Myth of the Week: Wittman has been good for VA-01
Maybe it's the other way around!
Welcome to Myth of the Week, where we address some of the most-repeated myths about Rob Wittman’s work as our VA-01 Congressional representative.
MYTH:
Wittman has been good for VA-01.
REALITY:
Wittman coasts along in a comfortable seat while VA-01 suffers from his performative politics.
Some say that we at Wittman Watch are unreasonably demanding and unfairly critical of Rob Wittman, our Congressional representative in VA-01. He claims to have delivered significant achievements to VA-01 since he was elected in 2007. To ensure we weren’t missing anything, we examined the nature of those accomplishments and his role in making them happen, and we found a very telling pattern. Let’s get into it!
Federal Recognition of Six Virginia Indian Tribes
What Rob wants you to know:
Wittman authored and shepherded H. R. 984, the Thomasina E. Jordan Indian Tribes of Virginia Federal Recognition Act, which was signed into law on January 29, 2018. The bill granted federal recognition to the Chickahominy, Eastern Chickahominy, Upper Mattaponi, Rappahannock, Monacan, and Nansemond tribes. Federal recognition grants them sovereign legal standing, the right to repatriate ancestral remains from the Smithsonian, and eligibility for federal grants.
What Rob wants you to ignore:
The bill passed unanimously in both chambers — after Senators Warner and Kaine surprised the Senate by demanding a vote on it — with broad bipartisan acceptance.
VERDICT:
Wittman deserves credit for authoring and shepherding the bill through Congress. He faced few obstacles, as it had wide bipartisan support and little to no opposition. The whole Virginia delegation was behind it. This was an easy win that anyone in our seat could and should have delivered.
America’s Conservation Enhancement (ACE) Act and Its Reauthorization
What Rob wants you to know:
Wittman sponsored the 2025 renewal of the ACE Act (originally signed into law in October 2020) in the House, which reauthorized the EPA’s Chesapeake Bay Program, the Chesapeake WILD Program, and the North American Wetlands Conservation Act (NAWCA). The Bay defines VA-01’s economy, culture, and ecology; our watermen, tourism operators, and communities are dependent on healthy fisheries and water quality. These programs fund oyster restoration, habitat conservation, and pollution reduction directly benefiting district waterways.
What Rob wants you to ignore:
The ACE Act was a national program started in 2020, and was not just focused on the Bay. The bill was introduced by Sen. John Barrasso (R‑WY) and Sen. Tom Carper (D‑DE). Wittman voted on it in 2020 — and so did the majority of Congress, as it passed with broad bipartisan support. Wittman did lead the reauthorization in the House in 2025 and, again, it had massive bipartisan support.
Significantly, environmental advocates noted in March 2026 that the Trump administration (which Wittman unquestioningly supports) has proposed significant rollbacks to EPA funding and regulatory enforcement for Bay cleanup. So while Wittman helped keep the ACT Act alive, the administration he unwaveringly supports is working to kill the agency responsible for enforcing its provisions.
VERDICT:
Once again, Wittman didn’t fight for anything here, but he rode others’ coattails to get funding for the Bay. And now his silent complicity threatens the entire endeavor.
Shipbuilding and Naval Infrastructure: FY26 NDAA and Defense Appropriations
What Rob wants you to know:
As vice chairman of the House Armed Services Committee and chairman of the Tactical Air and Land Forces Subcommittee, Wittman voted for the FY26 NDAA (signed into law in December 2025). It authorized over $1.6 billion in military construction projects across 12 Virginia sites, advanced Virginia-class submarine and Ford-class carrier procurement, and included servicemember pay improvements. He also voted for the FY26 Defense Appropriations Act in January 2026, which included $1.5 billion for the Navy’s Shipyard Infrastructure Optimization program.
What Rob wants you to ignore:
The FY26 NDAA was approved by a strong bipartisan vote in both chambers. Wittman voted for it; so did the rest of the Virginia delegation in the House except for Bob Good (formerly R, VA-05, who always voted against “compromise” bills). Warner and Kaine (both Democrats) also voted yes in the Senate.
VERDICT:
Bipartisan cooperation is a good thing, and this is a good bill to have passed. But once more, Wittman rode the coattails of bipartisan government to deliver this funding to VA-01. It was an easy win, requiring zero statecraft to persuade or compromise. Any representative of either party in our seat could have delivered it.
Rural Broadband Expansion Efforts
What Rob wants you to know:
As co-chair of the bipartisan House Rural Broadband Caucus, Wittman introduced the Serving Rural America Act (authorizing $500 million over five years for broadband grants), helped draft the Broadband DATA Act (requiring more accurate coverage mapping), and has supported Virginia’s VATI broadband grant program through letters of support for VA-01 counties including Caroline, Essex, Fauquier, Hanover, James City, and King George. The Serving Rural America Act model was incorporated into the NTIA Broadband Infrastructure Program, a $288 million funding mechanism. In 2023, over $59.5 million in broadband grants were awarded to Essex and Caroline counties in VA-01.
