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Blaizen Buckshot Bloom

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This page was current at the end of the individual's last campaign covered by Ballotpedia. Please contact us with any updates.
Blaizen Buckshot Bloom
Image of Blaizen Buckshot Bloom
Elections and appointments
Last election

June 17, 2025

Education

High school

Deep Creek High School

Personal
Birthplace
St. Cloud, Minn.
Religion
Humanist
Profession
Laborer
Contact

Blaizen Buckshot Bloom (Democratic Party) ran for election to the Virginia House of Delegates to represent District 89. Bloom lost in the Democratic primary on June 17, 2025.

Bloom completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2025. Click here to read the survey answers.

Biography

Blaizen Bloom was born in St. Cloud, Minnesota. Bloom graduated from Deep Creek High School and attended Old Dominion University. Bloom's career experience includes working as a laborer.[1][2][3]

Bloom has been affiliated with the following organizations:[3]

  • International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW), Local #666
  • Chesapeake Democratic Committee
  • Suffolk Democratic Committee
  • Chesapeake Democratic Women
  • Hampton Roads Young Democrats
  • Virginia LGBTQ+ Democrats
  • Chesapeake NAACP
  • Rural Chesapeake Preservation Committee
  • Mitigation & Adaptation Research Institute
  • Institute for Coastal Adaptation & Resilience
  • Civics Unplugged
  • Virginia States of the Students
  • Bay Group Sierra Club

Elections

2025

See also: Virginia House of Delegates elections, 2025

General election

General election for Virginia House of Delegates District 89

Karen Robins Carnegie and Michael Lamonea are running in the general election for Virginia House of Delegates District 89 on November 4, 2025.


Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Democratic primary election

Democratic primary for Virginia House of Delegates District 89

Karen Robins Carnegie defeated Blaizen Buckshot Bloom in the Democratic primary for Virginia House of Delegates District 89 on June 17, 2025.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Karen Robins Carnegie
Karen Robins Carnegie
 
77.8
 
4,656
Image of Blaizen Buckshot Bloom
Blaizen Buckshot Bloom Candidate Connection
 
22.2
 
1,329

Total votes: 5,985
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team.

Republican primary election

Republican primary for Virginia House of Delegates District 89

Michael Lamonea defeated Kristen Shannon in the Republican primary for Virginia House of Delegates District 89 on June 17, 2025.

Candidate
%
Votes
Michael Lamonea
 
66.0
 
2,562
Kristen Shannon
 
34.0
 
1,317

Total votes: 3,879
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team.

Withdrawn or disqualified candidates

Campaign finance

Endorsements

Bloom received the following endorsements. To send us additional endorsements, click here.

2023

See also: City elections in Chesapeake, Virginia (2023)

General election

General election for Virginia Dare Soil and Water Conservation District (2 seats)

Incumbent Vickie Greene and Lawrence Mason defeated Blaizen Buckshot Bloom and incumbent John Pierce in the general election for Virginia Dare Soil and Water Conservation District on November 7, 2023.

Candidate
%
Votes
Vickie Greene (Independent)
 
36.2
 
34,436
Image of Lawrence Mason
Lawrence Mason (Independent)
 
27.3
 
25,949
Image of Blaizen Buckshot Bloom
Blaizen Buckshot Bloom (Independent) Candidate Connection
 
23.2
 
22,096
John Pierce (Independent)
 
13.3
 
12,622

Total votes: 95,103
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team.

Endorsements

Ballotpedia did not identify endorsements for Bloom in this election.

2022

See also: Chesapeake Public Schools, Virginia, elections (2022)

General election

General election for Chesapeake Public Schools, At-large (5 seats)

The following candidates ran in the general election for Chesapeake Public Schools, At-large on November 8, 2022.

