Public Comments (GAD)
2026 Regular Session HB4029 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Jamie Y. on January 18, 2026 15:32
Public contracts using all or in part funds from the public be it tax monies or otherwise should be available for viewing by the public.
2026 Regular Session HB4029 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Toki on January 25, 2026 02:00
I'm for this. The more transparency the better.
2026 Regular Session HB4058 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Toki on January 25, 2026 03:29
I'm for this. I believe it would really help some WV communities.
2026 Regular Session HB4145 (Government Administration)
Comment by: madeline renner on January 20, 2026 17:19
I think this bill should pass. This would allow more accurate school choice information be provided, and would allow for a more central hub for homeschoolers. I would like to see this office take over processing of NOIs, portfolio submissions, and everything having to do with homeschooling in WV. This would also alleviate overwhelming already busy BOEs.
2026 Regular Session HB4148 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on January 23, 2026 16:35
I strongly oppose HB 4148, which requires proof of U.S. citizenship to obtain a real estate salesperson license. This bill creates prejudice among American residents and lawful workers, undermines equal protection principles, and imposes a citizenship test where none is legally or practically required.
First, citizenship is not a lawful prerequisite for work.
Under federal law, lawful permanent residents and other lawfully authorized non-citizens are permitted to work in the United States. States may regulate professional licensing, but they may not impose citizenship requirements that conflict with federal immigration authority or discriminate against lawful workers. Courts have repeatedly held that blanket citizenship requirements for occupational licenses are constitutionally suspect under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Second, HB 4148 replaces competency standards with identity-based barriers.
Real estate licensing already requires education, examinations, background checks, and regulatory oversight. Citizenship status has no connection to consumer protection, ethical conduct, or professional competence. This bill shifts licensing away from merit and toward exclusion based on status rather than ability or conduct.
Third, the bill creates discriminatory outcomes even among taxpayers and long-term residents.
Many lawful residents pay state and local taxes, contribute to the economy, and comply with all professional requirements. HB 4148 denies them access to a licensed profession solely based on citizenship, creating unequal treatment among people who are otherwise similarly situated under the law.
Fourth, the bill invites legal liability and administrative burden.
Imposing citizenship documentation requirements exposes the state to litigation risks, enforcement inconsistencies, and constitutional challenges. It also burdens licensing agencies with immigration-related determinations they are not equipped or authorized to adjudicate.
Finally, this policy promotes prejudice rather than public safety.
There is no evidence that citizenship requirements improve consumer protection in real estate transactions. What this bill does accomplish is the normalization of “papers-based” exclusion in civilian life, setting a precedent that erodes equal access to lawful employment.
For these reasons, HB 4148 is unnecessary, discriminatory, and constitutionally vulnerable. Professional licensing should be based on qualifications, ethics, and accountability—not citizenship status. I urge the Legislature to reject this bill.
2026 Regular Session HB4148 (Government Administration)
Comment by: SS Walker on January 29, 2026 13:43
Waste of resources. More important issues to deal with.
2026 Regular Session HB4167 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Brian Powell on January 19, 2026 21:06
I support this bill. Redistricting should not be treated as a political matter. Politicians should not select their constituents.
2026 Regular Session HB4167 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on January 23, 2026 16:53
I oppose HB 4167 as written because, despite its stated intent, it risks enabling structural gerrymandering and de facto redlining under the appearance of neutrality.
While the bill claims to establish an “independent” redistricting commission, the selection and strike process still allows political gatekeeping, concentrated influence, and indirect partisan control. Independence is not achieved merely by removing sitting legislators if the process itself permits strategic exclusions and lacks enforceable safeguards against demographic manipulation.
Of particular concern is how “communities of interest” are defined and applied. Historically, this language has been used to fragment marginalized, rural, Indigenous, and low-income communities, diluting their voting strength while maintaining plausible deniability. Without explicit protections, this invites outcomes that resemble racial and economic redlining, even if not labeled as such.
