Bacon Appointed Executive Director of The Jefferson Council

CHARLOTTESVILLE—The Jefferson Council, an alumni association devoted to upholding the Jeffersonian legacy at the University of Virginia, has appointed James A. Bacon Jr. as executive director.

“The hiring of a full-time director manager is a milestone in the evolution of the Jefferson Council from an all-volunteer group to a professionally staffed organization,” said President Bert Ellis. “The appointment will position the Council to ramp up its activities in support of the longstanding Jeffersonian traditions of civility, honor, free speech and the open exchange of ideas.”

Bacon is the perfect individual to manage the day-to-day operations of the Council, Ellis said. “As a university alumnus, a life-long Virginia journalist, including 16 years as editor and publisher of Virginia Business magazine and then founder of the Bacon’s Rebellion public policy blog, Bacon has a depth of knowledge of UVa’s challenges that few can match.”

Founded two years ago, the Jefferson Council is one of the first alumni associations in the United States to organize in response to the rise of ideological intolerance and suppression of free speech on college campuses. It is one of five founding members of the Alumni Free Speech Alliance, and a leader in the alumni rebellion sweeping the United States.
“We want UVa to be open and welcoming to everyone, but we believe that demographic diversity should be accompanied by free speech, free expression and intellectual diversity,” Bacon said. “We share Thomas Jefferson’s vision of UVa as an institution based upon ‘the illimitable freedom of the human mind where ‘we are not afraid to follow truth wherever it may lead, nor to tolerate any error so long as reason is left free to combat it.’”

“We envision UVa as a place where ideas collide and diverse viewpoints contend,” Bacon said. “Building upon our rich history, our Honor Code, and world-heritage architecture, we aspire to make UVa the most intellectually vibrant university in the United States, if not the world.”

Bacon’s priorities as executive director will be (1) to locate a Charlottesville office and flesh out the Council organization, (2) build a coalition of groups that share the desire for political and ideological pluralism on the grounds, and (3) create an alternative source of news and commentary about governance and culture at the university.

About the Jefferson Council: The Jefferson Council, which has more than 1,500 members, is organized as a Virginia nonstock, nonprofit corporation governed by a board of directors. It has four primary goals:

  1. Promote an academic environment based on open dialogue throughout the University.
  2. Preserve the Jefferson legacy.
  3. Protect the appearance of the Lawn as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
  4. Support and reinvigorate the Honor System.

For more information visit our website and blog.

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Jordan Ball
Jordan Ball
2 years ago

A great step forward.

Geoffrey Close
Geoffrey Close
2 years ago

Congrats to James for his appointment

John Buckley
John Buckley
2 years ago

Excellent!

J B McCoy III
J B McCoy III
2 years ago

Jim is well qualified to win in the marketplace of ideas!

Bring it on.

Clarity77
Clarity77
2 years ago

Excellent and a great step forward towards the fulfillment of Jefferson’s vision for the University which sadly has gone off the rails in so many ways under its current administration nistration.

Jack Kennard
Jack Kennard
1 year ago

Congratulations and well deserved! We are fortunate to have The Jefferson Council and the Council is fortunate to have James Baker.

walter smith
walter smith
1 year ago

This is a big step, but just the first step of a long journey to restore UVA to its Jeffersonian ideals and educational mission.

If you are a follower of this site, please keep the pressure on family, friends, alumni, politicians, BOV members and UVA faculty/admin to make UVA the pre-eminent public university of real knowledge with real free speech.

In fact, wouldn’t a real differentiator be a true free speech Grounds, where the students could speak what they really thought without fear of the mob and cancellation? And that wouldn’t even cost hundreds of millions of dollars!