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Nadarius Clark
View on WikipediaNadarius Clark (born 1995) is an American activist and politician who has served as delegate for the 84th district of the Virginia House of Delegates since 2023, and formerly the 79th district from 2022 to 2023. Clark, a Democrat, defeated incumbent Steve Heretick in the Democratic primary and Republican nominee Lawrence Mason in the 2021 Virginia House of Delegates election.[1][2][3]
Key Information
He resigned on March 28, 2023, to run for election to a different seat in the chamber.[4] On June 20, 2023, Clark won the Democratic primary for the new 84th district.[5] He won the election with 53% of the vote to his Republican opponent's 47% Michael Dillender in Virginia's 84th House of Delegates district.
Early life
[edit]Nadarius Clark attended Virginia Union University for college, in Richmond.[6]
Political career
[edit]Virginia House of Delegates
[edit]Nadarius Clark is a Democratic politician and activist from Virginia who, at a young age, has held multiple terms in the Virginia House of Delegates. He worked as a campaign organizer for Tim Kaine from when he was governor. Clark became the youngest ever representative at 26 years old, the minimum age to be a representative is 21 years old.[6]
Clark first won election in 2021 to represent Virginia's 79th House of Delegates district, defeating incumbent Steve Heretick in the Democratic primary and later the Republican challenger in the general election.
In 2023, following redistricting, Clark resigned from his seat and sought election in the 84th House District. In June 2023, he won the Democratic primary for the seat, and won the general election later that year, securing about 53% of the vote. Clark has continued served as the delegate for District 84 since.
Committee assignments
[edit]During his tenure, Clark has held committee assignments including Agriculture Chesapeake & Natural Resources, Communications, Education, Technology & Innovation, and Public Safety. He is the vice chair for the Agriculture Chesapeake & Natural Resources Committee, and the chair for the Public Safety - Firearms subcommittee.[7]
Policy positions and legislation
[edit]In the 2024 session, Clark introduced a bill that would prohibit the collection of medical debt if collection proceedings didn't start within 3 years of the due date on the final notice.[8]
In 2024, Clark introduced a bill to cap rising rents which ultimately didn't advance.[9]
In the 2025 session, Clark had multiple bills signed into law, including one to establish bleeding control programs, requiring schools to have and maintain bleeding control kits, with certain contents such as bandages and tourniquets.[10] He also introduced a bill to limit the ability of third parties to file malpractice claims against another person's lawyer, which also became law.[11] Another passed bill allows businesses in localities with higher unemployment and poverty to qualify for investment grants under more flexible requirements.[12]
Electoral history
[edit]2021 elections
[edit]| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Democratic | Nadarius Clark | 2,033 | 45.73 | |
| Democratic | Steve Heretick (incumbent) | 1,883 | 42.35 | |
| Democratic | Dante Walston | 530 | 11.92 | |
| Total votes | 4,446 | 100.0 | ||
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Democratic | Nadarius Clark | 10,647 | 56.1 | |
| Republican | Lawrence Mason | 8,283 | 43.6 | |
| Write-in | 63 | 0.3 | ||
| Total votes | 18,993 | 100.0 | ||
| Democratic hold | ||||
2023 election
[edit]| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Democratic | Nadarius Clark | 15,899 | 52.99 | |
| Republican | Michael Dillender | 14,046 | 46.82 | |
| Write-in | 58 | 0.19 | ||
| Total votes | 30,003 | 100 | ||
| Democratic gain from Republican | ||||
References
[edit]- ^ Littlehales, Alex (June 9, 2021). "Meet Nadarius Clark: the 26-year-old vying for Virginia's House of Delegates". 13 News Now. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
- ^ Virginia General Assembly: Nadarius Clark
- ^ Virginia Scope: Nadarius Clark, 3 October 2021 (audio)
- ^ "Clark resigns House seat, completes move to Suffolk". The Smithfield Times. March 28, 2023. Retrieved 7 April 2023.
- ^ Janney, Josh (June 20, 2023). "Nadarius Clark and Michael Dillender win their primaries in House District 84". The Virginian Piolot. Retrieved August 27, 2023.
- ^ a b Wilson, Thailon (2024-04-03). "Virginia's General Assembly is trending younger. At 28, Del. Clark strives to get young voters involved". The Virginian-Pilot. Capital News Service. Retrieved 2024-06-14.
- ^ "Delegate Nadarius E. Clark". Virginia General Assembly. virginiageneralassembly.gov. Retrieved 2025-10-01.