Additionally, the bill does not provide sufficient, enforceable standards to prevent:
- Packing or cracking of minority and dissenting voters
- Maps that preserve political power while appearing statistically compliant
- Disproportionate harm to communities with limited political or financial means
True redistricting reform must include strong civil-rights protections, transparent demographic impact analysis, meaningful public consent, and judicially enforceable anti-discrimination standards — not just procedural reshuffling.
West Virginians deserve fair representation, not a process that shifts gerrymandering from elected officials to an insulated body with limited accountability. Until these concerns are addressed, HB 4167 should not advance.
2026 Regular Session HB4527 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Chelsea Rae Gunther on February 1, 2026 21:00
I am a West Virginia constituent in Beckley, Raleigh County, and I support HB 4527 because it reduces everyday administrative burden and helps residents stay legally registered without unnecessary stress.
This bill directs the West Virginia Division of Motor Vehicles to create an opt-in system where vehicle owners can save billing information in a secure portal so registration renewals can occur automatically after the DMV receives confirmation that personal property taxes were paid. For working families, caregivers, rural residents, and people juggling multiple jobs or health issues, it’s easy to miss a deadline that has nothing to do with safety and everything to do with paperwork. This bill shrinks that gap.
The safeguards matter. The DMV must send notice two weeks before any charge, using the method the registrant chooses (text, email, or U.S. mail). Residents can change the billing date or payment method up to five days before the charge. That combination supports autonomy while still offering a smoother default path.
HB 4527 also improves coordination between counties and the DMV by requiring monthly reporting of paid personal property taxes and setting a timeline for the DMV to apply that information to accounts. And if a payment does not show up correctly, the bill requires a way to upload receipts or proof of payment (or bring them to a local office), which gives residents a practical correction route.
In short, HB 4527 modernizes a routine process, decreases accidental lapses, and respects residents’ time while keeping notice and control in the owner’s hands.
2026 Regular Session HB4531 (Government Administration)
Comment by: toki on January 29, 2026 21:10
I cant remember if commented on this one before or not, but i'm doing it again if so. I'm definitely for this 100%.
2026 Regular Session HB4532 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Katie Moore on January 20, 2026 19:51
Bare minimum, but I mean, yeah, we should probably do that.
2026 Regular Session HB4532 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Toki on January 29, 2026 21:11
i'm 100% for this.
2026 Regular Session HB4551 (Government Administration)
Comment by: George Caldwell on January 26, 2026 11:06
PASS THIS BILL
This bill is vital to the protection of our Mountaineer drivers. This is long over-due regulation and is gaining traction nationwide. West Virginia needs to lead the way in standing up for American citizens. Commercial Drivers Licensing is a large responsibility and must be awarded to those who comply with your laws. By implementing this we can be one step closer to ensuring our CDL holders are the right people for the right job.
2026 Regular Session HB4793 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Jacqueline Ellison on February 4, 2026 21:27
I support this bill because it enables teens to begin building their careers at an early stage. It provides opportunities to learn a trade, allowing students to establish a stable foundation before graduating high school. For those who choose to pursue college afterward, they would already have valuable skills and work experience in place. Additionally, this bill helps young people develop responsibility, a strong work ethic, and essential interpersonal skills, particularly in customer service roles.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Bethany Clark on January 23, 2026 16:14
This is absolutely ridiculous. There are people in the comments on the announcement about this bill who loved Charlie Kirk but are saying this is a complete waste of time. I am not one of those people; I do not think he deserves to be memorialized this way (although I condemn the violence by which he died and the violent rhetoric he espoused when he was alive), especially not in West Virginia, a state which he was not from and toward which he has contributed nothing. There are far more pressing issues in our state, such as making sure public schools have adequate funding for everything they need and improving infrastructure and increasing jobs. Stop wasting time on issues like this.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Laura Thomas on January 23, 2026 16:42
What did Charlie ever do for West Virginia or West Virginians? We should be celebrating accomplished people from our own state, but instead our representatives would waste time and taxpayer dollars virtue signaling. Our government has lost touch with its citizens.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Amy Cowgill on January 23, 2026 19:04
This is ridiculous. Charlie Kirk was a racist misogynist. Considering the first amendment is completely under attack in this country, celebrating it seems quite hypocritical, and naming it after such a controversial figure is unacceptable.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Shannon Swartz on January 23, 2026 20:56
While I acknowledge the tragedy of any loss of life, I believe this resolution sets a dangerous precedent by honoring an individual who promoted deeply divisive and harmful ideologies. Charlie Kirk, through his organization Turning Point USA and his public platforms, consistently espoused views that many Americans, including myself, find abhorrent. These include promoting racism, homophobia, transphobia, Islamophobia, sexism, and Christian Nationalism to name a few.
