• Info-Wars at UVa: Who Decides What the BoV Needs to Hear?

    Provost Ian Baucom

    by James A. Bacon

    Last October University of Virginia Provost Ian Baucom briefed the Faculty Senate executive committee about a package of four multimillion-dollar academic initiatives that were in the works. The camera angle in the video recording shows him as a tiny, barely discernible figure at the far end of a long conference table. But his fast-clipped, staccato voice comes through loud and clear.

    One initiative would address society’s “Grand Challenges” while another would build the university’s R&D infrastructure. Two others, largely geared to the pursuit of diversity, would set up a $20 million fund to aid the recruitment of graduate students and a $20 million fund to boost recruitment of “under-represented” faculty.

    Members of the Faculty Senate were on board with the diversity programs, and Baucom felt at ease talking about them. “Behind [the faculty-recruitment initiative],” he said, “is the reaffirmation of the Audacious Futures Report to double the number of under-represented faculty. The president and I have been very clear that he stands by that goal.”

    Four months later when the initiatives had moved further through the administrative pipeline, though, the Provost was less forthcoming with the Board of Visitors than he had been with the faculty. He described the Grand Challenges and R&D initiatives in considerable detail, but barely acknowledged the other two strategic priorities. He never explained that the faculty and graduate-student initiatives were designed in part to advance diversity.

    The dichotomy in Baucom’s presentations raises important questions of governance at UVa. At a time when racial preferences in admissions and hiring are coming under increasing scrutiny, how much information about those practices is the Ryan administration withholding from the Board of Visitors? Who decides what to tell the Board? What power does the Board have to demand a fuller accounting? (more…)


  • When Local Registrars Get Caught in the Middle

    by Martin Davis and Shaun Kenney

    Last week, Cardinal News published a piece by reporter Markus Schmidt about the difficulties facing several Democratic candidates for state and local offices in Virginia, owing to complications with their paperwork.

    Mistakes related to paperwork happen every year, and sometimes the Virginia Department of Elections can sort out the problem. Schmidtโ€™s story notes two instances in recent years when this happened. Notably, in 2019, when the department accepted late paperwork for Del. Terry Kilgore, R-Scott County, and in 2021, when it placed Del. Dave LaRock, R-Loudoun County, on the ballot despite a missed deadline.

    City and county registrars, however, are the people who are on the front lines of most issues relating to candidatesโ€™ paperwork issues. And these people are often caught between conflicting interpretations of critical statutes.

    In Spotsylvania County, concern over signatures collected by two candidates for local office provides an interesting look into the challenges local registrars face. It also reveals some issues with the way the state is relaying information to candidates and registrars. (more…)


  • Is Hopewell the Next Petersburg?

    Downtown Hopewell. Photo credit: Richmond BizSense

    by James A. Bacon

    Long-time Bacon’s Rebellion readers will remember the fiscal saga of Petersburg, a struggling rust-belt city whose finances were so mismanaged that the city had to call in outside consultants to fix them. The City of Hopewell, another struggling rust-belt industrial town, may be facing the same fate. City Council has appointed Concetta Manker — its former information technology manager — to lead a financial turnaround.

    Finances had deteriorated to the point where Virginiaย State Secretary of Finance Stephen Cummings ordered an outside audit and outlined steps the city should take to get back on track. According to the Richmond Times-Dispatch, Cummings stressed the need to bring in experienced help to get the municipalityโ€™s books in order. He even offered $200,000 to help the city find such an executive.

    But Council voted “no” yesterday on the idea, and elevated Manker, who was serving as interim city manager, to step into the role officially. Manker’s job would be tough under any circumstances: the city with a population of 23,000 cannot take on debt because it hasn’t even had a credit rating since 2017. Making the challenge even greater, her professional background is IT, not finance. (more…)


  • Youngkin Upholds Parents Rights in Transgender Debate

    by James A. Bacon

    With educational outcomes for Virginia public school children collapsing across the board, I’m not sure that the use of pronouns and restrooms for transgender students is the most urgent policy facing our schools today. But both sides of the culture wars are determined to fight this battle, so it continues to consume an inordinate share of our attention — as when Governor Glenn Youngkin issuedย yesterdayย his revised “model policies” for treating transgender students.

    I will spend little time rehashing the details of the new model policies, which you can read here. The Washington Post summarizes the key points, as do the state’s other major newspapers. In broad brushstrokes, Youngkin’s purpose is to strengthen parental rights, restricting the ability of schools to make contentious decisions regarding a student’s gender identity without the parents’ knowledge and consent.

    I’m more interested in peripheral — yet telling — aspects of this story. I’m interested in seeing how the shapers of public opinion are constructing their narratives.

    It is interesting to see how Team Youngkin attempts to frame the narrative. You can see it in the full title of the document: “Model Policies on Ensuring Privacy, Dignity, and Respect for All Students and Parents in Virginia’s Public Schools.” (more…)


  • Can Virginia Republicans Find 500,000 Votes?

    by Shaun Kenney

    Back in November 2019, the Commonwealth of Kentucky was well on its way to being a blue state. That is, until the stateโ€™s Republican leadership saw the trend and decided to do something about it. Aided by terrible Biden numbers, Kentuckyโ€™s GOP reversed the decline in short order:

    If youโ€™re like myself, the palpable groan about seducing moderates and independents into the Virginia GOP becomes audible. Yet that is the old way of doing voter outreach. Todayโ€™s Virginia is more transient than ever, with military families and highly educated suburban families โ€” particularly immigrant communities who share our traditional values โ€” migrating into places such as Northern Virginia and Richmond.

