Virginia to Remove Statue of 
Confederate General Robert E. Lee Plans to remove the monument in the city of Richmond 
will be revealed Thursday by Governor Ralph Northam. A senior administration official tells 
the Associated Press (AP) that the statue 
of Lee will be put into storage. The official adds that Northam's administration 
will discuss plans to move it to a new location. The move comes amid nationwide protests 
against police brutality and racism after 
the death of George Floyd. Confederate monuments have become targets of Virginia protesters. Besides General Lee, Monument Avenue has 
four other Confederate monuments. They include statues of Confederate President 
Jefferson Davis and Confederate General 
Stonewall Jackson. They have also been hit with graffiti 
messages such as "stop white supremacy." Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney has revealed 
that he plans to take down the other statues 
from Monument Avenue as well. Levar Stoney, 
via statement Bill Gallasch, president of the 
Monument Avenue Preservation Society, 
opposes the decision to remove the monuments. According to AP, Gallasch believes removing the 
statues will hurt tourism in Richmond and create 
violence between groups on both sides of the issue.