Candidate
%
Votes
Kim Scott (Nonpartisan)
 
12.8
 
42,363
Brittany Walker (Nonpartisan)
 
12.0
 
39,870
Image of Amanda Dean
Amanda Dean (Nonpartisan)
 
11.8
 
39,039
Image of John McCormick
John McCormick (Nonpartisan)
 
11.5
 
38,272
Michael Lamonea (Nonpartisan)
 
11.3
 
37,557
Image of Shirley Auguste
Shirley Auguste (Nonpartisan) Candidate Connection
 
9.8
 
32,548
Malia Huddle (Nonpartisan)
 
9.4
 
31,300
Bradley Moore (Nonpartisan)
 
8.7
 
28,935
Gayle Gilmore (Nonpartisan)
 
3.0
 
9,986
Image of Blaizen Buckshot Bloom
Blaizen Buckshot Bloom (Nonpartisan) Candidate Connection
 
2.7
 
8,936
Jared Miller (Nonpartisan)
 
2.3
 
7,525
Image of Kimberly Alameda
Kimberly Alameda (Nonpartisan) Candidate Connection
 
2.3
 
7,496
Image of Jennifer Economy
Jennifer Economy (Nonpartisan) Candidate Connection
 
2.1
 
6,808
 Other/Write-in votes
 
0.4
 
1,295

Total votes: 331,930
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team.

Withdrawn or disqualified candidates

Endorsements

To view Bloom's endorsements in the 2022 election, please click here.

Campaign themes

2025

Ballotpedia survey responses

See also: Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection

Candidate Connection

Blaizen Buckshot Bloom completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2025. The survey questions appear in bold and are followed by Bloom's responses. Candidates are asked three required questions for this survey, but they may answer additional optional questions as well.

Expand all | Collapse all

I am an activist, climate policy scientist, and union member running to be the youngest Democrat ever elected to the House. I have a history of successfully fighting for environmental justice, union rights, student rights, and queer/trans rights.

Growing up working class across Chesapeake and Suffolk taught me how to fight back against a system that’s failing you. It took my father, a disabled Navy, a decade to win the care he needed and deserved from our underfunded VA – a decade we’ll never get back. My mother survived a string of abusive relationships while struggling to raise us on one paycheck. I hid my Asthma and Crohn’s Disease out of fear of creating another bill. That’s not how kids should grow up.

I turned this experience into advocacy. I helped kill the Atlantic Coast Pipeline, which could have incinerated every student in Thurgood Marshall Elementary School with a single spark. I fought for safe COVID reopening and trans student rights. I formed a bipartisan group—the Rural Chesapeake Preservation Committee—to balance rural and urban needs.

I’m in this race because resisting Trump isn’t enough. We need to show how government should work. We can build affordable housing, protect farmland, manage flooding, invest in schools, care for veterans, and stop price gouging. I know personal freedom is inseparable from economic stability. I’m running to help Virginians lead big, healthy lives that include the right to love who you love and to afford a life of dignity.
  • My focus is creating economic security in our district by raising wages and lowering costs. I support raising the minimum wage to no less than $17/hr (indexed to inflation/productivity) and strengthening unions by repealing "right-to-work" laws to empower collective bargaining. Unions built the middle class, and we must restore their power to uplift workers. I'll push to replace the grocery tax with a luxury goods tax, to make essentials more affordable. We can address housing costs by streamlining permitting for & incentivizing construction of starter homes to increase supply and restricting private equity speculation to curb artificial price inflation. Finally, we must cap runaway prescription drug costs, particularly for insulin.
  • We should promote economic growth by supporting small businesses and expanding local manufacturing into offshore wind through the following policies: Reform the flat business tax to a progressive one, starting at 0% for new businesses, to incentivize growth. Establish a statewide fund, supported by large corporations, to help small businesses transition to policies like a higher minimum wage and paid leave, enabling them to compete for talent. Invest in shovel-ready sites and school apprenticeship programs to position our region as an offshore wind industry hub, leveraging its central location and deep-port advantage. Partner with industry, offering incentives tied to guaranteed development, to create sustainable, high-paying, union jobs.
  • As Trump destroys due process, tanks our economy and attacks all our institutions at once, there’s a reason Democratic leadership is frozen: they have no experience being marginalized. But that’s what I, and other working class activists, have always overcome. It’s what my dad taught me by battling the VA to win the care he deserved. It’s what my mom taught me by just surviving. It’s what I did when I took on the Atlantic Coast Pipeline with its millions and lobbyists. It’s what I did when I took on the school board as those conversations were at their most toxic. I helped kill that pipeline and won real changes for our students. We need Democrats who know how to resist and win when your back is up against a wall. I do, because I have.
First is education/mental health, which are connected. Being of the Covid generation, I witnessed the epidemic of mental illness and underfunding plaguing our schools. We vitally need to restore school funding to pre-recession (‘08) levels. We also need more mental health staff and a REAL K-12 mental wellness curriculum NOT banning books or bullying queer/trans youth.