The tragic circumstances of Kirk's death should not overshadow the harmful legacy of his work. While we can condemn violence in all forms, we must also be critical of the ideologies that promote division and discrimination in our society. We should be honoring those who bring Americans together, not those who have sowed division and hatred.
Do the work for YOUR people, the people of YOUR state. Charlie Kirk has ZERO ties to West Viriginia other than a few pass throughs to "debate" college students for which he had amassed a wealth unknown to the majority of the West Virginia constituents.
I formally request rescinding of the proposed bill. It does absolutely nothing for West Virginia.
Additionally, I request an audit on the time, energy and costs associated with this waste of time of a bill/resolution that does nothing for the people of West Virginia to be billed to
Jonathan Pinson and anyone else that dares to waste the tax payors money on this type of drivel.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Kathy Sergent on January 24, 2026 02:47
Bill 4797 to declare a new WV holiday “Charlie Kirk Day” under the pseudo name Freedom of Speech Day is reprehensible and partisan. If you’re going to declare a new holiday, it should be to honor someone or something noble that significantly united us not divide us. With what is going on in our Country now, freedom of speech is under attack and Mr. Kirk only added to the division. This bill should go no further!
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Sondra J Lambiotte on January 24, 2026 10:06
What a ridiculous waste of your time, and our tax dollars. Most people did not even know who Charlie Kirk was before his death. It is not your job as legislators to force some of the members’ hero worship on the citizens of West Virginia!
Stop allowing these silly bills to embarrass our state!
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Daniel F on January 24, 2026 10:25
It’s awful what happened to him…but he had nothing to do with this state. I thought the focus would be on fixing roads, water, jobs, schools, attracting business, etc….but it seems it’s still on things that aren’t going to rise us out of the bottom 5 on almost every important statistic.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Joanne Miller on January 24, 2026 16:39
I am appalled that my fellow citizens believe that this is an issue worth spending our tax dollars on. This man was not an American hero of any kind, nor was he a fellow West Virginian. Vote no on this ridiculous bill proposition. We have communities that can't get clean water, but you choose to spend actual working hours on this. No.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Mark Delbrook on January 24, 2026 20:09
This is an absolute waste of taxpayer money. WV has so many more problems to fix and you're wasting time and money on this nonsense. J Pinson should be apologize to his district
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Marcia Hinkle on January 24, 2026 20:21
Recognizing the importance of freedom of speech given to all in this country according to the US Constitution is admirable. But I take great offense that this bill would carry Charlie Kirk’s name on it. Why? He was a political influencer who had the backing of the wealthy to spread his message that was meant to divide people who didn’t think, believe, or look like him. He had the right to say what he said, but we should not reward his comments with a freedom of speech bill named after him!
