
by James A. Bacon
The “no confidence” campaign against the University of Virginia Board of Visitors is gaining momentum with the United Campus Workers of Virginia (UCWV) joining the effort. Strikes and lawsuits are among the options available to protesters, although, as one panelist put it in a “teach-in” yesterday, strikes by state employees are illegal in Virginia and hard to pull off. “There’s probably a lot of steps in between [a strike] and where we are now.”
The union representing graduate students and other employees at UVA, Virginia Tech, Virginia Commonwealth University, and the College of William & Mary also is keeping close tabs on the GMU Board of Visitors, which was meeting today amidst widespread fears that it might oust President Gregory Washington in disputes over anti-Semitism and Diversity, Equity & Inclusion. The UVA Board is scheduled to meet in a special session Monday to discuss the search for a new president.
In a zoom meeting open to public participation yesterday, the UCWV provided insight into what leftist elements in Virginia’s public universities are thinking and doing. From the remarks made in the meeting, it was evident that UCWV members sympathized with the UVA Faculty Senate’s recent 46-to-6 “no confidence” vote against the UVA board but faced a steep learning curve to understand the governance of public universities.
The meeting took place against a backdrop of a battle royale between Governor Glenn Youngkin and state Senate Democrats over control over the governing boards of Virginia’s public universities.
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