The second is environmental justice. As an environmental policy scientist who grew up low-income, I understand how our underserved communities bear the brunt of industrial pollution, have the least protections against climate change, and have the least access to natural beauty. I’m committed to making sure these communities get less pollution, less flooding, and more trees.
My working-class roots taught me the importance of economic justice and how to fight. My father is a disabled navy veteran who experienced the worst of our underfunded VA but never gave up pushing for the care he deserved and needed. After a decade of battling that bureaucracy, a decade we’ll never get back, he finally got that care. I watched my mother survive a string of abusive relationships while trying to raise us on a single paycheck that was never enough. I didn’t discover I had Crohn’s Disease or Asthma until my late teens because I hid symptoms out of fear of creating medical bills. That’s not how kids should grow up. But, you know, my mom got through it, and I think they managed to do a great job raising me and my brother despite the world trying to make that as hard as possible.

I took that energy into my advocacy, and it empowered me to help kill the Atlantic Coast Pipeline, a classic case of environmental injustice that could have incinerated Thurgood Marshall Elementary School with a single spark. That energy helped me win some REAL mental healthcare improvements for students when I took on a toxic school board culture that wanted to use “mental healthcare” as a smokescreen to ban books and bully queer/trans youth. That energy is what we need in our legislators right now if we want them to effectively fight for the big improvements we need in the face of the monumental forces aligned against us. We need people who understand that when forces try to intimidate and quiet you, the response is to get louder and more active, not patiently wait for a more opportune circumstance that may never come.
I want to build a movement that will be remembered for fostering a strong, interconnected community that actively confronts challenges with unity. A legacy characterized by building a future defined by economic advancement for everyone, rejecting any slide backward in social progress. It's about creating a society where individuals are not just surviving, but genuinely flourishing, with the opportunity to pursue their full potential. Ultimately, our campaign and its desired legacy are centered on ensuring every Virginian can live their biggest, most fulfilling life.
Virginia faces a set of interconnected challenges over the next decade, with climate change, economic inequality, and ensuring equitable development at the forefront.

Climate Change: The increasing threat of sea level rise, extreme weather events, and the need to transition to clean energy pose significant challenges, particularly for vulnerable coastal communities like those in the Hampton Roads region. The urgency of this issue requires both mitigating its effects through pollution reduction and adapting our infrastructure and communities to be more resilient, especially to flooding.

Economic Inequality: Long-standing economic disparities, exacerbated by factors like unequal access to quality education and job opportunities, continue to affect working families across Virginia. Addressing these inequities through policies that support good wages, affordable healthcare, and access to resources is crucial. Every Virginian should be able to afford a life of dignity.

Equitable Development: The need to balance economic growth with environmental protection and social equity is paramount. This includes ensuring that development benefits all communities and doesn't perpetuate historical patterns of environmental injustice or displacement. For example, The Chesapeake Mall region requires smart redevelopment that brings current businesses and residents along for the ride, while our small farms in the south require policies to help them retain their current character.

These challenges are interconnected and require comprehensive, forward-thinking solutions that prioritize the well-being of all Virginians.
I have a lot of day one priorities, some of which are widely shared (e.g. repealing “Right-to-Work laws”), and some of which will require more educating and advocating toward other legislators. In the latter camp, I very much believe we should restrict private equity’s long-term speculation of the housing market and will immediately introduce legislation to that effect. This private equity practice reduces housing stock and artificially inflates housing prices to generate a profit at our expense.

This prohibition will not in any way disincentivize new construction or prevent individuals from holding investment properties. What this would stop is private equity firms manipulating the housing market by buying up large chunks of homes, most of which were bought up during and following the 2007-2008 housing crisis, thereby reducing supply and spiking prices. We need policies that actively increase the supply of housing for everyday people, and this is one I would champion.