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: anna fragale on January 24, 2026 21:12
what a waste of WV taxpayer money that could be spent on fixing our water contamination crisis, unusable roads, or struggling education system. you should be ashamed of yourselves.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Tanganyika Medina on January 24, 2026 21:26
I oppose this bill because freedom of speech is already established. what happened to this man was tragic, but was he born in WV? No. was he a resident of WV? No. i didn't even know who he was until his death. focus on real issues concerning the citizens of WV!!! PLEASE AND THANK YOU! why is my rent increasing 4 months after I signed my lease and more importantly why is that not illegal?!
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Allison Pugh on January 25, 2026 07:52
While I am a proud supporter of the first amendment right to free speech, and hate to see ANYONE murdered in broad daylight, this bill seems like a waste of the legislature's time. I'd like to see more time and energy poured into bills that will actually improve the lives of mountaineers. Bills addressing clean, reliable water as well as adding regulations to data centers would be much better uses of your limited time together and may actually impact the people of this state.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Joseph Westwright on January 25, 2026 08:34
What is the purpose of this bill celebrating and mandating school lessons for a figure that was both divisive and not from West Virginia? Not to minimize this individual’s contributions but where is the bill for Rep Melissa Hortman who was assassinated?
Over 350 lives were taken as part of mass shootings in the country last year alone, where is their holiday?
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Tim Shepherd on January 25, 2026 08:37
Vote no on this bill! To honor a person who has a history of using racial and hateful comments makes no sense. To honor someone like Charlie Kirk is an embarrassment to all West Virginians. Vote No on this bill!
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Jerry Forren on January 25, 2026 11:47
This is the most ridiculous bill ever. There are many much more important things that the House should be dealing with. Quit wasting time !
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Michael Gillum on January 25, 2026 12:22
Regarding house bill 4797:
West Virginia has many perplexing issues that requires the focus of intelligent and responsible representatives of the public. Continually wasting valuable time by introducing superfluous legislation to further divide the citizenry while ignoring the real issues just showcases the lack of seriousness that you have for your status as a lawmaker. This should be dropped immediately and bills to address the real issues facing West Virginian citizens should be introduced. If Pinson can only introduce “own the libs” legislation, maybe he lacks the necessary intellect to hold such a role in forwarding the state of West Virginia.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Lillian Roy on January 25, 2026 13:12
Charlie Kirk wasn't from West Virginia. He wasn't a politician who did something for the state. I don't understand why a day would be designated for him. Instead, I believe we should have an Appalachian History Day to honor the history of coal miners and other residents of West Virginia who lost their lives powering this country and who fought for the rights of workers throughout the USA. I would love to see West Virginia designate October as Appalachian History Month. Boone, NC has already set a precedent for it, and it would be a nice show of solidarity with them, after all the suffering western North Carolina has endured.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Benjamin on January 25, 2026 16:34
This bill seems unnecessary and performative. Charlie Kirk was not from West Virginia and did nothing to improve the life of West Virginians. Honoring someone who has promoted ideals of racism and segregation go against the ideals of the multi-cultural people whom, when seeing injustice being performed, separated from Virginia to become their own state.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Nolan Rose on January 25, 2026 19:56
This bill is clearly not serious and simply not worthy of consideration to be submitted as bill, let alone passed. We cannot have random holidays for every political commentator that someone in office likes. I reject this bill and so should the house.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Erin on January 25, 2026 20:03
This is a waste of time. This guy was a podcaster. He was not someone we should be honoring,
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Chelsea Rae Gunther on January 25, 2026 20:20
HB 4797 is an embarrassment. It drags West Virginia into national culture-war theater by creating “First Amendment Freedom of Speech Day” and a memorial week tied to “the date of Charlie Kirk’s birth,” then naming the entire package “The Charlie Kirk Memorial First Amendment Freedom Act.”
If I understand correctly, you are asking the Governor to issue a proclamation praising Kirk and to direct the Department of Education to run student activities recognizing him. That is not protecting speech. That is the state picking a controversial political figure and demanding public participation, while ignoring the full context of who he was.
