Daily Press

Virginia Dems reject 3 Youngkin appointees

Governor calls actions ‘shameful,’ ‘appalling’

- By Sarah Rankin and Denise Lavoie

RICHMOND — Virginia Senate Democrats voted to reject several appointees of GOP Gov. Glenn Youngkin, including the state health commission­er.

The chamber approved resolution­s containing dozens of Youngkin appointees after the names of those to whom they objected — Health Commission­er Dr. Colin Greene, parole board member Steven Buck and education board member Suparna Dutta — were stripped out.

Another Youngkin appointee to the University of Virginia Board of Visitors, Bert Ellis, survived an attempted removal after Democrats Chip Peterson and Lynwood Lewis joined with Republican­s to keep him. The resolution­s now move to the GOP-controlled House, which could attempt to restore the appointees, who have been serving in their roles.

Youngkin said the senators were attacking the integrity of “three highly qualified members of my administra­tion” in “an appalling show of partisansh­ip.”

“Democrats are repeating loudly their clear beliefs: parents don’t matter, criminals first victims last, and petty politics above Virginia’s best interests. It’s shameful. Virginians deserve so much better,” Youngkin said in a statement.

Greene, the health commission­er, was reprimande­d by the Board of Health last year for remarks to The Washington Post in which he called gun violence “a Democratic talking point” and questioned the role of structural racism in health outcomes, including maternal and infant mortality rates.

Youngkin previously expressed disappoint­ment in those remarks and said they did not represent the view of his administra­tion. They were the focus of much of Tuesday’s debate, though Democratic Sen. Jennifer McClellan also said concerns about Greene also extend to his impact on health department staff. “His leadership is having a chilling effect on the work that the Legislativ­e Black Caucus has done to address racism as a public health crisis,” McClellan said.

Republican Sen. Steve Newman defended Greene as a “remarkable” leader with an impressive resume that included 30 years in the U.S. Army.

GOP Sen. Amanda Chase, who raised objections about Greene’s refusal to embrace the use of the anti-parasitic drug Ivermectin for COVID-19, joined Democrats in voting to block him.

Maria Reppas, a health department spokespers­on, referred a request for comment to the governor’s office, which said Greene had ably led Virginia out of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Buck, a former state and federal prosecutor, was nominated by Youngkin to the Virginia Parole Board in April.

Senate Democrats said they had reviewed parole board votes and found Buck voted to grant parole in only seven of the roughly 1,500 cases he’d heard so far.

That led members to be concerned that he apparently “doesn’t believe” inmates deserve parole, Sen. Scott Surovell said.

There was no immediate response to an AP request for comment sent to Buck via the parole board’s website.

Democrats voted to remove Dutta in part over what they said were concerns she was unqualifie­d due to a lack of work history in education.

Newman defended Dutta as a successful woman of color with experience teaching others about IT software developmen­t.

In an emailed response to the Senate’s vote, Dutta wrote that she was honored to have been appointed to the board and thought she had succeeded in “challengin­g the status quo.”

“It is disappoint­ing, however, that slander and blatant lies won the day today,” she wrote.

Also this session, lawmakers are expected to grapple with filling vacancies on the powerful State Corporatio­n Commission. They failed to reach an agreement on one opening last year, and another commission­er has since resigned.

House Majority Leader Terry Kilgore said Tuesday that House members hope to start meeting with Senators soon to “start sharing names and trying to narrow that down.”

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