    To make matters even more digestible, it may shock many a reader to find out that evangelical Protestants and pew-sitting Catholics simply do not vote in similar numbers to our more secular โ€œnonesโ€ and liberal friends โ€” politics being a sordid and nasty thing.

    So there are three constituencies where Virginia Republicans stand to gain:

    1. Rural and suburban Christians.
    2. African-American voters.
    3. NOVA and Richmond immigrant communities.

    I mean โ€” it would be just perfect if Virginia Republicans elected three statewide candidates who just happen to have inroads to all three, right?

    Weird, right?

    (more…)


  • Too Fearful to Cross the Rubicon

    Washington and Lee

    by Donald Smith

    Maximus:ย  Still no word?

    Quintus: Not a sign.

    Maximus: How long has he been gone?

    Quintus:ย  Nearly two hours.

    โ€œHeโ€ was a Roman liaison sent to see if the Germanic tribes lined up across the valley from Maximusโ€™ (and Roman emperor Marcus Aureliusโ€™) legions wanted to avoid a fight.ย  Shortly after Maximusโ€™ conversation with his executive officer Quintus, the liaisonโ€™s horse rode back into the Roman lines.ย  Strapped in the saddle was the liaisonโ€™s headless body.ย  Across the valley, the leader of the Germanic tribes held up the head and shouted defiance.ย  โ€œThey say no,โ€ said Maximus.

    Earlier this past week, W&L students blanketed a plaque honoring Traveler, General Leeโ€™s horse, with apples.ย  This effort was endearing โ€” and also offered the W&L leadership an opportunity to NOTย escalate the ongoing fight over the place of Confederate heritage in the public square.ย This wasnโ€™t a Faithful Slave monument.ย  It was a plaque about a horse, which mentioned General Robert E. Lee and the United Daughters of the Confederacy.ย  Here was a chance to demonstrate that wokeness hadnโ€™t crushed common sense at Washington and Lee. ย 

    The students offered their schoolโ€™s leadership a chance to show Virginians that W&L leaders and faculty could handle complex thoughts and reason through complicated subjects.ย  Americaโ€™s history is complex.ย  It canโ€™t be properly handled by shallow, emotional thinking.ย  The apples were a plea for the W&L leadership to demonstrate that they understood that.ย  That they really could walk AND chew gum at the same time.

    They said no. ย  (more…)


  • An Utter (and Videotaped) Disgrace of the Virginia General Assembly

    by James C. Sherlock

    Scott Johnson at the podium on Jan 17, 2023 testifying before the House Committee on Health, Welfare and Institutions.

    Whatever the Virginia Health Care Association (VHCA), the stateโ€™s nursing home lobbying organization, pays its General Counsel, Scott Johnson, it is not enough.

    He has been representing them for 20 years, and he owns the General Assembly.

    This is going to sound boring as I frame the background that is the subject of the hearing. But I feel I must try to explain the complexities to make what happened in the hearing understandable.

    But I promise the hearing itself is not boring. There are heroes, heroines and villains.

    That hearing was a thoroughgoing disgrace to the General Assembly of Virginia. Members are seen clearly to surrender their authority, their duties, and their personal dignity to an industry they are elected to oversee.

    It was videotaped for posterity.

    It represents the “Virginia Way.” a product of unlimited campaign donations. It is reprehensible.

    The law passed through this process must be repealed in its entirety. (more…)


  • Empty, Airy Words

    Credit: Bing Image Creator. Letters lighter than air.

    by James A. Bacon

    After the U.S. Supreme Court issued its ruling restricting the use of race as a higher-ed admissions criteria, University of Virginia President Jim Ryan and Provost Ian Baucom released a statement proclaiming that they would do everything in their power to admit a class of students that is “diverse across every possible dimension.” That commitment extended not just to race, ethnicity, and gender, they proclaimed, but “geography, socioeconomic status, first-generation status, disability status, religion, age, sexual orientation, viewpoint, ideology, and special talents.” (My italics.)

    Some of those dimensions have occasioned far more attention than others. For example, UVa has put into place a large Diversity, Equity & Inclusion bureaucracy to advance racial/ethnic diversity. By contrast, far from promoting viewpoint and ideological diversity, university practices — hiring of left-of-center faculty, mandatory DEI statements and Student Guide tours — serve to drive off prospective students and faculty who are conservatively inclined.

    In this post, I will argue that the Ryan administration pays little more heed to the geographic and socioeconomic criteria on its checklist than it does to viewpoint and ideological diversity. Students from poor households and rural households are severely underrepresented. But UVa does not care enough to even track their numbers. (more…)


  • Jeanine’s Memes

    From The Bull Elephant.


