
Virginia Democrats stripped tax exemptions from Confederate heritage groups after decades of privilege, but courts may soon restore them on free speech grounds.
1950 Origins in Massive Resistance
Virginia enacted tax exemptions for Confederate groups in 1950 during the Massive Resistance campaign against racial integration. Lawmakers preserved Confederate legacy as schools faced desegregation orders. Groups like the United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC) gained exemptions for real and personal property. This shielded their operations amid civil rights pushback. The policy endured for 76 years until Democratic momentum forced change.
Repeated Vetoes by Gov. Youngkin
Gov. Glenn Youngkin vetoed similar bills in 2024 and 2025. He rejected targeted changes for the UDC, arguing government should avoid picking winners and losers. Youngkin favored broad tax reforms over symbolic removals. HB 1699 passed party lines in 2025 but met the same fate. He cited risks of setting inappropriate precedents. UDC praised his stance, defending their historical and educational mission.
Democratic Trifecta Enables Passage
Democrats gained full control after 2025 elections. Del. Alex Askew (D-Virginia Beach) reintroduced HB 167 early 2026. The House passed it 71-24 in February. Senate followed with a 21-17 vote days later. The bill explicitly names UDC Virginia Division, Confederate Memorial Literary Society, Stonewall Jackson Memorial, Sons of Confederate Veterans Virginia Division, and J.E.B. Stuart Birthplace Preservation Trust. Askew demands they pay their fair share for schools.
Askew’s Push for Fiscal Fairness
Askew frames the repeal as equity, not punishment. He targets groups that glorify the Confederacy. Richmond assessors estimate UDC’s headquarters owes over $50,000 yearly in property taxes. Funds could support public schools. Democrats view this as reckoning with whitewashed history. Post-2020 protests amplified monument debates tied to these organizations. Passage reflects partisan divide in Virginia politics.
Virginia Governor Ends Tax Breaks for Confederate Groups https://t.co/O5J9DBceCE
— Eric Nelson (@CommodoreNelson) April 14, 2026
First Amendment Roadblocks Ahead
UVA First Amendment scholar Kevin Cope warns the bill invites court defeat. Governments cannot withhold tax benefits based on viewpoint, even controversial ones. IRS and states must remain neutral on ideology. Youngkin’s vetoes aligned with this common-sense principle. Targeted repeals risk viewpoint discrimination claims. Groups plan litigation, potentially restoring exemptions. Facts support Cope’s analysis over Askew’s equity claim.
Revenue Gains Versus Precedent Risks
Short-term, localities gain modest revenue for schools and services. Long-term, the bill signals shifts in nonprofit tax policy for heritage groups. It may inspire copycats nationwide. Socially, it advances Democratic narratives on Confederate legacy. Politically, it cements post-election power. Yet constitutional hurdles loom large. American conservative values prioritize free speech protections over selective taxation.
Sources:
Virginia Clears Bill Cutting Confederacy Groups’ Tax Exemptions
Youngkin vetoes Confederate tax break roll-back, but 1A scholar says that might be best
Virginia Legislative Information System – HB1699













