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From Mark Levine to Kristin Hoffman: What Alexandria voters wrote in for House of Delegates District 5

Nearly 1,700 voters rejected the lack of choice in state legislative race

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Elizabeth Bennett-Parker ran unopposed for her third term representing House of Delegates District 5 in the November 4 election, winning with 33,909 votes. But 1,693 Alexandria voters—4.8% of all votes cast—chose to write in someone else entirely.

Unlike the protest votes in the Sheriff race or the generic rejection in the Commonwealth’s Attorney race, these write-ins included a surprising number of actual political figures—including the former delegate Bennett-Parker defeated four years ago.

Voters cast their ballots at a polling station on November 4, 2025, in Alexandria, Virginia. (Alex Wong/Getty Images)

The ghost of primaries past

The most striking write-in: Mark Levine, the incumbent delegate Bennett-Parker defeated in the June 2021 Democratic primary.

Levine, who represented the district (then numbered 45) from 2015 to 2021, lost his seat when he simultaneously ran for lieutenant governor while facing a primary challenge from Bennett-Parker. She defeated him with 59% of the vote.

His appearance as a write-in four years later suggests some voters still preferred the former delegate—or at least wanted to signal their discontent with having no alternative to Bennett-Parker on the ballot.

National and statewide political figures

Several voters wrote in prominent politicians:

Presidential/national level:

  • Donald Trump / Donald J. Trump (appearing multiple times)
  • Kamala Harris

Neighboring districts:

  • Kristin Hoffman (the Republican candidate running in neighboring House District 6 against incumbent Rip Sullivan)

The Hoffman write-ins are particularly telling—she was on the ballot just one district over, suggesting some District 5 voters wished they had a Republican option like their neighbors.

Rejection votes

Many voters explicitly rejected the lack of choice:

  • “Other” (appearing multiple times)
  • “N/A”
  • Blank write-ins with filled bubbles

Personal names

The majority of write-ins appear to be personal names:

  • Chris Howell
  • Allen Young
  • Anthony Priest
  • Jessica Gallaway
  • Joseph Mama (possibly a joke name)
  • Alan Younk
  • Terrel Austin
  • And many others

These likely represent friends, family members, or people voters wished were running—or simply names written in frustration at having no real choice.

Voting methods

The 1,693 write-ins for House of Delegates District 5 came through:

  • 602 in early voting (36%)
  • 938 on Election Day (55%)
  • 112 by mail (7%)
  • 32 provisional (2%)
  • 9 post-election (1%)

Virginia write-in law

For a write-in vote to count toward a candidate’s official total in Virginia, that person must register as a write-in candidate with the state before the election. Since none of these write-in candidates registered, their votes are tallied and recorded but don’t affect the official outcome.

The votes are preserved in these write-in assignment documents for transparency and to comply with state election record-keeping requirements.


METHODOLOGY NOTE: This analysis is based on my review of Alexandria’s official write-in assignment document from the Nov. 4, 2025, general election for House of Delegates District 5, which contains images of write-in ballots requiring adjudication. The document shows 1,683 ballot images across 130 pages. The official results show 1,693 total write-in votes, with the 10-vote difference likely representing write-ins that were clearly legible and didn’t require adjudication review. Some handwriting was difficult to decipher, and some names may be spelled phonetically. All totals are from official Alexandria election results.


More on the write-in vote

From Trump to 'Free Palestine': What 393 Alexandria voters wrote in instead for governor and lt. governor
In one of Virginia’s most reliably Democratic jurisdictions, where Abigail D. Spanberger cruised to victory with 83% of the vote and Ghazala F. Hashmi won with 81%, nearly 400 Alexandria voters still couldn’t bring themselves to vote for any candidate on the ballot on Tuesday, November 4.
From 'Shannon Taylor' to 'Mickey Mouse': What 627 Alexandria voters wrote in for attorney general
Jay Jones won Alexandria decisively in the attorney general race, taking 77% of the city’s vote to defeat Republican Jason Miyares 47,317 to 13,412. But 630 Alexandria voters — just over 1% — chose to write in someone else entirely.
From Mark Levine to Kristin Hoffman: What Alexandria voters wrote in for House of Delegates District 5
Elizabeth Bennett-Parker ran unopposed for her third term representing House of Delegates District 5 in the November 4 election, winning with 33,909 votes. But 1,693 Alexandria voters—4.8% of all votes cast—chose to write in someone else entirely.
From 'ICE Out' to 'Wyatt Earp': What Alexandria voters wrote in for sheriff
Incumbent Sean Casey ran unopposed for Alexandria Sheriff in the November 4 election, securing the position with 49,276 votes. But 1,912 Alexandria voters—3.7% of all votes cast—chose to write in someone else entirely, transforming an uncontested race into an unexpected window on voter sentiment about law enforcement.

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