- ^ McIntyre, Meghan (2024-01-26). "Three interesting bills: medical debt, mobile home park tenant rights and state data breaches • Virginia Mercury". Virginia Mercury. Retrieved 2024-06-14.
- ^ "Virginia bills to cap rent increases don't advance this session". Virginia Mercury. Capital News Service. 2024-02-12. Retrieved 2024-06-14.
- ^ "HB1700". Virginia Legislative Information Service. lis.virginia.gov. Retrieved 2025-10-01.
- ^ "HB2174". Virginia Legislative Information Service. lis.virginia.gov. Retrieved 2025-10-01.
- ^ "HB2179". Virginia Legislative Information Service. lis.virginia.gov. Retrieved 2025-10-01.
- ^ "2021 June Democratic Primary". Virginia Department of Elections. Archived from the original on June 10, 2021. Retrieved June 10, 2021.
- ^ "2021 November General". 2021-11-03. Archived from the original on 2021-11-03. Retrieved 2024-06-14.
- ^ "Member, House of Delegates (84th District)". Election results. elections.virginia.gov. Retrieved 2 April 2024.
Nadarius Clark
View on GrokipediaEarly life and education
Childhood and family background
Nadarius Emmanuel Clark was born in 1995 in Norfolk, Virginia, to parents Annette and Tony Clark.[3] His family maintained connections to the U.S. Navy alongside a background in business entrepreneurship.[3] [14] Clark was raised in the Hampton Roads region, with primary upbringing in Portsmouth.[3] [14] He grew up immersed in a strong faith community, later identifying as Pentecostal and attending Zion Community Church in northern Suffolk.[3] [2] At age 14, Clark began working his first job at a local 7-Eleven store, reflecting early exposure to routine employment in his community.[3]Academic pursuits
Clark graduated from I. C. Norcom High School in Portsmouth, Virginia, with an advanced diploma in 2013.[15] He attended Virginia Union University, where he earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in music and theatre in 2019.[15] During his time there, Clark served as head drum major of the university's "Ambassadors of Sound" marching band, demonstrating leadership in performing arts.[3] In 2017, he participated as a student leader at the Samuel DeWitt Proctor Conference, engaging in advocacy and educational initiatives aligned with his studies.[3] In recognition of his contributions, Clark received the Presidential Choice Award from the Virginia Union University National Alumni Association in 2021.[15]Pre-political career
Community organizing efforts
Prior to entering elective office, Nadarius Clark engaged in community organizing centered on faith-based advocacy, social justice, and policy reform. In 2016, he co-founded the charter chapter of the Generation Now Network, a group emphasizing activism, advocacy, and education within faith communities.[3] That same year, Clark participated in activism responding to a Ku Klux Klan march, contributing to local counter-efforts against racial extremism.[3] Clark's organizing extended to electoral and policy mobilization. He collaborated with organizations including Virginia For Our Future, The Outreach Team, Freedom VA, and the Portsmouth Mayor's office, as well as the Virginia Democratic Party, to support voter outreach for candidates such as U.S. Representative Bobby Scott, U.S. Senator Tim Kaine, and President Joe Biden.[3] In 2017, he rallied alongside surviving leaders of the 1968 Memphis Sanitation Strike at the Samuel DeWitt Proctor Conference, drawing parallels to contemporary labor and civil rights issues.[3] Following this, Clark lobbied in Washington, D.C., for expansions to Medicare and Medicaid, advocating for greater equity in healthcare access.[3] His efforts also addressed broader inequities in housing, education, and healthcare, often framed through a progressive lens prioritizing working-class concerns in Hampton Roads.[3] These activities positioned Clark as a self-described working-class organizer in Suffolk and surrounding areas, though documentation primarily stems from his personal and campaign accounts, with limited independent verification in contemporaneous reporting.[3][16]Healthcare professional experience
Prior to entering politics, Nadarius Clark served as a community consultant for The Kairos Group, a Virginia-based management and consulting firm that provides strategic, operational, and advisory services to healthcare providers, medical clinics, and related organizations in Hampton Roads.[3][17] In this capacity, Clark focused on supporting local healthcare entities, including community clinics, in establishing operations and achieving sustainability amid regional challenges.[3] The Kairos Group's work encompasses client services such as community outreach for adult medical clinics, billing support, and recruitment for healthcare roles like chief medical officers.[18][19] Clark's involvement in this sector aligns with his self-description as a working-class healthcare professional, though his formal education includes a Bachelor of Fine Arts in music and theater from Virginia Union University, obtained in 2019, rather than clinical or medical training.[3][20] He continues this consulting work outside legislative sessions, reflecting a non-clinical role emphasizing organizational development for healthcare access in underserved areas.[3][21] No public records detail specific start dates, certifications, or patient-facing duties in his professional history.[22]Political career