Kirk has been repeatedly criticized for racist and bigoted statements. His own quotes condemn him.
West Virginia deserves better than becoming a punchline and a headline. There are certainly ways to celebrate the First Amendment without honoring a figure whose public career was marked by hateful rhetoric.
If nothing else I've said matters, please at least consider that Charlie Kirk had no ties to WV, and that we have plenty of WV champions who can be memorialized.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Martha Elder on January 25, 2026 20:54
I do not think we need another state holiday for Charlie Kirk. We had Juneteenth and you took that away for what reason I do not know other than we switched governors! It is silly to keep making up holidays for regular people! They aren’t famous! He was a political activist. Not worthy of a holiday in my opinion.
Just my thought.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Rachel Lester on January 26, 2026 07:06
Absolutely ridiculous. There are many many MANY more pressing issues than making a holiday for an entertainer. He contributed nothing other than hate to our nation. He was not from WV, did not die in WV, he should not be honored in WV. Disgusting. Do not pass this abhorrent bill.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Hunter Childers on January 26, 2026 07:47
As a former West Virginia resident I find this Bill despicable you’re wasting taxpayer money time and resources on such a useless piece of legislation. not to mention honoring a man who only spewed just because he didn’t use physical violence doesn’t mean he didn’t cause violence. Your time is better spent helping our citizens and bettering our country, which you are not doing.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Wyatt Sanders on January 26, 2026 09:24
My name is Wyatt and I am a resident of Martinsburg. I am writing to express my strong opposition to HB 4797 and HCR 7.
While I respect the importance of the First Amendment, I believe these measures are an inappropriate use of our legislative session for several reasons:
- Priorities: Our state faces pressing local challenges. Legislative time should be spent on issues that directly improve the lives of West Virginians, rather than honoring a person from Illinois with no historical ties to our state.
Educational Autonomy: I am concerned by the mandate in HB 4797 that requires the Department of Education to develop specific programs centered on a singular political activist. Our schools should focus on non-partisan civic education.
Fiscal Responsibility: Designating new memorial weeks and potential holidays involves state resources. I urge the committee to consider if this is the most effective way to spend taxpayer dollars.
With so much going on in WV today do we really want to honor someone who does not represent what West Virginias are about.
Here are some of his quotes. Wil we teach this about him too?
On Race and Civil Rights
- The Civil Rights Act: "We made a huge mistake when we passed the Civil Rights Act in the 1960s... [It] created a beast, and that beast has now turned into an anti-white weapon." (The Charlie Kirk Show, April 2024)
- On Black Professionals: "If I see a Black pilot, I'm going to be like, boy, I hope he's qualified." (The Charlie Kirk Show, January 23, 2024)
- On Martin Luther King Jr.: Kirk described the civil rights icon as "awful" and "not a good person," explicitly stating it was "true" that he viewed King as a "bad guy." (FactCheck.org / The Charlie Kirk Show, 2024)
- On Diversity & Excellence: "If I'm dealing with somebody in customer service who's a moronic Black woman, I wonder is she there because of her excellence, or is she there because of affirmative action?" (The Charlie Kirk Show, January 3, 2024)
On Women and Family
- On Feminism: "Feminism must be defeated for the West to be saved... Reject feminism. Submit to your husband... You're not in charge." (The Charlie Kirk Show, August 26, 2025)
- On Women’s Education: At the 2025 Young Women’s Leadership Summit, he called on women to abandon career-focused education to "submit to a godly man" and raise "more children than you can afford."
- On Female Success: "You do not have the brain processing power to otherwise be taken really seriously. You had to go steal a white person's slot to go be taken somewhat seriously." (Referring to prominent women of color, The Charlie Kirk Show, July 13, 2023)
On Gun Violence and Public Safety
- On Gun Deaths: "I think it's worth it to have a cost of, unfortunately, some gun deaths every single year so that we can have the Second Amendment." (2023)
I ask that you vote "No" on these measures and instead focus on the local issues that matter most to our communities.
