Primary for Proposed New Virginia 7th District

Dorothy McAuliffe, former First Lady of Virginia and wife of ex‑Gov. Terry McAuliffe, has formally entered the Democratic primary for Virginia’s 7th Congressional District, announcing her bid Wednesday in a post on X. Her run is contingent on voters approving an April 21 constitutional amendment that would lock in a new congressional map, with the proposed 7th stretching from Northern Virginia suburbs around Washington, D.C., west to Augusta County. McAuliffe, who later served as U.S. Special Representative for Global Partnerships in the Biden State Department, is pitching herself as a cost‑of‑living and health‑care reform candidate who promises to “never back down from holding Donald Trump and ICE accountable,” signaling a hard‑line stance on Trump‑era immigration enforcement and executive power. Virginia’s congressional primaries were recently shifted by state law from June to August 4, with early in‑person voting and absentee mailing to begin June 19, giving campaigns less time between final district lines and election day. She joins a crowded Democratic field that already includes incumbent Rep. Eugene Vindman, state Del. Dan Helmer and Army veteran Alex Thymmons, setting up an establishment‑heavy, high‑profile contest in a reconfigured district whose final shape remains uncertain until the amendment vote.

Virginia 7th District 2026 Race Congressional Elections

📌 Key Facts

  • Dorothy McAuliffe announced Wednesday she is running in the Democratic primary for Virginia’s 7th Congressional District.
  • Her candidacy assumes voters approve an April 21 constitutional amendment establishing a new congressional map with a redrawn 7th District from the D.C. suburbs to western Augusta County.
  • Virginia’s congressional primary is scheduled for August 4, with early voting and absentee mailing to start June 19.
  • McAuliffe is a former Virginia First Lady and was appointed U.S. Special Representative for Global Partnerships in June 2022 by President Biden.
  • Other declared Democratic candidates in the 7th District primary include incumbent Rep. Eugene Vindman, Del. Dan Helmer and Army veteran Alex Thymmons.

📊 Relevant Data

From 2010 to 2022, the non-Hispanic White population in Virginia decreased from 64.9% to 59.8% of the total population, reflecting increased diversity driven by immigration and migration.

Virginia population by year, county, race, & more — USAFacts

Without immigration, Virginia's population growth would be almost flat, and much of Northern Virginia would have lost population between 2010 and 2020.

ODU report: Without immigration, Virginia’s population growth would be almost flat, and much of Northern Virginia would have lost population — Cardinal News

In Virginia, children with undocumented status have an estimated uninsured rate of 48%, compared to 3.7% for citizen children.

Investing in Health Equity During the 2024 Legislative Session — Voices for Virginia's Children

Northern Virginia has a foreign-born population of 36.7% and a racial/ethnic diversity index of 70.2% based on 2020-2024 data.

Demographic Fact Sheet — Northern Virginia Regional Commission

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