A Fairfax County circuit county judge has sided with state Senate Democrats who filed a lawsuit to prevent eight public university board members appointed by Gov. Glenn Youngkin from continuing to serve.
The Democrats claimed that an 8-to-4 vote June 9 by a Senate subcommittee during a special session required no other action. Youngkin and Attorney General Jason Miyares countered that rejection had to undergo a full vote of the Senate. The eight nominees could continue serving until such a vote occurred.
“The Senateโs rejection of the Confirmation Resolution, by and through the vote of the Committee charged by the Senate with reviewing the resolution and determining whether it should advance or die in committee, constitutes the refusal of the General Assembly to confirm the Disputed Appointees,” wrote Jonathan D. Frieden in a ruling handed down today.
“Today, the court affirmed what we have maintained all along,” said Sen. Aaron Rouse, D-Virginia Beach, head of the Privileges and Elections Committee, in a statement: “The Senate of Virginia has the constitutional authority to confirm or reject board nominees, and that authority cannot be bypassed.”
Affected are board members of the University of Virginia, the Virginia Military Institute and George Mason University, each of which have been embroiled in battles over Diversity, Equity & Inclusion (DEI).
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