  • Bacon Meme of the Week

    From the inimitable Babylon Bee:

    JERUSALEM โ€” Citing newly uncovered writings from Greece, Rome, and Jerusalem, biblical scholars are now saying the shockingly rapid growth of the early church can be attributed to the fact that Christians were allowed to eat bacon.

    “Save yourselves from this crooked generation! Believe in Jesus, the Messiah! And also, I had a dream last week and we can totally eat bacon now!” said Peter in one of his recently discovered early sermons given in a Jewish synagogue. “Seriously–have you people tried this stuff? It’s amazing! All the bacon you can eat! God told me it’s not unclean anymore! Wooo hooooo!” Read the rest.


  • Well, They Went and Done It

    Photo credit: The Generals Redoubt

    Washington & Lee has set a new precedent in the culture wars — it has cancelled a horse. Robert E. Lee’s horse Traveller, to be precise. A plaque dedicated to the memory of the renowned steed was removed yesterday in a larger purge of references to its rider, who salvaged the university from extinction after the Civil War. (See an enumeration of purge actions here.)

    The zeal of W&L President William C. Dudley and his minions has no limits in their campaign to transform W&L from an elite liberal arts university build upon Southern traditions into an elite liberal arts bastion of Diversity, Equity & Inclusion. No detail is too small to be expunged. Dudley’s notion of inclusion and belonging, it appears, does not extend to the thousands of alumni who have demonstrated lifetime commitments to the university and its traditions, nor to the man who stood for reconciliation between North and South after the nation’s bloodiest war. (more…)


  • A Non-Political Digression

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    As I get older, I find that I tend to read the obituaries more often. Maybe it is because, as the old joke goes, I want to check to see if my name is in there.

    Obituaries tend to follow a standard format. Most are fairly brief, consisting of the deceasedโ€™s date and place of birth, date of death, parents, surviving relatives, sometimes a summary of the deceasedโ€™s professional life, awards, etc. Occasionally, however, there is an obituary that provides a glimpse of the personality of the deceased. A recent obituary in the Gazette-Virginian of South Boston was such a piece.

    It starts off with:

    Photo credit: Va. Dept. of Wildlife Resources

    Herbert Louis โ€œBullfrogโ€ Throckmorton was reunited with his โ€œLilypadโ€ Vicky on Thursday, July 6, 2023.

    As far as I am concerned, that would have been enough for a classic obituary, but, after listing all the relatives that had predeceased him, the narrative went on:

    Louis lived life to the fullest and had battle scars to prove it. He enjoyed piddling, fixing up junk cars, and talking trash on the CB. He was locally known and well hated as he liked to joke and say.

    Left to carry on his legacy are his daughters, Angie and Chasity, as well as his son, Tony. His son in law, Mike, will be left to clear up the mess he left behind in the shop.

    There is more, but that is enough to convince me that this was a man whom I would like to have known and had a beer with.


  • Youngkin Budget Leadership Faulted

    David Toscano

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    This blog gives ample exposure to conservative bloggers Kerry Dougherty and Shaun Kenney, but not to bloggers with other perspectives.

    David Toscano of Charlottesville, former Democratic floor leader in the House of Delegates and the author of a book on recent Virginia politics, regularly comments on Virginia politics, which is available to anyone who subscribes (free) to his e-mail list.

    Here is his latest in which he takes Governor Glenn Youngkin to task for a lack of leadership on Virginia’s budget.ย  He contrasts Youngkin’s passive approach to the active approach of Mark Warner in somewhat similar circumstances.ย  Regardless of what one thinks of Toscano’s views on various policy issues that he lists in the commentary, it is hard to argue against the proposition that Youngkin has been absent in the budget negotiations.


  • Now Theyโ€™re Going After Leeโ€™s Horse!

    from The General’s Redoubt

    Washington and Lee President William C. Dudley is hell-bent on eliminating all references to Robert E. Lee from the campus of W&L. And now that Lee has been almost completely erased, Dudley is going after Traveller.

    Thatโ€™s right. Weโ€™re not exaggerating! Robert E. Leeโ€™s beloved equestrian companion, who served with Lee through some of our nationโ€™s most historic battles, and who gave Lee much-needed comfort through afternoon rides in his post-war years in Lexington, is the latest victim of Dudleyโ€™s cancel campaign. (more…)


  • The Latest Tool for Suppressing Unpopular Speech: Special Use Permits

    by James A. Bacon

    With considerable fanfare by Governor Glenn Youngkin, Armed Forces Brewing announced six days ago that it would relocate its headquarters from Annapolis, Md., to Norfolk, creating 47 local jobs. The company, which markets its beer by adopting a rough, often profane language prevalent in the military, says it will hire veterans for 70% of its workforce.

    Good news, right?

    Not for some people. Within days, opposition surfaced. Norfolk Councilwoman Andria McClellan has said Armed Forces may have a tough time getting business permits from the City Council, according to WHRO. The company’s offense? Supposed misogyny in its ads and anti-LGBQT+ statements by the president.

    Misogyny? Apparently, CEO Rob O’Neill, a retired Navy SEAL, fired guns in an ad flanked by a woman in skimpy military-themed costumes. (more…)