As the 2026 midterm elections come into focus, Virginians are poised to send a clear message to Washington: It’s time for bold, principled leadership that puts our commonwealth first. Enter State Senator Bryce Reeves, a battle-tested conservative who announced his bid last month to unseat entrenched incumbent Mark Warner. Reeves isn’t just another politician, he’s a U.S. Army Ranger (ret), a former narcotics detective, small business owner, and an accomplished state legislator with a track record of delivering results. In a Senate chamber too often paralyzed by partisanship, Reeves represents the fresh, no-nonsense voice Virginia deserves.
Born on November 28, 1966, in a modest family where resources were scarce but ambition ran deep, Reeves embodies the American Dream he now fights to preserve. Growing up, he watched his mother hang a simple plaque that read: “Education is not only for earning a living. It’s so you can live, serve, and lead.” True to those words, Reeves and his brother Blain became the first in their family to graduate college. Every man in his lineage has served in the military, instilling in him a profound sense of duty from an early age. A standout at Texas A&M University, Reeves earned the prestigious Distinguished Military Graduate honor before commissioning as an infantry officer in the United States Army.
His military service was nothing short of exemplary. Reeves graduated as an honor graduate from the U.S. Army Airborne School at Fort Benning, Georgia, and conquered the grueling Ranger School. These experiences didn’t just build a resume; they forged a man who understands sacrifice and strategy, qualities sorely needed as threats to our national security loom large.
After hanging up his uniform, Reeves channeled that same resolve into law enforcement, serving as a narcotics detective in Prince William County. There, he witnessed firsthand the heroism of officers on the front lines battling drug cartels and street-level threats that tear communities apart. This isn’t abstract policy talk for Reeves, it’s personal. As a small business owner, he’s also felt the squeeze of overregulation and economic headwinds, fighting daily to keep Virginia’s entrepreneurial spirit alive. These roots in service, enforcement, and enterprise make him uniquely equipped to tackle the border crisis, inflation, and overreach that have defined the Warner era.
Since entering the Virginia General Assembly in 2012, first in the House of Delegates and now as a State Senator for District 28, Reeves has built a legacy of principled conservatism with pragmatic results. In the Virginia Senate, Senator Reeves has supported our law enforcement, protected parental rights, defended our veterans, and stood up for small businesses. Take his sponsorship of body-worn camera legislation (SB 1119), which equips officers with critical tools for accountability and safety, or his push for tax subtractions benefiting low-income military veterans with service-connected disabilities, measures that honor those who’ve served while easing their burdens back home. On parental rights, Reeves has been a steadfast defender of family values, championing policies that empower parents over bureaucrats in education and child welfare. And for small businesses, the backbone of Virginia’s economy, he’s advocated against burdensome mandates, ensuring Main Street thrives amid DC’s fiscal folly.
What sets him apart isn’t just his wins, it’s how he secures them. Senator Reeves doesn’t waver on his conservative values but works in a bipartisan manner to bring real solutions. In a divided Richmond, he’s forged alliances across the aisle on veteran vital records access and local government efficiencies, proving that true leadership bridges gaps without compromising core principles. This isn’t the showmanship we’ve seen from Warner, who’s rubber-stamped billions in wasteful spending and turned a blind eye to border chaos. Reeves will bring that Ranger discipline to the Senate Finance Committee, slashing deficits and securing our southern flank.
Imagine a U.S. Senator who arrives in Washington not as a career climber, but as a guardian of Virginia’s way of life, from the rolling hills of Culpeper to the tech hubs of Northern Virginia. Reeves will fight radical agendas on everything from election integrity to Second Amendment rights, all while partnering with the Trump administration to unleash American energy independence and rebuild our military. His experience as a narcotics detective positions him perfectly to lead on the opioid epidemic and fentanyl floodgates, while his small business savvy will champion tax cuts that let families keep more of their hard-earned dollars.
As endorsements pour in, from fellow Senators Danny Diggs and Timmy French, as well as Delegate Nick Freitas, who praise his unshakeable reliability, it’s clear Reeves is building the coalition needed to flip this seat red. In an era of elite disconnect, Bryce Reeves stands as the antidote: a father, volunteer, and patriot who’s lived the struggles of everyday Virginians.
Bryce Reeves is a trustworthy conservative who all Virginians must rally behind. On November 3, 2026, let’s send him to the Senate to restore sanity, security, and strength. Virginia’s future, and America’s, depends on it.


8 comments
I have met and spoken with this man on several occasions and find him a true gentleman and Comrade, I fully support this man over the clown Warner whom I have know for several years and he has to go, forgotten where he came from.
Retired Command Sergeants Major
I have met and spoken with this man on several occasions and find him a true gentleman and Comrade, I fully support this man over the clown Warner whom I have know for several years and he has to go forgotten where he came from.
Retired Command Sergeants Major
Strange.
I, too, completed the “grueling” US Army Ranger School (1968) and Airborne and Air Assault and Pathfinder and two tours in the bush in Vietnam as well as 28 years on active duty, yet whenever I raise my head here, I am attacked and excoriated by you people who worship a failed, lying, draft dodger.
Meanwhile, this guy who I doubt has ever had a shot fired in his direction is some kind of Savior of All That Is Holy.
Pardon me but I think you are mixing up a good person with Brice Reeves. For starters, ask Reeves wives.
January, 2017 https://www.whsv.com/content/news/Alleged-affair-accusations-heat-up-usually-quiet-campaign-410137585.html
It’s the kind of spat you’d expect to find on daytime TV.
An anonymous email alleging an affair. Electronic records that suggest a surprise culprit. Accusations. Recriminations. A once close friendship destroyed.
But it’s not a soap opera. It’s the GOP primary for lieutenant governor in Virginia. A contest that’s typically a little-watched election has turned into a messy public scandal.
Earlier this week, state Sen. Bryce Reeves’ lawyer wrote to Sen. Jill Vogel and her husband saying there is “strong evidence” they, or someone at their direction, sent an email to state Republicans alleging Reeves was having an affair with a campaign staffer. The letter asks the Vogels not to destroy any emails or related devices “due to the likelihood of litigation.”
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But, hey, according to his bio he volunteers in the community and is a missionary.
The only time I hear of Reeves is when he is running for re-election. Sorry, but that is how I feel. Of course I would not vote for Warner, but this is just how I feel. I miss Dave Brat and felt for the 1st time that I had a representative. I felt the same way with Nick Freitas. I actually engaged in a conversation with him at the Madison County Women”s Club and was very disappointed.
I wish him well. It’s going to be a hugely difficult battle to unseat Marxist Warner given the fact that the democrat communists outnumber the patriots in VA.
Reeves’ problem is that he’s a philanderer who has managed to convince enough voters around Liberty University that he is Christ re-incarnate.
Check out his former wives and his occasional squeeze.
He lives with his two dogs.