Sincerely,
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Kayla Sistilli on January 26, 2026 10:28
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I respectfully oppose any proposal to designate a Memorial Day or official state recognition for Charlie Kirk in West Virginia.
Memorial days and state honors should be reserved for individuals or events that unite our communities and reflect broadly shared values of service, sacrifice, and respect for all West Virginians. Charlie Kirk is a highly partisan national political figure whose work and public statements have been deeply divisive and controversial. Granting an official day of recognition risks politicizing state honors and alienating many residents who do not share or support his views.
West Virginia has countless veterans, first responders, educators, miners, community leaders, and public servants whose contributions directly benefit our state and whose service brings people together rather than deepening political divisions. Our limited capacity for official recognition should prioritize those who have demonstrated clear, positive, and unifying impact on the people of West Virginia.
For these reasons, I urge lawmakers to reject this proposal and keep state-recognized memorials and honors focused on individuals and causes that genuinely reflect the shared values and interests of all West Virginians.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Maleea Martin on January 26, 2026 11:41
I respectfully oppose any proposal to designate a Memorial Day or official state recognition for Charlie Kirk in West Virginia.
Memorial days and state honors should be reserved for individuals or events that unite our communities and reflect broadly shared values of service, sacrifice, and respect for all West Virginians. Charlie Kirk is a highly partisan national political figure whose work and public statements have been deeply divisive and controversial. Granting an official day of recognition risks politicizing state honors and alienating many residents who do not share or support his views.
West Virginia has countless veterans, first responders, educators, miners, community leaders, and public servants whose contributions directly benefit our state and whose service brings people together rather than deepening political divisions. Our limited capacity for official recognition should prioritize those who have demonstrated clear, positive, and unifying impact on the people of West Virginia.
For these reasons, I urge lawmakers to reject this proposal and keep state-recognized memorials and honors focused on individuals and causes that genuinely reflect the shared values and interests of all West Virginians.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Heather Perdue on January 26, 2026 14:40
West Virginia has much more pressing issues to deal with than to entertain this nonsense. Jobs, healthcare, clean water, education, housing - just to name a few - and the Legislature thinks a State holiday for a podcaster is what is important? How about doing something to actually help West Virginians for a change? This is a shocking and ridiculous waste of time and money that helps no one in this State.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Laura Farr on January 26, 2026 18:10
Wayne County has oil in their water supply. Why is the legislature concerned with memorializing a podcaster that wasn’t born in the state?
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Rebekah Bostic on January 27, 2026 09:03
As a West Virginia constituent, I do not support the passage of this bill. It is a purely political move meant to divide people. I would urge the legislature to instead focus on issues that actually affect West Virginians.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Misty Curry on January 27, 2026 10:32
Message I strongly oppose this moving forward. This is a waste of time for citizens of West Virginia. We have hundreds and hundreds of citizens in the southern part of the state that are suffering due to not having clean drinkable usable water. Instead of worrying about what a social media influencer had going on in his life that most people don’t even agree on we need to worry about taking care of real problems in this state. We still have a family that does not have a bridge to get to their home in Gary West Virginia. We have problems with our substance use disorder population, and we could spend our time working on more important bills and issues that really help the citizens of this state. Please vote note on this bill.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Susie Nelson on January 27, 2026 14:32
I'm sorry, this is ridiculous. I'm all for free speech, but I didn't even know who Charlie Kirk was until he died. Holidays are meant to honor our nation's collective heroes. Shouldn't we celebrate free speech day every day? Let's have a holiday for every single bill in the bill of rights? What's stopping us from doing that? That would mean 10 more holidays! I don't understand why our legislators waste time with ludicrous bills. Move on.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Brittany Singhass on January 27, 2026 15:17
