by James A. Bacon

Last August, Governor Glenn Youngkin submitted the names of hundreds of appointees to state government boards and commissions for confirmation by the General Assembly. Traditionally, legislators accommodate the wishes of the chief executive, but occasionally they flex their political muscles by nixing someone they especially dislike.
This year the Democrat-controlled Senate Committee on Privileges and Elections pushed the delete button for two nominees to the Virginia Military Institute Board of Visitors, three to the George Mason University board, and one to the Board of Education.
Unless Senate Joint Resolution 275 is amended to add new names, Youngkin’s other appointees to Virginia’s public colleges and universities — and that includes five appointees to the University of Virginia board — likely will survive the legislative session intact.
Senate Dems gave only the vaguest of reasons for deep-sixing the six board members, all of whom have been actively serving pending their confirmation or rejection.
“We found their nomination to be inconsistent with the expectations, goals and values we hold for those boards,” said Senator Adam Ebbin, D-Alexandria of the rejected nominees. When pressed repeatedly by Republican members of the subcommittee, Ebbin repeated the same phrase without further elucidation.
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