Local News in Virginia
Veto On Public Monuments Applauded
By Leonard E. Colvin
Chief Reporter
New Journal and Guide
Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe has vetoed legislation which would have prevented Virginia locales from knocking down or moving monuments to past wars, especially those erected to honor the soldiers and legacy of the old Confederacy. McAuliffe said the bill would prohibit communities from making their own decisions about controversial symbols. House Bill 587 would aim to clarify the scope of a law passed in 1998 that prevented local governments from disturbing or interfering with war-related monuments. It was one of the first bills McAuliffe vetoed in early March near the end of the 2016 legislative session. McAuliffe said he supports historic preservation, but called the legislation a “sweeping override of local authority” that has ramifications for “interpretive signage to tell the story of some of our darkest moments during the Civil War.”
“There is a legitimate discussion going on in localities across the Commonwealth regarding whether to retain, remove, or alter certain symbols of the Confederacy,” McAuliffe said in his veto message. In the city of Portsmouth, the majority Black council is devising a way to pay for the removal of a prominent Confederate monument downtown. In the city of Norfolk, activist Roy Perry-Bey of the United Front for Justice, has demanded that the city council remove a huge Confederate monument sitting in the heart of city’s business district downtown.
In Richmond, the first Confederate capital, Mayor Dwight C. Jones, who is Black, has balked at moving on demands that the council remove a large number of monuments to rebel heroes such as Jefferson Davis, Robert E. Lee, J.E.B. Stuart and Stonewall Jackson. Mayor Jones has said he is more focused on “building up” rather than tearing down. The call nationally to remove Confederate flags and monuments from public places was generated last year in Charleston, South Carolina, where nine Black worshipers were shot to death at a church by a young White racist who supported the Klan. McAuliffe moved to phase out state-issued license plates showing the Confederate flag shortly after.
This bill’s main sponsor was State Delegate Charles D. Poindexter, a Republican from Franklin County. He said the Governor’s veto leaves all of Virginia’s war memorials at risk. The Republican-controlled legislature could vote to overturn McAuliffe’s veto when it reconvenes April 20. The House of Delegates passed the bill with a 82-16 vote. The margin was tighter in the Senate where the bill passed 21-17 with broad Democratic opposition.

Black Business News1 week agoTrump’s Big Ugly Bill Strips Nursing of Professional Status as Black Women Across the Nation Brace for Devastating Consequences
Black Arts and Culture7 days agoIN MEMORIAM: Jimmy Cliff Music Pioneer & Partner To Bob Marley, Dies At 81
Education6 days agoJohns Hopkins University Eliminates Tuition For Some Undergraduates
Black Community Opinions1 week agoHouse Dems Ready For 2026
Black Arts and Culture5 days agoBTW Auditorium Dedication Ceremony Honors Legendary Director Samuel L. Roundtree
- National News7 days ago
Now Exonerated After 27 Years, He Forms Justice Non-Profit
Black History7 days agoAn NJG Series: Our History, Our Journey – Part I: Black-Owned Hotels In Norfolk
Black History1 week agoSCLC Victory: Court Rejects Trump Order On MLK Files









