The Guardian (USA)

Blackface past and sexual assault claim threaten Virginia's top three officials

- Ben Jacobs in Washington and agencies

The political crisis in Virginia escalated dramatical­ly on Wednesday when the state’s attorney general confessed to putting on blackface in the 1980s and a woman went public with detailed allegation­s of sexual assault against the lieutenant governor.

With Governor Ralph Northam’s career already hanging by a thread over a racist photo in his 1984 medical school yearbook, the day’s developmen­ts threatened to take down Virginia’s top three elected officials, all of them Democrats.

The twin blows began with the attorney general, Mark Herring, issuing a statement saying he had worn brown makeup and a wig in 1980 to look like a rapper during a party as a 19-year-old student at the University of Virginia.

Herring, who has been among those calling on Northam to resign, said he was “deeply, deeply sorry for the pain that I cause with this revelation”. He said that in the days ahead, “honest conversati­ons and discussion­s will make it clear whether I can or should continue to serve as attorney general”.

Then, within hours, Vanessa Tyson, the woman whose sexual assault allegation­s against the lieutenant governor, Justin Fairfax, surfaced earlier this week, issued a detailed statement saying Fairfax forced her to perform oral sex on him in a hotel room in 2004 during the Democratic national convention in Boston.

Tyson, a 42-year-old political scientist who is on a fellowship at Stanford University and specialize­s in the political discourse of sexual assault, said she was not motivated by politics to come forward, writing: “I am a proud Democrat.”

Fairfax, who is line to become governor if Northam resigns, has repeatedly denied her allegation­s, saying that the encounter was consensual and that he is the victim of a strategica­lly timed political smear.

“At no time did she express to me any discomfort or concern about our interactio­ns, neither during that encounter, nor during the months following it, when she stayed in touch with me, nor the past 15 years,” he said in a statement.

Herring, 57, went public after rumors of a blackface photo of him had circulated at the capitol for a day or more. But in his statement, he said nothing about the existence of a photo.

Herring made a name for himself nationally by playing a central role in getting Virginia’s ban on gay marriage lifted, and he had been planning to run for governor in 2021.

The chairman of the Virginia legislativ­e black caucus, Lamont Bagby, said its members needed time to process the news about the attorney general: “We’ve got a lot to digest.”

In his statement, Herring said he and two friends had dressed up to look like rappers they listened to, including Kurtis Blow, admitting: “It sounds ridiculous even now writing it.

“That conduct clearly shows that, as a young man, I had a callous and inexcusabl­e lack of awareness and insensitiv­ity to the pain my behavior could inflict on others,” he said.

But he also said: “This conduct is in no way reflective of the man I have become in the nearly 40 years since.”

Northam has come under pressure from nearly the entire state and national Democratic establishm­ent to resign after the discovery of a photo on his profile page in the Eastern Virginia Medical School yearbook of someone in blackface standing next to a person in a Ku Klux Klan hood and robe.

Northam admitted at first that he was in the photo without saying which costume he was wearing. A day later, he denied he was in the picture. But he acknowledg­ed he once used shoe polish to blacken his face and look like Michael Jackson at a dance contest in Texas in 1984, when he was in the army.

Last Friday, Herring condemned the yearbook photo as “indefensib­le” and said that it was “no longer possible” for Northam to lead the state.

Associated Press contribute­d to this report

 ??  ?? Virginia’s attorney general, Mark Herring, said he was ‘deeply, deeply sorry for the pain that I cause with this revelation’. Photograph: Joshua Roberts/Reuters
Virginia’s attorney general, Mark Herring, said he was ‘deeply, deeply sorry for the pain that I cause with this revelation’. Photograph: Joshua Roberts/Reuters
 ??  ?? Ralph Northam, with his wife Pam. Photograph: Steve Helber/AP
Ralph Northam, with his wife Pam. Photograph: Steve Helber/AP

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