2021 election and initial term (2022–2023)
In the Democratic primary for Virginia House of Delegates District 79 on June 8, 2021, Clark defeated three-term incumbent Steve Heretick, receiving 45.8% of the vote amid criticism of Heretick's ties to Dominion Energy.[23][24] Clark's campaign emphasized progressive priorities including healthcare access and community organizing, drawing support from critics of corporate influence in politics. In the general election on November 2, 2021, Clark defeated Republican challenger Lawrence Mason, the first GOP candidate in the district in over a decade, securing a decisive victory in the heavily Democratic Portsmouth-based district.[25] Sworn into office on January 12, 2022, as part of the Democratic majority in the 162nd General Assembly, Clark, then 26 years old, became the youngest Democratic delegate in Virginia history and the first Black millennial elected to the House.[26][6] His legislative focus reflected his background in healthcare and activism, with sponsorship of bills addressing perinatal health disparities, including HB538 requiring implicit bias training for providers, and HB something on teacher compensation to match national averages, though the latter failed.[27] He also co-patroned measures expanding tax exemptions for medicines under HB551 and supported initiatives for domestic workers' overtime rights.[28] Clark's voting record aligned closely with the Democratic caucus, supporting 96% of party positions where two-thirds or more Democrats voted similarly during the 2022 session.[29] As a freshman, he prioritized constituent services in Portsmouth, advocating for local economic development and public health amid post-pandemic recovery, though his term was abbreviated by redistricting changes effective for 2023 elections.[30]Resignation due to redistricting (2023)
In early 2023, Virginia's House of Delegates districts were redrawn following the adoption of new maps based on the 2020 census, which reconfigured boundaries including those of District 79 in Portsmouth, where Clark resided and served.[31] To represent the newly created District 84—encompassing Suffolk and portions of adjacent areas—Clark relocated his residence from Portsmouth to Suffolk, thereby moving outside District 79's revised boundaries.[8] [7] On March 16, 2023, Clark announced his intent to resign his District 79 seat before the General Assembly reconvened on April 12, citing the need to comply with residency requirements and pursue election in District 84.[7] He formally resigned effective March 17, 2023, vacating the position under Virginia's constitutional rule that a delegate who relocates outside their district forfeits the seat.[6] [32] No special election was held to fill the vacancy, as state law deems such elections unnecessary when occurring close to the November general election cycle, leaving District 79 unrepresented until the new term.[33]2023 reelection and second term (2024–present)
In the wake of redistricting, Clark secured the Democratic nomination for the newly drawn Virginia House District 84 in the primary election on June 20, 2023, receiving 81.7% of the vote against challenger Michele Gregory.[34] In the general election on November 7, 2023, he defeated Republican Mike Dillender with 53.0% of the vote to Dillender's 47.0%, securing the seat for a district encompassing parts of Chesapeake, Franklin, Isle of Wight County, and Suffolk.[35][36] The victory marked a return to the House after his earlier resignation, with the race noted for its competitiveness in a district leaning Democratic but with significant Republican support.[37] Clark was sworn in for his second term representing District 84 on January 10, 2024.[6] As the youngest member of the Virginia General Assembly at age 28, he has focused on issues affecting working families, including sponsoring bills to incrementally raise the state minimum wage to $15 per hour by January 1, 2027.[38][9] Other legislation includes exemptions for prescribers from certain Prescription Monitoring Program requirements when treating sickle cell anemia patients with opioids, which advanced through committee.[9] Clark also serves as Democratic Deputy Whip and has participated in committees addressing agriculture, Chesapeake Bay matters, and regulations.[39][40] Throughout the 2024 and 2025 legislative sessions, Clark has advocated for policies on affordable housing, such as local rent stabilization ordinances, though some proposals did not pass.[41] His tenure has emphasized community organizing influences, with efforts to engage younger voters and address regional economic disparities in Hampton Roads.[12] As of October 2025, Clark is seeking a third term in the upcoming November election against Republican challenger Felisha Storm.[42]Legislative record and positions
Key policy initiatives