It sickens, though does not surprise, me that our lawmakers would waste precious time bringing something like this to the committee and I truly hope it does not see the light of day on the floor. We should celebrate the First Amendment every day and not waste time making up ridiculous holidays in honor of people who did nothing positive for the state of WV. Please get back to work on real issues.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Nicole Kirby on January 27, 2026 15:29
As a female I am appalled to see WV creating a day of celebration for Charlie Kirk who actively sought to limit civil rights for woman. If you want people to stay in this state and don’t provide clean water, good schools, and jobs- you’d better at least need to try and make it palatable.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Nathan Music on January 27, 2026 15:39
This bill is a ridiculous waste of time that lawmakers could be spending on something that would actually benefit the citizens of West Virginia. Charlie Kirk has nothing to do with the State of West Virginia. This bill is nothing but Republican grandstanding.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Lee on January 27, 2026 20:03
Charlie Kirk is not from WV and it does not benefit anyone living in WV to be required to participate in a day or week set aside to honor him and his ideologies. Kirk claimed to be Christian, but the Bible contradicts some of his statements. I encourage all elected senators and representatives to utilize this session to tackle issues that will positively affect residents of WV - affordable health care, clean water, access to free and public education, etc.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Jamie Hazelwood on January 29, 2026 23:39
I strongly oppose the proposal to designate a “Charlie Kirk Day” as a state holiday. State recognized days should reflect values that UNITE residents across political, cultural, and ideological lines, and this proposal does not do that. Elevating a highly polarizing political figure to official recognition risks deepening division rather than honoring shared civic ideals. I urge you to reconsider and focus on initiatives that serve and represent all constituents in our state.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Steven Wendelin on February 2, 2026 05:43
I strongly oppose House Bill 4797.
The First Amendment belongs to everyone. It should never be used as a political prop or tied in state law to a single contemporary partisan figure. HB 4797 does not protect free speech. It uses government power to elevate and mandate praise for one political activist, including directing public schools to participate in that narrative.
Charlie Kirk has a well-documented public record of statements widely condemned as misogynistic, hostile to LGBTQ Americans, and dismissive of marginalized communities. Enshrining such a figure in statute dishonors West Virginia and sends a message that divisive and demeaning rhetoric is acceptable when it serves a political agenda.
This bill will deepen political division, invite constitutional challenges, and misuse the Legislature’s authority for ideological messaging instead of governing. West Virginians deserve laws that unite us and protect real freedoms—not culture-war symbolism written into statute.
I urge the Legislature to reject HB 4797.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Laura A. Isom on February 2, 2026 11:19
Why are we setting aside a day to honor someone that is not from our state much less has never even visited our state? Ms Katherine Johnson who was a native West Virginian and provide vital support to NASA is one that should have a day of honor, not Charlie Kirk. I was very sad when he was violently assassinated but don’t feel that warrants our great state of West Virginia making a day of honor for him. You didn’t do that when JFK was assassinated!
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Alexis Layman on February 3, 2026 12:00
I disagree with this bill as I don't think that Charlie Kirk is symbolic of freedom of speech. While he did use his rights to practice and grew a large audience, he was not the first, nor the most successful. His practices did not create a movement or a change for the betterment of society collectively. he was a debater who more often than not was controversial and criticized core values and ideas of our society.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Matthew Martin on February 5, 2026 04:20
Christian zionist, fascist, and a notorious racist doesn't need a remembrance day, nor any official acknowledgement by the state of wv. A complete waste of tax dollars, this bill does nothing for any wvian and yall know it. Just drop this piece of shit legislation, no one is gonna honor this day even if it came with a day off work. Fix our roads, water, infrastructure that's what you exist for not this bullshit.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Tim Lee on February 5, 2026 11:31
I strongly oppose House Bill4797. Honoring First Amendment rights should not be attributed to one individual, especially someone whose speech was so divisive on many fronts. There are many other important issues facing West Virginians that can and should be addressed rather than trying to score political points, or whatever this is.