- Source: Winsome Sears
Winsome Sears (née Earle; born March 11, 1964) is an American politician and Marine Corps veteran serving as the 42nd lieutenant governor of Virginia. A member of the Republican Party, Sears served in the Virginia House of Delegates from 2002 to 2004. She also served on the Virginia Board of Education, and she ran unsuccessfully for the U.S. House of Representatives in Virginia's 3rd congressional district in 2004 and for U.S. Senate in 2018. In 2021, Sears was elected lieutenant governor of Virginia. Sears is a candidate for the 2025 Virginia gubernatorial election.
Sears is the first woman to serve as lieutenant governor of Virginia and is the first woman of color and first Jamaican-born American citizen elected to statewide office in Virginia.
Early life, family and education
Sears was born in Kingston, Jamaica, on March 11, 1964. She immigrated to the United States at the age of six. She grew up in the Bronx, New York City.
Sears earned an A.A. from Tidewater Community College, a B.A. in English with a minor in economics from Old Dominion University and an M.A. in organizational leadership from Regent University.
Career before politics
Sears served as an electrician in the United States Marines from 1983 to 1986. Before running for public office, Sears directed a Salvation Army homeless shelter.
Political career
In November 2001, Sears upset 20-year Democratic incumbent Billy Robinson while running for the 90th district seat in Virginia's House of Delegates, becoming the first Jamaican female Republican, first female veteran, and first naturalized citizen delegate, to serve in the body. In 2004, Secretary of Veterans Affairs Anthony J. Principi appointed her to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs' Advisory Committee on Women Veterans.
In 2004, Sears unsuccessfully challenged Democrat Bobby Scott for Virginia's 3rd congressional district seat. She received 31% of the vote.
Sears opened a home appliance business in Virginia after her 2004 election loss.
Governor Bob McDonnell appointed Sears to the Virginia Board of Education in 2011.
In September 2018, Sears entered the race for U.S. Senate as a write-in candidate after Corey Stewart won the Republican nomination, citing his past alliances with white nationalists and other racial controversies. She received less than 1% of the vote.
During the 2020 United States presidential election campaign, Sears supported Donald Trump and was national chairwoman of the PAC "Black Americans to Re-elect the President."
Following the 2022 midterms, where Trump-endorsed Republicans lost in critical battleground states, Sears criticized Trump and called him a liability on the party and said she would not support Trump in the 2024 presidential election. She later declared her support for Trump after he became the presumptive nominee.
= Lieutenant Governor of Virginia
=2021 lieutenant gubernatorial election
On May 11, 2021, Sears won the Republican nomination for lieutenant governor of Virginia on the fifth ballot, defeating former state delegate and second-place finisher Tim Hugo 54% to 46%. On November 2, 2021, she won the race along with gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin and attorney general candidate Jason Miyares. She was inaugurated as the 42nd lieutenant governor of Virginia on January 15, 2022. She is the first female lieutenant governor of Virginia as well as the first black woman lieutenant governor and statewide officeholder in the Commonwealth.
During the election campaign, she declined to state whether she had been vaccinated against COVID-19, but she encouraged others to get vaccinated.
2025 gubernatorial election
On September 5, 2024, Sears announced her candidacy for governor of Virginia in 2025. If she wins, she will be the state's first female governor, and the first black woman to be elected governor anywhere in the United States.
Political positions
= Abortion
=During her campaign for lieutenant governor, Sears initially said she would support legislation similar to the Texas Heartbeat Act, which would make an abortion illegal as soon as fetal heartbeat was detected (as early as six weeks). She has stated that abortion should be allowed in cases of rape and incest, or to prevent harm to a pregnant woman. Later in her 2021 campaign, WRIC-TV wrote that Sears "appeared to backtrack" on her initial comments about the Texas Heartbeat Act. Sears said she did not examine the Texas law, and she declined to state when she thought abortion should be made illegal. After Roe v. Wade was overturned by the Supreme Court of the United States in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, Sears announced her support for a 15-week abortion ban.
= Cannabis
=In 2021, Sears said she supported medical marijuana but opposed the legalization of marijuana for recreational use.
= Education
=Sears has called for the opening of more charter schools, lab schools, and virtual schools in Virginia.
Sears has argued that critical race theory (CRT) was "definitely being taught in some form or fashion" in Virginia schools and accused critics of using "semantics" to deny it. Politifact rated as "False" Glenn Youngkin's claim that critical race theory has "moved into all of our schools in Virginia." The site found that, though CRT had been discussed among educators, it was not part of the state's "Standards of Learning", and several school districts denied teaching it to students. Sears called the CRT concept "racist;" she also said the good and bad of American history should be taught.
After COVID-19 interrupted schooling in the state, Sears floated the possibilities of having year-round school or longer school days to make up lost educational time.
= LGBT rights
=Sears opposed same-sex marriage in her 2004 campaign and wrote in an op-ed that she strongly supported a Constitutional amendment defining marriage as being between a man and a woman and that "our society has gone immeasurably beyond almost all standards in accommodating the homosexual community over the last couple of decades." Sears supports civil unions, but she believes same-sex marriage will continue under precedent.
= Gun rights
=Sears supports gun rights. Her 2021 lieutenant gubernatorial campaign included a photo of Sears with a rifle that was used on campaign material and social media, which drew criticism from Democrats but also increased her prominence among Republicans, helping elevate her from political obscurity.
Personal life
Sears is married to Terence Sears. She has had three daughters. One of Sears's daughters died in a 2012 car crash, along with Sears's two young granddaughters. As of 2016, she and her family resided in Winchester. She is a devout Christian, and authored a Christian self-help book, Stop Being a Christian Wimp!, before entering politics.
Electoral history
See also
List of minority governors and lieutenant governors in the United States
References
External links
Campaign website
Lieutenant governor's website
"Winsome E Sears". Virginia Public Access Project.
Ferguson, Malcolm (August 18, 2021). "'Who knew Nixon was a homeboy?' A Q&A with lieutenant governor hopeful Winsome Sears". Virginia Mercury. Retrieved June 26, 2022.
Appearances on C-SPAN
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- Winsome Sears
- 2025 Virginia gubernatorial election
- 2025 United States gubernatorial elections
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- Black conservatism in the United States
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- 2025 Virginia lieutenant gubernatorial election
- Lieutenant Governor of Virginia