What Rob wants you to ignore:
Wittman voted against the Bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (2021), which included the largest single broadband investment in U.S. history ($65 billion), calling it the “Green New Deal in disguise.” He then publicly touted infrastructure projects (including Port of Virginia funding) that resulted from the law he voted against. He deleted a tweet after criticism and being cited in ABC News and CNN reports about Republicans “voting no and taking the dough”. Wittman’s supposed broadband advocacy has not been fully matched by his votes on major legislation that would have accelerated deployment.
VERDICT:
Wittman eagerly voted against the legislation that accelerated broadband deployment across VA-01. Then he claimed credit for delivering the same funding through the same mechanism that he had voted against. This is simple hypocrisy.
Shore Power Infrastructure at NWS Yorktown
What Rob wants you to know:
Wittman secured $2.2 million through Community Project Funding to construct a shore power loading and unloading substation at Naval Weapons Station Yorktown, specifically to support Virginia-class submarines. The funding was signed into law on November 12, 2025, as part of the Appropriations Extension Act.
What Rob wants you to ignore:
This Community Project Funding (which is the new name for “earmarks” that Wittman once railed against) was jammed in the Continuing Appropriations and Extensions Act, 2026, the law that reopened the government after the prior shutdown. That bill had to pass to reopen the government.
VERDICT:
Wittman sneaked this funding into a bill that had to pass to reopen the government. It seems he didn’t negotiate to make this happen, but used procedure to get it over the line, even though it had a lot of support already. That’s not a bad maneuver, but it doesn’t scream “master dealmaker” either — especially as he’s Vice Chair of the House Armed Services Committee!
Freedom to Invest in Tomorrow’s Workforce Act
What Rob wants you to know:
Wittman authored this bipartisan bill to expand 529 education savings plans to cover post-secondary credentialing, professional certifications, licensing fees, apprenticeships, and related testing costs. It was enacted as part of H. R. 1 (the “One Big Beautiful Bill”) on July 4, 2025.
What Rob wants you to ignore:
We’ve critiqued this before. The biggest benefits of this law accrue to the already-wealthy, and those with enough income to sock away for a long time. Even more pertinent to the question of Wittman’s ability to stand alone and fight for VA-01, this bill was co-sponsored by Virginia Democrats Jennifer McClellan and Suhas Subramanyam. And even more concerning is that the provision was enacted inside H. R. 1, the “One Big Beautiful Bill,” which the CBO estimated cuts roughly $1 trillion from Medicaid over a decade. This is projected to strip coverage from more than 300,000 Virginians, including an estimated 250,000 who had coverage under the pre-existing program. Wittman himself stands to personally save between $19,900 and $59,300 annually in tax cuts from the same legislation. The vehicle that delivered this (apparently helpful and benign) workforce benefit imposes substantial healthcare costs on some of the same constituents it purports to help. In many cases, those health costs will dramatically outstrip educational savings.
VERDICT:
Wittman sponsored a measure that mostly helps the wealthy, and it was part of the biggest-ever giveaway to America’s wealthiest families, funded by stripping healthcare from over 300,000 Virginians. That is FAR from being a good deal for VA-01.
Norris Bridge Replacement
What Rob wants you to know:
Wittman says he was a persistent advocate for replacement of the Robert O. Norris Jr. Bridge, a 1.9-mile span connecting the Northern Neck and Middle Peninsula across the Rappahannock River. The bridge carries 7,500+ vehicles daily, far exceeding its 1957 design capacity. It has been classified as “fracture critical” by VDOT. The detour if the bridge closes is 85 miles. Wittman claims that his engagement with federal and state officials contributed to the project being accelerated to begin construction in 2028 — eight years ahead of the previously planned 2036 groundbreaking.
What Rob wants you to ignore:
Local and state coverage (e.g., Rappahannock Record, Southside Sentinel, VDOT video, and Youngkin’s ceremonial bill‑signing events) focus on the state law and VDOT financing plan, and repeatedly emphasize that the Commonwealth Transportation Special Structures Program Revenue Bond Act of 2025, championed by state Sen. Ryan McDougle and signed by Governor Youngkin, is what actually accelerated the bridge replacement to a 2028 start date. The primary documentation of Wittman’s “years of advocacy” comes from his own office and statements, while state law and VDOT financing decisions are evidently what drove the schedule change.
VERDICT:
There’s no concrete evidence that Wittman’s efforts had any impact on this project timeline. He may have written some letters and had a chat with a few folks at USDOT over multiple sessions, but is that “years of advocacy”? It appears Wittman is claiming credit for something he did very little to support.
SHARKED Act
(Awaiting Senate Floor Vote as of April 2026)
What Rob wants you to know:
With Representatives Darren Soto (D-Florida), Daniel Webster (R-Florida), and Marc Veasey (D-Texas), Wittman co-authored the SHARKED Act, directing NOAA to establish a task force addressing shark depredation. This is when sharks consume hooked fish before anglers can land them. Shark depredation affects the $230 billion U.S. recreational sportfishing industry. The bill has endorsements from 15 sportfishing and conservation organizations, including the American Sportfishing Association and Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership.