Clark has prioritized maternal and postpartum health, sponsoring HB2446, the Postpartum Depression Education Act, which requires the Department of Health to launch a public awareness campaign, develop educational materials for healthcare providers and families, and report on implementation; the bill passed both chambers and was signed into law on May 2, 2025.[43] He also introduced HB1614 to include postpartum doula services in Medicaid coverage for eligible mothers, providing non-medical support during the postpartum period; this measure passed and became effective July 1, 2025.[44] Earlier efforts included HB538 requiring implicit bias training for perinatal health providers, though it failed to advance.[27] In public safety and criminal justice, Clark sponsored HB2235 prohibiting the use of restraints on pregnant incarcerated individuals during labor, delivery, and postpartum recovery unless medically necessary, aiming to reduce health risks; the bill passed on May 2, 2025.[45] He also advanced HB2393, establishing a writ of vacatur process to vacate convictions for victims of human trafficking, facilitating record expungement and reintegration; this legislation passed and took effect July 1, 2025.[46] Additionally, he co-sponsored measures like HB2485 to legalize and regulate a taxed cannabis marketplace, reflecting support for criminal justice reform through reduced enforcement on non-violent offenses.[47] On labor issues, Clark introduced HB2401 mandating compensation and protections for minors engaged in content creation, such as social media influencing or online videos, to prevent exploitation; the bill passed on May 2, 2025.[48] He has pushed for broader wage reforms, sponsoring bills to raise the state minimum wage to $15 per hour by 2027, though these have not passed amid partisan divides.[9] Environmental initiatives include HB2034 creating a task force to study and recommend protections for Virginia's wetlands amid development pressures and climate change; it passed on April 2, 2025.[49] Clark also sponsored proposals for health department work groups on microplastics in drinking water, which failed, highlighting ongoing concerns over water quality in coastal districts like Portsmouth.[50] Reproductive rights feature prominently, with HB1716 affirming a right to contraception access and HB2371 requiring health insurers to cover contraceptives without cost-sharing; both passed the General Assembly but were vetoed by Governor Glenn Youngkin on May 2, 2025, citing conflicts with existing laws.[51][52] These reflect Clark's alignment with Democratic priorities, though vetoes underscore executive-branch resistance.Notable votes and stances
Clark supported measures expanding gun restrictions, including HB 1876 (2025), which would have authorized public colleges and universities to prohibit firearms on campus, a bill vetoed by Governor Glenn Youngkin whose override failed 50-46 in the House.[53] He also backed HB 1977 (2025), prohibiting weapons in hospitals providing mental health care, similarly vetoed with override failure.[53] In the 2023 session, Clark voted in favor of pro-Second Amendment measures only 6% of the time across 112 relevant floor votes tracked by the Virginia Citizens Defense League.[54] As co-chair of the House Gun Violence Prevention Caucus, he has advocated for universal background checks and an assault weapons ban.[55] On reproductive rights, Clark co-sponsored a state constitutional amendment to protect abortion access and has maintained a 100% voting record supporting such measures, consistent with Democratic positions in Virginia's post-Dobbs legislative environment where no gestational limits were enacted.[55] He voted yea on SB 1105 (2025), establishing a right to access FDA-approved contraceptives.[53] Regarding labor and collective bargaining, Clark voted for SB 917 (2025), authorizing state and local public employees to engage in collective bargaining, passing conference report 51-45 before veto override failure.[53] He also supported HB 2531 (2025), requiring the Virginia Employment Commission to create a paid family and medical leave insurance program, vetoed with override failing 50-46.[53] In environmental and energy policy, Clark backed HB 1883 (2025), amending Virginia's renewable portfolio standard to include additional clean energy requirements, passing concurrence 58-39.[53] He supported HB 2537 (2025), expanding the Virginia Clean Economy Act's battery storage mandates, and HB 2087 (2025), easing timelines for public electric vehicle charging infrastructure.[53] Clark voted for SB 1009 (2025), authorizing ranked-choice voting in certain local elections, passing 50-46 with amendment.[53] On technology and child safety, he endorsed SB 905 (2025), creating an Internet Safety Advisory Council (78-18 passage), and SB 908 (2025), enhancing cyberbullying protections (90-7 passage).[53]Controversies
Racial comments on employment disparities
