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No holiday for justice as protesters hold March of Reckoning

By Caitlin Morris and Rosemarie O’Connor/Capital News Service | 2/22/2019, 6 a.m.
Banks and schools may have been closed Monday, but around 50 political activists descended on Bank Street and went to ...
Protesters head down Franklin Street to the State Capitol during Monday’s March of Reckoning calling for the resignation of the state’s top three elected officials and a halt to Dominion Energy’s natural gas pipeline and compressor station in the historically African-American community of Union Hill in Buckingham County. Jeremy M. Lazarus/Richmond Free Press

Banks and schools may have been closed Monday, but around 50 political activists descended on Bank Street and went to work protesting against Gov. Ralph S. Northam and other elected officials.

The “March of Reckoning” began in Monroe Park with friction and ended in a showdown at the State Capitol.

Protesters called for the resignations of Gov. Ralph S. Northam, Lt. Gov. Justin E. Fairfax and Attorney General Mark R. Herring, all Democrats, and Republican state Sen. Tommy Norment of James City County, the Senate majority leader.

Gov. Northam came under fire earlier this month after a photo surfaced of his 1984 medical school yearbook page that featured a man in blackface and another in a KKK hood and robe. Gov. Northam apologized at first, without saying which person in the photo was him. He then later denied that he was in the photo, but admitted that he wore blackface to compete as Michael Jackson in a dance contest in Texas later in 1984.

Mr. Herring was among the many officials who called for Gov. Northam’s resignation. But days later, Mr. Herring revealed he had worn blackface to portray a rapper at a college party in 1980.

The revelations led many across the state to dig through college yearbooks, peering into the pasts of numerous government officials. It was found that Sen. Norment was an editor of Virginia Military Institute’s yearbook when it published numerous racist images and language.

As the blackface scandal erupted, two women accused Lt. Gov. Fairfax of sexual assault in 2000 and 2004, while he was in college and law school. The lieutenant governor has denied the allegations, saying that both sexual encounters were consensual.

“Virginia’s on fire and the whole world is watching,” Rebecca Keel of Justice RVA said during Monday’s protest.

Demonstrators including Travis Williams reminded the crowd that accusations of racism against the state’s top officials do not stem from just the blackface confessions, but include such policies and actions as support for the natural gas pipeline and compressor station that Dominion Energy is building in Union Hill, a historically African-American community in Buckingham County. Mr. Williams said Gov. Northam was a “major enabler” of the project.

“We don’t need to just think about the projection of ridicule and bigotry onto people and communities,” Mr. Williams said. “We also need to think about … negation, erasure, dehumanization, devaluing. That’s what’s been going on in Union Hill.”

Police had a visible presence in Monroe Park, where the rally started. A Monroe Park Conservatory volunteer stepped in and asked protesters to stop blocking bike paths.

Tension continued to grow as protesters marched through the Virginia Commonwealth University campus and down Franklin Street toward the Capitol.

Marchers carried banners and signs while chanting, “No blackface, no pipeline, Northam must resign.” At times, the crowd moved against the flow of traffic and shut down multiple streets as they crossed.

The group paused at the Dominion Energy building in Downtown and voiced disdain for the company’s political influence on Gov. Northam and state lawmakers. According to the Virginia Public Access Project, Gov. Northam has received almost $200,000 in campaign contributions from the energy giant.

“Not only are governments supporting businesses that are completely harmful to the environment and exacerbating climate change, but it’s also the case of environmental racism,” said Vincent Mangano, a VCU freshman. “The people who are seeing these effects are primarily poor people of color.”

Chants grew louder as the group reached Capitol Square, where Capitol Police closed and locked gates to the grounds. Protesters and members of the media were locked out, although protesters tried multiple gates before entering an hour-long standoff with police. After laying down signs and ending the chanting, protesters tried to enter the grounds as “citizens” but were still denied access. The Capitol is open to visitors seven days a week.

“We’re being denied access just as people,” said Ms. Keel. “We’re not in protest, we’ve made that abundantly clear. Actually, all the protesters have left. We’re being denied our right to come and enjoy the Capitol grounds. I’m feeling extremely disappointed in the Capitol Police.”

Police said they couldn’t allow anyone to enter without a valid permit from the Department of General Services, which provides management for Capitol Square.                      

During the standoff, one protester slid under the gate and onto the grounds and laid down on her back, facing the officers above her.

Some demonstrators said they received different answers from Capitol Police officers regarding entering the grounds, leading to confusion.

March organizers eventually dispersed after being denied entry.

“We’re going to sue you tomorrow,” Ms. Keel told Capitol Police as she left.