Spanberger, who led in fundraising throughout the race, won a decisive 15-point victory in November after a campaign focused on the cost of living and the impact of the Trump administration’s federal cuts in Virginia. Democrats see her victory as an early test case of the party’s emerging message on “affordability,” which they are expected to deploy across the country in this year’s midterms.

Economic concerns were at the forefront of her victory speech in November. But Spanberger also paid tribute to the Virginia women in politics before her, including Barbara Johns, a Black teenage activist who led a 1951 school walkout to protest school segregation. The walkout led to a legal case that was later folded into the landmark U.S. Supreme Court case Brown v. Board of Education that ultimately desegregated American public schools.

“She showed us that no matter your age, you can be part of the change and the progress that you want to see here in Virginia and across the nation,” Spanberger said in her speech. “We are a nation founded on ideas, but we are a country where it is up to us, the citizens, who must put those ideas into action.”