
by James A. Bacon
Under pressure from the Department of Justice, University of Virginia President Jim Ryan has submitted his resignation to resolve a DOJ investigation into the University’s Diversity, Equity & Inclusion, reports the New York Times. The Board has accepted Ryan’s resignation.
In a letter to Rector Robert Hardie, Ryan said that he had planned to step down at the end of the next academic year but “given the circumstances and today’s conversations,” he had decided with “great sadness” to tender his resignation, according to a source whom the Times said was briefed on the contents of the letter.
On March 7 the Board ordered Ryan to dissolve its Diversity, Equity & Inclusion programs and end all racial preferences. Due to frustratingly slow compliance, the Board followed up by tightening oversight over his efforts. On April 28 the Civil Rights division sent a letter demanding evidence that the University had complied with the March resolution. Governor Glenn Youngkin read the Board the riot act, demanding action on DEI, and Democratic Party legislators jumped into the picture by rejecting Youngkin’s nomination of board member Ken Cuccinelli, an act that quickly grew into a constitutional controversy as the legislators and the governor disagreed over whether they were empowered to do so.
Yesterday the Times reported that the DOJ officials had demanded Ryan’s resignation based on conversations with three anonymous sources who had been “briefed on the back-and-forth between the University and the Justice Department” but did not want to be identified discussing “negotiations that were supposed to remain private.” In retrospect, it is clear that the negotiations centered on the terms and conditions of Ryan’s departure.
It was unclear when Ryan will leave, the Times reported. In the letter, he said the resignation would be effective “no later than August 15, 2025.”
(Read more to see updates.)