In an April 17, 2021, episode of his podcast Polititalk, Nadarius Clark discussed perceived racial disparities in employment, stating: "Our counterparts, a Caucasian, can be mediocre and still get a $100,000 job. We have to be—we've got to have a doctorate degree, a Ph.D., to get let in those doors. We have to be overqualified … to get half of what an unqualified Caucasian would get."[56] The remarks framed hiring outcomes as systematically favoring underqualified white individuals over highly qualified Black candidates, linking this to broader issues including police treatment of Black people. The comments resurfaced in September 2023 amid Clark's reelection campaign for Virginia House District 84, as reported by Fox News, which characterized them as implying that "mediocre" or "unqualified" white people secure high-paying roles inaccessible to Black applicants without advanced credentials.[56] Audio clips from the podcast episode circulated on social media platforms, amplifying scrutiny during the competitive race against Republican Mike Dillender in a battleground district pivotal to House control.[57] Critics, including conservative commentators, argued the statements generalized racial differences in professional success without empirical evidence tying outcomes directly to bias rather than factors like education levels, work experience, or labor market dynamics; for instance, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data from 2021 showed Black Americans holding 12.3% of doctoral degrees compared to 13.1% for whites, while median earnings gaps persisted after controlling for education (e.g., $1,048 weekly for Black workers vs. $1,235 for whites in Q2 2021). Clark did not publicly retract or clarify the remarks, and no mainstream outlets beyond conservative-leaning sources covered the controversy extensively, potentially reflecting selective media attention on narratives aligning with partisan priorities.District residency and resignation issues
Nadarius Clark represented Virginia House District 79, encompassing parts of Portsmouth, from January 2022 until his resignation in March 2023. Following the completion of the 2021 redistricting process by the state's independent commission, District 79 was redrawn to exclude Clark's residence, prompting him to relocate to Suffolk to qualify for candidacy in the newly configured District 84, which includes portions of Suffolk, Chesapeake, and Portsmouth.[7][8] Under Article IV, Section 7 of the Virginia Constitution, a delegate who moves from the district they represent vacates their seat automatically, necessitating resignation to avoid legal invalidation of their service. Clark announced on March 16, 2023, his intent to step down before the General Assembly reconvened on April 12, citing the constitutional requirement after completing his move. He formally resigned on March 21, 2023, leaving District 79 vacant for the remainder of the term without a special election, as the timing aligned closely with the November 2023 general elections under state law.[7][58][13] The resignation drew no formal challenges or investigations into Clark's prior residency compliance during his initial term, though it highlighted broader procedural tensions in Virginia's post-redistricting landscape, where multiple incumbents faced similar displacements. Clark successfully ran for and won District 84 in the November 2023 election, maintaining his legislative service without subsequent residency disputes reported in official records or court filings.[32][59]Electoral history
2021 Portsmouth District 79 election
In the Democratic primary for Virginia House District 79 on June 8, 2021, Nadarius Clark, a 26-year-old activist and community organizer, challenged incumbent Delegate Steve Heretick, who had held the seat since 2017 and was viewed as a centrist Democrat with ties to law enforcement.[60][61] Clark positioned his campaign on progressive priorities including criminal justice reform and economic equity, contrasting with Heretick's record on issues like police funding.[62] Clark secured victory with 45.8% of the vote, defeating Heretick's 42.4% by a margin of 154 votes out of approximately 4,480 cast, while third candidate Dante' Walston received the remainder.[23][63] District 79, encompassing parts of Portsmouth, Norfolk, and Chesapeake, had been a reliably Democratic seat, with no Republican general election challenger since 2001.[25] In the November 2, 2021, general election, Clark faced Lawrence Mason, a Republican and the first GOP nominee in the district in two decades, who campaigned on fiscal conservatism and public safety.[61] Clark won decisively with 56.1% of the vote.| Candidate | Party | Votes | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nadarius Clark | Democratic | 10,647 | 56.1% |
| Lawrence Mason | Republican | 8,283 | 43.6% |
| Write-in | - | 63 | 0.3% |
| Total | 18,993 | 100% |
2023 Virginia House District 84 election
In the Democratic primary held on June 20, 2023, incumbent Delegate Nadarius E. Clark defeated challenger Michele E. Joyce, receiving 4,176 votes (81.7%) to Joyce's 934 votes (18.3%), with a total of 5,110 votes cast.[34] [64] In the Republican primary on the same date, Michael J. Dillender Sr. prevailed over Rod Thompson to secure the nomination.[64] The general election took place on November 7, 2023, for the newly redrawn District 84, which includes portions of Chesapeake and Suffolk cities, all of Franklin city, and parts of Isle of Wight County.[36] Clark, seeking to represent the reconfigured district after resigning from his prior seat due to boundary changes, faced Dillender.[37]| Candidate | Party | Votes | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nadarius E. Clark | Democratic | 15,899 | 53.0% |
| Michael J. Dillender | Republican | 14,046 | 46.8% |
| Others | - | 58 | 0.2% |
| Total | 30,003 | 100% |
