by James A. Bacon
When University of Virginia President Jim Ryan appeared in a WVIR-TV interview in late January, he seemed fatigued. His brow was deeply furrowed and his face, already lean from marathon training, wore an expression of perpetual worry.
The last few months have been the most trying time in Ryan’s six-and-a-half-year tenure. After enjoying tremendous initial success in implementing his priorities at UVA, he is now mired in endless controversies which threaten to unravel his legacy.
In his early years under Democratic governors and a friendly Board of Visitors, Ryan advanced a sweeping “great and good” overhaul of the University based on the principles of social justice and equity: publication of the Racial Equity Task Force report, renaming of the Alderman Library, removal of the George Rogers Clarke statue, erection of a monument to enslaved laborers, expansion of a Diversity, Equity & Inclusion bureaucracy, imposition of DEI statements, steering tens of millions of dollars toward the recruitment of minority students, grad students and faculty, the stacking of faculty with far-left professors, and much more.
It all came easily. Ryan was popular with students and faculty, the Board was cooperative, alumni were somnambulent, and after the 2020 George Floyd protests, he was in sync with the national vibe.
But the vibe has changed, and the past few months have been a strain.














