Stand up for the facts!

Our only agenda is to publish the truth so you can be an informed participant in democracy.
We need your help.

More Info

I would like to contribute

$
Chap Petersen
Chap Petersen
stated on May 25, 2022 in a statement.:

On building an NFL stadium in Virginia.

Full Flop
By Warren Fiske
June 9, 2022

Chap Petersen does Full Flop on Commanders Stadium

If your time is short

  • State Sen. Chap Petersen, D-Fairfax, voted twice in February for a bill that would lend the Washington Commanders $1 billion to build an NFL stadium and retail and entertainment complex in Northern Virginia. 
  • Petersen announced in May that he would oppose the bill, saying, "I don't have confidence in the Washington Commanders as a viable NFL franchise."

     

See the sources for this fact-check

The General Assembly’s zest for luring the Washington Commanders to Northern Virginia is losing its zing. 

In February, there was broad bipartisan backing for a bill that would help the football team finance construction of a $3-billion stadium, retail and entertainment complex. The measure would allow a state authority to sell $1 billion in bonds that the Commanders would later pay back. 

Negotiators have since reduced the state subsidy to $300 million as Dan Snyder, the Commanders’ owner, has become entangled in allegations of sexual and financial improprieties. Snyder denies the charges.

The project lost a key supporter on March 25 in state Sen. Chap Petersen (D-Fairfax). Days after his announcement, the General Assembly leaders indefinitely delayed a scheduled June 1 vote on the plan.

We decided to gauge Petersen’s actions on our Flip-O-Meter, which measures a politician’s consistency on an issue. We do not contend politicians should never change their minds; we just lay out their reasons.  

Petersen then

Petersen was a huge fan of the Commanders when they were called the Washington Redskins. He held season tickets for their games at FedEx Field in Landover, Maryland, for 22 years and was a founding member of “Redskins Caucus,” a group of tailgating legislators that defended the team’s old name against arguments that it was a racist term for native Americans. 

Petersen voted for the $1-billion-bond bill during a Feb. 10 meeting of the Senate Finance and Appropriations Committee. He opposed an unsuccessful effort that would have made the loan contingent on the release of NFL investigations into Snyder’s conduct that the team and league have kept private.

“We need to focus on the business details, that’s the only thing that matters,” he said. 

Petersen voiced unspecific concern about the business deal. “I think there’s a lot of details here that need to be vetted,” he said. 

Five days later, Petersen voted for the bill again on the Senate floor and it passed overwhelmingly. He later said he thought there would be time to work out particulars as the measure worked its way through the House and to the governor’s desk.

Petersen now

Word leaked on May 23 that the Commanders had acquired the right to buy 200 acres in Prince William County to build a stadium. Even so, the team is reportedly still interested in sites in Washington and Maryland.

Two days later, Petersen issued a scathing statement saying, “I do not plan to support the project or Virginia’s pursuit of this NFL franchise.” His main reason, he wrote, is “I don’t have confidence in the Washington Commanders as a viable NFL franchise.”

During a May 26 radio interview with The Sports Junkies, Petersen said the Commanders are a different organization than the once-powerful Redskins, a team that filled stadiums and won championships from the early 1970s through 1992. 

“None of that exists anymore. You don’t have the fanbase for starters … . You don’t have the same identity; you don’t have the same community buy-in,” he said, referring to the team’s losing record in recent decades and its declining home-game attendance.

“I’m looking at it from a taxpayer perspective,” Petersen said. “If we, in any way, subsidize — even in a small way — a huge economic development and then the anchor tenant is not a stable entity, and either leaves or does something else, that’s a problem.”

He added, “What happens if Dan Snyder builds a stadium or the team builds a stadium, and we build all the infrastructure around it, and five years later they’re getting 20,000 people, [and] they’re like ‘we’re out of here?’ And then we’re sitting there with an empty building on I-95.”  

Petersen, in an interview with us, acknowledged that the team’s sagging popularity and changing brand have been issues for several years and didn’t stop him from voting for the bill twice in February.

“That’s a fair criticism,” he said.

What about his season tickets? Petersen said he dropped them in 2020 when the team dropped its former name.

Our ruling

Despite reservations, Petersen voted twice in February to subsidize building a stadium for the Washington Commanders in Virginia. He announced in May that he opposes the project, questioning whether the troubled team is “viable as an NFL franchise.” He acknowledged that his concerns about the team’s dwindling fanbase go back several years.

That’s a Full Flop.

 

Browse the Truth-O-Meter

More by Warren Fiske
Glen Sturtevant
stated on March 16, 2023 a candidate's forum
On red flag laws.
Full Flop
Aaron Rouse
stated on December 23, 2022 a TV ad.
“Kevin Adams wants to ban abortion.”
Mostly False
Levar Stoney
stated on October 26, 2022 a news conference.
“I don’t get involved in the hiring and firing of police chiefs.”
False
Yesli Vega
stated on October 7, 2022 a statement.
On House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy.
Full Flop
Glenn Youngkin
stated on September 21, 2022 a news conference.
“In 2016, Democrats suggested that the election was stolen.”
Half-True

Luria stretches Kiggans’ comment on proposed 15-week U.S. abortion ban

Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
stated on January 7, 2026 a press briefing

stated on January 14, 2026 a statement

Social Media
stated on February 14, 2026 social media posts



stated on January 20, 2026 an op-ed


Donald Trump
stated on February 3, 2026 remarks in the Oval Office


Social Media
stated on February 8, 2026 social media posts





Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
stated on stated on November 17, 2025 in remarks at George Washington University:

Donald Trump
stated on February 2, 2026 an interview with Dan Bongino