The president of the University of Virginia (UVA) has reportedly informed the board that oversees the college that he will resign his position after coming under pressure from theTrump administrationover diversity efforts.
James Ryan was facing political pressure from Washington to step aside in order to resolve a justice department investigation into UVA’s diversity, equity and inclusion policies, the New York Timesreported on Friday, citing three people briefed on the matter.
Ryan had a reputation for trying to make the UVA campus more diverse and encouraging students to perform community service.
The apparent campaign against a prominent public sector university in the US follows Donald Trump’s agenda since returning to the White House to cancel programs and policies aimed at greater diversity, equity and inclusion in government, workplaces, and various establishments and organizations across American society.
In parallel, the US president set aboutattackingand taking funds from elite private sector universities, withHarvard at the forefront, in an assault on the academic and research independence of higher education more broadly.
The New York Times first reported late on Thursday that the justice department had demanded that Ryan step down as part of an agreement to settle a civil rights investigation into the school’s diversity practices, as Trump further erodes the government agency’s distance from the White House by enlisting its investigative powers as part of his political agenda.
Ryan said in a letter, briefed to the Times by a source, that he was going to step down next year but “given the circumstances and today’s conversations” he had decided “with deep sadness” to resign now.
The justice department hadreportedlytold UVA that the government thought it was prioritizing race-based factors during its admissions process and other aspects of student life in a way that constitutes “widespread practices throughout every component and facet of the institution”.
UVA is located in Charlottesville, Virginia, and found itself in the global headlines early on in the first Trump administration when, in August 2017, hundreds of far-right demonstratorswielding torchesand shouting racist slogans marched on to the historic campus ahead of a so-calledUnite the Right rallyin the small city, crowding towards a smaller group of counterprotesters.
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The subsequent rally, to try to prevent the removal of Confederate statues from a park, was massive and became very violent as neo-Nazi groups gathered and attacked counterprotesters, then later a white supremacist drove a car into such a group and killed a woman.
Trump sparked uproar by blaming both sides for the violence, on the one hand and, on the other,saying:“You had people that were very fine people on both sides.”
UVA did not immediately respond to requests for comment.