Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
Virginia
Related: About this forumNew conservative picks for VMI board and more Va. headlines - Virginia Mercury
New conservative picks for VMI board, delta-8 legality still in question, red flag law use in Roanoke and New River valleys and more of today's headlines from around Virginia
virginiamercury.com
New conservative picks for VMI board and more Va. headlines - Virginia Mercury
New conservative picks for VMI board, delta-8 legality still in question, and red flag law use in Roanoke and New River valleys
New conservative picks for VMI board and more Va. headlines - Virginia Mercury
New conservative picks for VMI board, delta-8 legality still in question, and red flag law use in Roanoke and New River valleys
Link to tweet
NEWS TO KNOW
THE BULLETIN
New conservative picks for VMI board and more Va. headlines
BY: STAFF REPORT - JULY 5, 2022 7:58 AM
Gov. Glenn Youngkin put several new conservative members on the board of the Virginia Military Institute, including a former board member who resigned amid a push for the school to shed its Confederate symbols.Washington Post
Fairfax County officials are rebuffing a request from a U.S. Supreme Court official to enforce anti-picketing laws against protests at justices homes.WTOP
Climate activists blocked traffic for more than an hour Monday on the Maryland side of the Capital Beltway.DCist
Virginia regulators say they still consider Delta-8 and other synthetic cannabinoids illegal, despite the General Assemblys move toward sanctioning hemp-based THC products.Axios
The teenaged daughter of a Toronto Blue Jays coach died in a boating accident on the James River.Richmond Times-Dispatch
{snip}
THE BULLETIN
New conservative picks for VMI board and more Va. headlines
BY: STAFF REPORT - JULY 5, 2022 7:58 AM
Gov. Glenn Youngkin put several new conservative members on the board of the Virginia Military Institute, including a former board member who resigned amid a push for the school to shed its Confederate symbols.Washington Post
Fairfax County officials are rebuffing a request from a U.S. Supreme Court official to enforce anti-picketing laws against protests at justices homes.WTOP
Climate activists blocked traffic for more than an hour Monday on the Maryland side of the Capital Beltway.DCist
Virginia regulators say they still consider Delta-8 and other synthetic cannabinoids illegal, despite the General Assemblys move toward sanctioning hemp-based THC products.Axios
The teenaged daughter of a Toronto Blue Jays coach died in a boating accident on the James River.Richmond Times-Dispatch
{snip}
1 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
New conservative picks for VMI board and more Va. headlines - Virginia Mercury (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Jul 2022
OP
mahatmakanejeeves
(61,661 posts)1. In clash over VMI's future, Youngkin appoints conservatives to board
In clash over VMIs future, Youngkin appoints conservatives to board
The picks by Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) were applauded by alumni resisting change at Virginia Military Institute
By Ian Shapira
July 2, 2022 at 7:00 a.m. EDT
In his first major step to shape the future of the nations oldest state-supported military college, Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) on Thursday named four White, mostly conservative members to the Board of Visitors at the Virginia Military Institute, including a former member who resigned in 2020 right before the vote to remove a statue of Confederate Gen. Stonewall Jackson from the campus. ...The 182-year-old school, whose cadets fought and died for the South during the Civil War, has been mired in allegations of racism and sexism that continue to divide alumni into rival camps of those who support change and those resisting it.
Two of the four new board members appointed by Youngkin are well-known in Republican political circles or within the conservative alumni wing. John Adams, a McGuire Woods lawyer who graduated from VMI in 1996, ran unsuccessfully as the Republican nominee for Virginia attorney general in 2017. Adams, a former clerk for Supreme Court justice Clarence Thomas, and his law firm were tapped by the VMI Alumni Agencies to help it defend the school against an independent investigation ordered by Gov. Ralph Northam (D) into the college. The state-funded probe concluded that the school has a racist and sexist culture and must change.
A second Youngkin pick is Thomas Teddy Gottwald, the former VMI board member. Gottwald, who graduated from VMI in 1983, resigned his seat in October 2020 right before the body voted to remove the Jackson statue from its prominent perch on the Lexington campus. The head of a petroleum additives holding company, Gottwald donated $77,500 to Youngkins campaign and another $25,000 to the Spirit of VMI political action committee, a group of alumni that has denigrated and mocked the investigation and reforms the college has made in response to its findings.
[Virginia Military Institute alumni push to reverse diversity reforms]
The two other new board members are Ernest Edgar, a 1987 VMI graduate who is the general counsel of an engineering design and construction firm called Atkins North America, according to his LinkedIn page, and Meaghan Mobbs, a 2008 graduate of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y., who is a consulting and public affairs firm vice president. She worked as a senior policy adviser to the Youngkin campaign, according to her bio on the website of her firm. ... Mobbs, a former member of the Board of Visitors at the U.S. Military Academy, made news last year when she and other Trump appointees serving on similar boards at the Naval and Air Force academies were asked by the Biden administration to resign or be fired. Mobbs refused to quit and tweeted that she found the move unconscionable.
{snip}
By Ian Shapira
Ian Shapira is a features writer on the local enterprise team. Twitter https://twitter.com/ianshapira
The picks by Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) were applauded by alumni resisting change at Virginia Military Institute
By Ian Shapira
July 2, 2022 at 7:00 a.m. EDT
In his first major step to shape the future of the nations oldest state-supported military college, Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) on Thursday named four White, mostly conservative members to the Board of Visitors at the Virginia Military Institute, including a former member who resigned in 2020 right before the vote to remove a statue of Confederate Gen. Stonewall Jackson from the campus. ...The 182-year-old school, whose cadets fought and died for the South during the Civil War, has been mired in allegations of racism and sexism that continue to divide alumni into rival camps of those who support change and those resisting it.
Two of the four new board members appointed by Youngkin are well-known in Republican political circles or within the conservative alumni wing. John Adams, a McGuire Woods lawyer who graduated from VMI in 1996, ran unsuccessfully as the Republican nominee for Virginia attorney general in 2017. Adams, a former clerk for Supreme Court justice Clarence Thomas, and his law firm were tapped by the VMI Alumni Agencies to help it defend the school against an independent investigation ordered by Gov. Ralph Northam (D) into the college. The state-funded probe concluded that the school has a racist and sexist culture and must change.
A second Youngkin pick is Thomas Teddy Gottwald, the former VMI board member. Gottwald, who graduated from VMI in 1983, resigned his seat in October 2020 right before the body voted to remove the Jackson statue from its prominent perch on the Lexington campus. The head of a petroleum additives holding company, Gottwald donated $77,500 to Youngkins campaign and another $25,000 to the Spirit of VMI political action committee, a group of alumni that has denigrated and mocked the investigation and reforms the college has made in response to its findings.
[Virginia Military Institute alumni push to reverse diversity reforms]
The two other new board members are Ernest Edgar, a 1987 VMI graduate who is the general counsel of an engineering design and construction firm called Atkins North America, according to his LinkedIn page, and Meaghan Mobbs, a 2008 graduate of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y., who is a consulting and public affairs firm vice president. She worked as a senior policy adviser to the Youngkin campaign, according to her bio on the website of her firm. ... Mobbs, a former member of the Board of Visitors at the U.S. Military Academy, made news last year when she and other Trump appointees serving on similar boards at the Naval and Air Force academies were asked by the Biden administration to resign or be fired. Mobbs refused to quit and tweeted that she found the move unconscionable.
Link to tweet
{snip}
By Ian Shapira
Ian Shapira is a features writer on the local enterprise team. Twitter https://twitter.com/ianshapira