What Rob wants you to ignore:
This bill has not been enacted into law since Wittman introduced it in 2024. Some people argue that sharks eating hooked fish is normal behavior (we agree!). Shark Stewards and other marine conservation groups have warned that the legislation risks being used to justify shark population management (i.e., targeted removals of species that may still be recovering from overfishing).
VERDICT:
Wittman’s proposed legislation threatens recovering shark populations because… they eat fish. This seems like a phenomenally silly thing to legislate about, with very troubling potential consequences. Wittman has a wall of dead fish in his DC office as he’s an avid fisherman himself, and members of his family work in fishing industries. We’re not saying this flimsy bill panders to his self-interests, but we are saying it seems strange to keep boasting about a bill that hasn’t passed.
Dull Rob ain’t so harmless
Taken as a body of work, Wittman’s biggest achievements seem pretty… tepid. When viewed in contrast to many of the other dangerous and damaging things Wittman has enthusiastically supported, often as the key vote in the House, his “delivery” to VA-01 is disgracefully weak.
H. R. 1 / One Big Beautiful Bill / Medicaid
Wittman voted for the final House passage (215–214), despite having previously signed a letter with Rep. Kiggans opposing elements of the Senate version. The CBO estimated the final law cuts roughly $1 trillion from Medicaid nationally, with projections of 300,000+ Virginians losing coverage. Wittman publicly stated the bill “protects Medicaid for vulnerable Virginians,” which is simply a lie. We’ve documented the full horror of Wittman’s support for H.R. 1 elsewhere; it’s essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the economic and healthcare tsunami that’s about to hit the country.
DOGE Rescissions Package (June 2025)
Wittman cast a key vote (214–212 margin) to codify DOGE-related spending cuts. Virginia has more than 234,000 federal workers, and polling showed DOGE was deeply underwater with Virginia voters - only 39% of people supported the DOGE cuts — including within VA-01. And Wittman voted for it anyway!
2025 Government Shutdown (43 Days)
A federal government shutdown began October 1, 2025, and lasted approximately 43 days before Wittman voted to reopen the government. He publicly condemned the shutdown as “unnecessary and harmful” and noted its direct impact on federal employees and VA benefits recipients in VA-01. The cause for the shutdown was Democrats’ demands for reforms to ICE, following the murders of Renee Good and Alex Pretti. Democrats offered paths forward, but Mike Johnson (Republican leader of the House) refused to engage and adjourned the House entirely. Eventually Johnson accepted the Democrats’ proposal, and Wittman then voted along. Wittman never demanded Johnson keep the House open to fix the problem. But he did crow about his proposed “budget responsibility” legislation that he knows for a fact will never, ever get out of committee, let alone pass. He just let the situation play out until he was told how to vote — his usual cosplaying of a Congressperson.
Benefits from bipartisanship but then claims all credit for himself
The biggest “wins” in Wittman’s history came from bipartisan legislation. He fails to note that fact when he talks about them, and never gives credit to Democratic members of the Virginia delegation, even when they support the legislation for which he takes whole credit for himself. A true statesman could be justifiably proud of passing legislation with full bipartisan support, and of successful cross-party cooperation that results in real progress, but Wittman never mentions it. He often claims he is a bipartisan politician, but it’s simply untrue. He votes with his party consistently; as of September 2025, he had NEVER voted against Trump’s positions, and the Heritage Foundation gives him a 74% lifetime score, indicating he rarely votes against the positions they prefer.
Has Wittman been good for VA-01?
Rob Wittman has a very comfortable seat. VA-01 benefits from many assets: defense industry, military presence, natural resources, proximity to Washington, D.C., strong home ownership, and much more. Wittman seems to believe that the district does not require a strong, purposeful advocate who will serve its constituents and fight for their needs because… he hasn’t tried to do that. He’s just coasted along, hoping we won’t notice.
Well, we have noticed. We’ve noticed a lot!
He’s supporting everything the Republican Party is doing in Washington, which is already damaging our families, our neighbors, our communities, our district, our nation, and the world. By literally every measure — the economy, national security, global standing, treasury, health, education, and so on — the administration that Wittman refuses to hold accountable for anything is making everything — everything! — worse.
And Wittman’s personal net worth has risen by 5,138% since he took office: from $109,000 in 2007 to almost $5.6 million today. Has your net worth increased that much in that time? We’re guessing probably not.
It’s simple: Wittman has been on cruise control for 18 years.
He’s introduced almost no legislation, and what he has introduced has been pitiful — or at best, unchallenged and undemanding.
He claims individual glory for legislation and initiatives passed on a broad bipartisan basis.
He benefits from money coming into the district for defense, but compared to other members of Congress, has done little to secure a better share — even though he’s Vice Chair of the House Armed Services Committee.
He votes against legislation that will help VA-01 and, if it’s subsequently passed without his support, he still claims the credit for himself.
He has profited nicely from his time in our seat in Congress, while too many people in VA-01 are struggling to afford basic household bills, healthcare coverage, and so much more.
VA-01 has been good for Wittman, but Wittman has NOT been good for VA-01. We deserve a real representative in our seat in Congress.


