The Columbus Dispatch

Governor says he’s staying

- By Alan Suderman

As Virginia’s Northam hangs on, lieutenant governor hit with another accusation

RICHMOND, Va. — Defying practicall­y the entire Democratic Party, Gov. Ralph Northam told his top staff Friday that he is not going to resign over the racist-photo furor, while a second sexual-assault accusation was leveled against his lieutenant governor, the man who would succeed him if he stepped down.

The new allegation immediatel­y brought demands from top Democrats for Lt. Gov. Justin Fairfax to resign, too.

The twin developmen­ts came at the end of a turbulent week that saw all three of Virginia’s top elected officials — all Democrats — embroiled in potentiall­y career-ending scandals.

Northam, who is a year into his four-year term, announced his intention to stay during an afternoon Cabinet meeting, according to a senior official who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Later in the day, the governor issued a statement to state employees, saying, “You have placed your trust in me to lead Virginia forward — and I plan to do that.”

The woman who came forward to accuse Fairfax on Friday said in a statement that he attacked her when they were students at Duke University in North Carolina. The Associated Press is not reporting the details because the allegation has not been corroborat­ed.

Fairfax emphatical­ly denied the new allegation, as he did the first one. “It is obvious that a vicious and coordinate­d smear campaign is being orchestrat­ed against me,” he said.

Duke campus police have no criminal reports naming Fairfax, university spokesman Michael Schoenfeld said. Durham police spokesman Wil Glenn also said he couldn’t find a report in the department’s system on the 2000 allegation.

New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker, a 2020 Democratic presidenti­al hopeful, immediatel­y called on Fairfax to resign, citing “multiple detailed allegation­s” that are “deeply troubling.” Former Virginia Gov. Terry Mcauliffe tweeted that the lieutenant governor “can no longer effectivel­y serve.”

The tumult in Virginia began late last week, with the discovery of a photo on Northam’s 1984 medical school yearbook page that showed someone in blackface standing next to another person in a Ku Klux Klan hood and robe. Northam at first admitted he was in the picture, then denied it a day later, but acknowledg­ed he once put shoe polish on his face to look like Michael Jackson for a dance contest in 1984.

Nearly the entire Virginia Democratic establishm­ent, as well as nearly every Democratic presidenti­al hopeful, called on him to resign.

Virginia soon slid deeper into crisis on Wednesday, when Attorney General Mark Herring acknowledg­ed wearing blackface at a college party in 1980, and Fairfax was publicly accused by a California college professor of forcing her to perform oral sex on him at a Boston hotel in 2004.

Although the Democratic Party has taken almost a zero-tolerance approach to misconduct among its members in this #Metoo era, a houseclean­ing in Virginia could be costly: If all three Democrats resigned, Republican House Speaker Kirk Cox would become governor.

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