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Gov. Youngkin expresses ‘regret’ for tweeting retaliatory photo against teen activist during campaign

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Virginia Governor Glen Youngkin has claimed he did not authorize a Tweet by his campaign that lashed out against a high school senior and former Virginia governor Ralph Northam. 

The Tweet, posted on Saturday on Youngkin’s campaign account, was directed at 17 year old Ethan Lynne, a senior at Patrick Henry High School and a Democratic activist, after Lynne retweeted a Richmond public radio station’s report about a historian resigning her Executive Mansion position telling stories of the enslaved.

Kelley Fanto Deetz, who had worked as the director of historic interpretation and education at the Executive Mansion, had worked with a team to highlight education about enslaved people who had worked at the mansion in the past. 

Deetz came to work one day last month to find her office had been cleared out, and several historical pieces on loan from historic sites had been moved.

The historian told VPM last week that she believed an educational space in the mansion had been turned into a family room. A correction was later issued after the governor’s press secretary said that assertion was incorrect and that nothing in the space had been moved by the Youngkin administration. Lynne noted the correction on Twitter.

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When Lynne re-Tweeted the VPM story on Saturday, Youngkin’s campaign responded by Tweeting a photo of the teen with former governor Ralph Northam, alongside a photo of Northam that surfaced in 2019 in which Northam wore blackface.

The Tweet read, “Here’s a picture of Ethan with a man that had a Blackface/KKK photo in his yearbook.” The Tweet was later deleted. Lynne told the Washington Post he still has not received an apology from the governor’s campaign.

The Governor responded by Tweeting, “On Saturday night, an unauthorized tweet came from a campaign account. I regret that this happened and it shouldn’t have. I have addressed it with my team. We must continue to work to bring Virginians together. There is so much more that unites us than divides us,” Youngkin said.

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Terry A. Hurlbut has been a student of politics, philosophy, and science for more than 35 years. He is a graduate of Yale College and has served as a physician-level laboratory administrator in a 250-bed community hospital. He also is a serious student of the Bible, is conversant in its two primary original languages, and has followed the creation-science movement closely since 1993.

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