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Tim Kaine: Robert E. Lee Statue in Capitol Replaced With Barbara Rose Johns

The moment is so seared into his brain that Sen. Tim Kaine remembers the exact time when he recorded the removal of the Robert E. Lee statue from the U.S. Capitol in 2020, when tearing down Confederate monuments and statues was all the rage (and soon spilled over into other controversial figures like Thomas Jefferson, Christopher Columbus, and Francis Scott Key). People were fretting over what to do with the Washington Monument. It was the same year Popular Mechanics published an article on scientists' recommendations for the best way to topple statues you decide you no longer like.

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Kaine got up early to watch the removal of the Lee statue from the Capitol building, and now he's proud to announce that the empty space will be filled with a statue of Barbara Rose Johns.

Thanks for the context, because we had no idea who Johns was. But now visitors to the Capitol will.

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It isn't. These are the people still in shock at seeing the East Wing being demolished.

They probably just stuck it in the basement along with all of the portraits of Confederate speakers of the House. Perhaps they'll follow Charlottesville's lead and have the Lee statue melted down to be transformed into new public artworks that celebrate inclusivity. (Actually, it was transferred to the Virginia Museum of History & Culture.)

And everyone clapped.

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Johns' statue was unveiled in Emancipation Hall on Tuesday. Good for her.

Now what to do with the problematic Jefferson Memorial and the Washington Monument?

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