While the fate of the controversial Robert E. Lee outdoor statue in Richmond, Virginia, remains in limbo in court, state leaders and county school officials in Northern Virginia decided to end their association with the Confederate general.
The speaker of the Virginia House of Delegates announced Friday morning that they removed busts of Lee and eight other Confederate leaders from the Old House Chamber in the state Capitol Building overnight. The move at the statehouse came hours after the Fairfax County School Board voted to change the name of the Robert E. Lee High School, in Springfield, to the John Lewis High School, in honor of the recently deceased Georgia congressman and civil rights leader.
"Representative Lewis was a champion of the Civil Rights movement, and our Board strongly believes this is an appropriate tribute to an individual who is a true American hero," School Board Chair Ricardy Anderson said in a statement Thursday night.
MORE: Robert E. Lee's descendant says taking down Confederate symbols a 'no-brainer'The school's new name will go into effect this fall, according to the board.
"The name Robert E. Lee is forever connected to the Confederacy, and Confederate values are ones that do not align with our community,” Tamara Derenak Kaufax, a board member who proposed the name change, said in a statement.
The House of Delegates, which became a Democratic majority earlier this year, has the power to remove the busts from their section of the Capitol, according to Speaker Eileen-Fuller Corn. Some of the other busts removed from the House of Delegates include Stonewall Jackson and Jefferson Davis.
The Virginia State Legislature made several moves this year to lessen Confederate memorials in the state, such as a measure that allowed local municipalities to remove their Confederate monuments and another piece of legislation that swapped state holidays honoring Confederate generals for Election Day.
MORE: Here's where Confederate statues and memorials have been removed in the USThe recent actions by officials took place in the backdrop of the legal battle over Gov. Ralph Northam's order to remove the Robert E. Lee statue in Richmond. The order, which was prompted by the Black Lives Matter protests following George Floyd's death, has been blocked by an injunction filed by Virginians who want to keep the statue in place. The statue, atop a pedestal on Richmond's historic Monument Avenue, features Lee on a horse.
On Friday afternoon, U.S. District Judge Henry E. Hudson dismissed a suit filed against the governor by Henrico, Virginia, resident William Davis which sought to stop the state from removing the statue. Davis sought a federal mandate for the removal and contended the state was violating federal landmark law.
However, Judge Hudson ruled that Davis "failed to establish the requisite elements to confer standing in this case," according to court documents.
"The matter cannot proceed in its present form. As a result, Plaintiff's motion will be denied as moot," Hudson ruled.
During a court hearing Thursday over a second lawsuit against the governor's order, Attorney General Mark R. Herring requested that Richmond Circuit Court Judge W. Reilly Marchant dismiss the injunction and the suit.
"It was raised as part of a deliberate effort to intimidate and demean Black Virginians and it should come down as part of a deliberate effort to heal, reconcile, and grow," Herring said of the statue in a statement.
The judge ordered the injunction to remain for another 30 days but said he would have a written ruling within a week.