by James A. Bacon
Having bragged on national cable news that “DEI is done” at the University of Virginia, Governor Glenn Youngkin now is asking for the resignation of the man most determined to ensure that DEI is, in fact, laid to rest.
Youngkin is worried that Board of Visitors member Bert Ellis’ “outspoken and sometimes combative manner,” to use The Washington Post’s words, could undermine his efforts to reshape the university.
Ellis has declined to oblige the governor, and the two men are scheduled to meet Tuesday to discuss the matter.
The Post cites two unidentified sources for its story. I don’t know who those sources are, but it’s safe to describe the piece as part of a larger effort to neutralize Ellis, who was the object of a previous smear campaign in 2022 after Youngkin nominated him to take the lead against DEI, administrative bloat, and rising tuition.
The tip-off is the Post’s reference to April 2023 videos in which Ellis harangued two University Police Department officers for their invisible presence on the Corner retail strip adjacent to UVA. The Post reporters obtained the police-cam videos through a highly specific Freedom of Information Act request that could only have been fed to them from a source familiar with the incident. In a sure sign that the newspaper is a willing tool in the effort to discredit Ellis, the reporters left out critical exculpatory context. (More on the Post article in a follow-up post.)
Ellis narrowly survived an effort by Virginia Democrats to derail his appointment two years ago after a character-assassination campaign depicted him as racist, homophobic and a physical danger to the UVA community. Since then, he has emerged as the one member of the Board of Visitors willing to openly confront Northam appointees who, until this year, controlled the board. In one showdown with Rector Robert Hardie, he insisted that the board discuss openly, not in closed session, the wave of antisemitism arising from pro-Palestinian rhetoric and demonstrations on Grounds. More recently, he has been voting solo against new spending requests until the Ryan administration presented a budget with major spending cuts and tuition relief.
Excepting only the confrontation with Hardie, Ellis has been restrained and respectful during board meetings. Outside the board, he has been blunt, plain-spoken and colorfully quotable. In a recent interview with The Daily Progress about the University, he said that “every aspect of DEI is to be ripped out, shredded and terminated.โ