Note: Ballotpedia reserves the right to edit Candidate Connection survey responses. Any edits made by Ballotpedia will be clearly marked with [brackets] for the public. If the candidate disagrees with an edit, he or she may request the full removal of the survey response from Ballotpedia.org. Ballotpedia does not edit or correct typographical errors unless the candidate's campaign requests it.

2023

Candidate Connection

Blaizen Buckshot Bloom completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2023. The survey questions appear in bold and are followed by Bloom's responses. Candidates are asked three required questions for this survey, but they may answer additional optional questions as well.

Expand all | Collapse all

I’m a Chesapeake native who graduated from Deep Creek High School in 2021. Currently I’m a student at Old Dominion University studying for a degree in Ocean & Earth Science. Over the past year, I’ve worked with the government of Grenada on a case study on what a 50 year plan needs to include for the nation to adapt to sea level rise and extreme precipitation events. I’m currently finishing up a case study for the City of Norfolk on how they can utilize Inflation Reduction Act funds to tackle racial inequalities caused from historic redlining to create an equitable urban canopy in Norfolk. But my work in our City began in December 2017 when I began advocacy in the chambers of City hall for efficient, sustainable growth for Chesapeake. It’s been the interest of my research with other governments looking at what we can bring to our City, and it’s also why I became a founding member of the Rural Chesapeake Preservation Committee a year ago. Chesapeake can continue to grow and become a great City. I’m running to bring my experience and passion to transform this Board into something more.
  • Economically & Environmentally Sustainable Agriculture
  • Environmental Conservation & Green Infrastructure
  • Community Partnerships
Smart, sustainable development. Where economic growth, cultural enrichment, and environmental conservation meet to form the foundations of a strong community. In agriculture, that looks like a farmer who is able to retire and pass the reigns to someone just entering the profession. It looks like farms that incorporate regenerative practices, and that lean into agricultural tourism avenues that maintain the spirit of the community, all while providing new sources of economic revenue in a way that conserves the existing ecosystem. Our legislators need to do more to support this form of development - the kind that cultivates the foundation of a resilient society.
Honesty, Empathy, and Passion. Public servants must above all be responsive to their constituents, and honest on the decisions they make and the reasoning behind them. Only then can they be held accountable to the people they’re sworn to represent. Empathy is key, because someone who is disconnected from the struggles of their constituents will never feel the gravity nor urgency to provide immediate and long term relief to support their communities. And that fiery passion to fight for the best deal that can be secured for back home is what makes the difference between a good and bad representative.
Fulfilling our state mandate through administering our agricultural cost share and conservation assistance programs by efficiently getting that money into the hands of our residents and farmers. But more importantly to seek out new opportunities for our farmers and residents within our District through state and federal aid for the administration of new programs. Investing in our farmers’ future economic sustainability through the induction of Chesapeake’s diverse population into the farming profession with support in creating farms that develop our economy through eco- and agro-tourism opportunities. By partnering with community organizations including civic leagues and churches to fund environmental restoration projects such as wetlands and urban forests that increase cultural wealth and natural mitigation against flooding and storm surges.
A legacy of action. A legacy of going above and beyond to provide the best services we can for those within our district even if they’re not part of our state obligations. A Conservation Director mustn’t just provide the resources given to us from our state government, but also utilize other governmental and nonprofit aid to support our farmers and residents across the City. Where demand is high for a program, we don’t sit back and wait for it to close out but instead find new funding sources to close that gap faster. Promoting more developments now that are good for our community and environments instead of slowly sorting through the stream of backlogs is how a Conservation Director can truly deliver. As elected officials and public servants, we can never be satisfied with our job if we’re not providing the best services we can to those who need them.

Note: Ballotpedia reserves the right to edit Candidate Connection survey responses. Any edits made by Ballotpedia will be clearly marked with [brackets] for the public. If the candidate disagrees with an edit, he or she may request the full removal of the survey response from Ballotpedia.org. Ballotpedia does not edit or correct typographical errors unless the candidate's campaign requests it.

