In texts, Youngkin appointee plots 'battle royale for the soul of UVA' [View all]
After Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) named him last summer to the University of Virginias governing board, Bert Ellis had a platform to influence the schools administration. He spotted a potential target, a vice provost named Louis P. Nelson, tasked with community engagement, public service and academic outreach programs.
Nelson, who reports to U-Vas chief academic officer, Provost Ian Baucom, is also a professor of architectural history and an award-winning scholar and teacher. He has researched buildings and landscapes that shaped slavery in West Africa and the Americas, including at the prestigious public university that Thomas Jefferson founded in Charlottesville.
Ellis was unimpressed.
Check out this numnut who works for Baucom and has nothing to do but highlight slavery at UVA, Ellis wrote on July 22 in text
That and other text messages from Ellis were obtained last week through Virginias Freedom of Information Act by Richmond-based author Jeff Thomas, who provided them to The Washington Post. They provide an unfiltered window into the conversations of a controversial board newcomer who has voiced skepticism of diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, been protective of the legacy of Jefferson and advocated for a new course for the flagship university.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2023/02/23/uva-bert-ellis-text-messages/