Virginia Democrat Eugene Vindman led a recent effort by more than 50 House members to get the Defense Department to reconsider a halt of munitions shipments to Ukraine. The group of bipartisan lawmakers sent a letter to the Pentagon on July 3, in response to an announcement that the shipments had halted. Within days, the department reversed course and shipments resumed. And on Monday, President Donald Trump announced that NATO members intend to send large amounts of Patriot missile batteries and other weapons to Ukraine, arms they would buy from the United States.
A member of the Armed Services Committee and former career military officer, Vindman led the group in pushing back on arguments by the Trump administration that the U.S. should prioritize maintaining weapons stockpiles to face down China. “If Russia wins in Ukraine, it would deepen the strategic challenge posed by the Russia-China partnership,” the lawmakers wrote. “Thus, part of deterring China necessitates Ukraine prevailing. This is simply maintaining advantage by subtraction.”
Getting to Congress: A 25-year Army veteran, Vindman spent the first half of his military career as a paratrooper and infantry officer before earning a law degree from the University of Georgia and becoming a judge advocate general in the military justice system. He was the National Security Council’s senior ethics official during the first Trump administration when he blew the whistle on a phone call in which Trump threatened to withhold aid to Ukraine in an attempt to coerce an investigation of his then political rival Joe Biden. That led to Trump’s 2019 impeachment in the Democratic-controlled House. Vindman was fired from his NSC post in February 2020, the same month that the GOP-controlled Senate voted to acquit Trump. He retired from the Army in 2022 and two years later made a bid for the House seat of former Democratic Rep. Abigail Spanberger, who left to run for governor. Vindman defeated Republican Derrick Anderson in the November 2024 election by less than 3 percentage points.
His District: Virginia’s 7th District covers parts of Washington’s outer suburbs and exurbs, including a commuter corridor along Interstate 95 through Fredericksburg. More than 25 percent of district residents work for the government in some capacity, thanks to proximity to the nation’s capital and a large military presence. The town of Quantico is home to Marine Corps Base Quantico, one of the largest Marine bases in the U.S., as well as the FBI’s training academy. The district’s more sparsely populated western half includes part of Shenandoah National Park, which drew over 1.7 million visitors in 2024. Politically, the 7th District was a reliable GOP stronghold until Spanberger’s election in 2018. Support for Democrats in the presidential race has decreased over the last two cycles, shrinking from a 6.8 percent margin for Joe Biden in 2020 to 2.9 percent for Kamala Harris in 2024, according to analysis by election watchdog The Downballot.
What’s New: As a freshman lawmaker, Vindman, a father of two, has introduced a pair of bills aimed at banning cellphone use in classrooms. One seeks to prohibit phones in public schools during school hours, while the other does the same in the Department of Defense Education Activity, a school system for the children of servicemembers stationed overseas.
Point of Interest: Vindman’s identical twin brother, retired Army Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman, testified at House hearings that led to Trump’s first impeachment. Both brothers, who were born in Kyiv and came to the U.S. as children, were working at the NSC at the time.
Briana Reilly contributed to this report.
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