2022

Video for Ballotpedia

Video submitted to Ballotpedia
Released Oct 7, 2022

Candidate Connection

Blaizen Buckshot Bloom completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2022. The survey questions appear in bold and are followed by Bloom's responses. Candidates are asked three required questions for this survey, but they may answer additional optional questions as well.

Expand all | Collapse all

I’m Blaizen Buckshot Bloom, a 2021 graduate of Deep Creek High School. In December 2017, I became involved in local politics, initially fighting for solar farms before shifting focus to the rapid, unchecked overdevelopment in southern Chesapeake. Yet, my passion for service continued as I volunteered in my school and community, earning me the President’s Volunteer Service Award in 2018. Two years later, I became a founding fellow of Civic’s Unplugged, an organization dedicated to preparing today’s youth to be tomorrow’s civic leaders. Within the next few months, I became a co-founder and co-leader of Virginia’s chapter of State of the Students, a national, non-partisan organization dedicated to connecting youth with the civic process. Since then, I’ve taken that experience to continue bettering our City by solving the problems in our school system.
  • My top priority is addressing the mental health needs of our student population. An easy first step is creating a health curriculum that educates the stigma out of mental illness. A great model to utilize is a framework tested in Texas Public Schools called “Eliminating the Stigma of Difference.” In addition, we must ensure that every school has at least one social worker and psychologist, with an end goal of achieving a 250:1 and 700:1 student-to-faculty ratio. In addition to their assigned tasks, those staff could perform annual mental illness screenings for students ages 12+ as recommended by the American Academy of Pediatrics.
  • My second priority is improving the work environment for our educators. The best means to achieve this is by removing workload from our staff members. That includes expanding our current mental health offerings, creating a proactive yet effective discipline system, and ensuring IEPs and 504s are correctly implemented and utilized. Furthermore, until we can recruit additional teachers to keep the student-to-teacher ratio low, we must hire more teacher assistants to help in the classroom. Finally, we must restore funding for teachers pursuing continuing education to ensure our teachers are among the best.
  • My third priority is creating an efficient, transparent budget. A line-by-line breakdown of the budget must be made publicly available, including actual spending of our district over the year prior. Moreover, Chesapeake Public Schools’ spending of Covid relief funds implies poor spending within our current budget. Such expenditures included $500,000 for plastic dividers that proved ineffective, though well-intentioned. Still, we must look for ways to improve our current budget without sacrificing the quality of education. One idea is partnering with local businesses and the military through our non-profit. As older technology gets replaced, our district can accept it to substitute even older, worse-for-wear technology.
My biggest passion is mental health. As a student who struggled with undiagnosed mental illnesses for most of my schooling, and with numerous friends in similar situations, I can speak first-hand to the unaddressed issues in Chesapeake Public Schools. Part of the problem is that students are terrified to ask for help because of the stigma against mental illness. There’s genuine concern that disciplinary action will get taken by family or staff. Whether it’s asking for help personally or seeking help for a friend, that worry remains in the student’s mind.

Yet another aspect of this dilemma students face is the accessibility to resources. I was terrified of the repercussions of crying out for help, but I also worried about the financial burden I would place on my struggling household. I wasn’t alone in that thought. It was another fear in our minds, an idea that we would become a financial burden for treatment of this disease in our minds.

Mental illness is an epidemic, especially among our children. It destroys, it takes lives, and it is something we must confront with full force. I know the damage it does. It’s my biggest motivator for running, and I won’t quit until our students can seek and receive the help they need.

Note: Ballotpedia reserves the right to edit Candidate Connection survey responses. Any edits made by Ballotpedia will be clearly marked with [brackets] for the public. If the candidate disagrees with an edit, he or she may request the full removal of the survey response from Ballotpedia.org. Ballotpedia does not edit or correct typographical errors unless the candidate's campaign requests it.


Campaign finance summary

Campaign finance information for this candidate is not yet available from OpenSecrets. That information will be published here once it is available.

See also


External links

Footnotes

  1. Information submitted to Ballotpedia through the Candidate Connection survey on October 9, 2022
  2. Information submitted to Ballotpedia through the Candidate Connection survey on September 28, 2023
  3. 3.0 3.1 Information submitted to Ballotpedia through the Candidate Connection survey on May 3, 2025


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