Carlson criticizes Virginia's Lt Gov for saying he was treated 'like George Floyd or Emmett Till'


Tucker Carlson on Wednesday led criticism of a Virginia politician hoping to be elected as the state’s governor, who likened himself to George Floyd and Emmett Till.

Justin Fairfax, the Lieutenant Governor of Virginia, was accused of sexual assault in 2019 and fiercely denies the allegations, saying the relations were consensual. 

On Tuesday night in the gubernatorial debate he said that he understands what it is like to be falsely accused, and denied due process – in the way that Emmett Till and George Floyd were not given a chance. 

Fairfax, 42, who is black, said he, like them, knew what it was to be denied justice. 

‘What a hall of famer,’ said Carlson on Wednesday night, expressing disbelief at the remark.

Justin Fairfax, pictured during Tuesday's debate, in which he likened himself to Floyd and Till

Justin Fairfax, pictured during Tuesday’s debate, in which he likened himself to Floyd and Till

Tucker Carlson on Wednesday night said Fairfax's comparison was shocking

Tucker Carlson on Wednesday night said Fairfax’s comparison was shocking

‘He didn’t explain why these allegations were untrue, he admitted he knew them, they are absolutely real people.

‘They accused him, essentially, of rape.

‘And he’s Emmett Till, a kid from Chicago murdered in Mississippi?’

Till was tortured and murdered aged 14 in Mississippi in 1955 for talking to a white woman. Floyd died while being arrested for using a fake $20 bill in May last year.

Fairfax is one of five Democrats hoping to replace Ralph Northam – who cannot serve a consecutive term – in November.

The five candidates for the Democrat nomination to contest November's gubernatorial election: from left - Lee Carter, Terry McAuliffe, Jennifer McClellan, Jennifer Carroll Foy, and Fairfax

The five candidates for the Democrat nomination to contest November’s gubernatorial election: from left – Lee Carter, Terry McAuliffe, Jennifer McClellan, Jennifer Carroll Foy, and Fairfax

Another of the contenders, state senator Jennifer McClellan, later condemned his remarks.

‘The murders of Emmett Till and George Floyd were traumatic & triggering for generations of Black people,’ she said through her spokesperson, Rhyan Lake. 

‘The Lt. Gov’s comparison was shocking, unseemly, & insensitive.’ 

Adele McClure, the executive director of the state black caucus, said his remarks were ‘disgraceful’.

‘Justin has repeated his appalling comparison to Emmett Till since 2019. 

‘My heart goes out to survivors tonight as Justin Fairfax continues to repeat these traumatizing & harmful talking points that will replay again & again. 

‘This harm is not new & cannot continue.’  

The issue arose when candidates, in their first gubernatorial debate, were asked about policing in the state, in light of the current trial in Minneapolis of Derek Chauvin, accused of the murder of George Floyd.

‘The murder of George Floyd was horrific, but it recalls a history in Virginia and in our nation where African-Americans — and particularly African-American men — are presumed to be guilty, are treated inhumanely, are given no due process, and had their lives impacted, and in some cases taken away, in an instant,’ Fairfax said.

‘In the interest of speaking truth to power here… we can’t just talk theoretically about what generally happens. 

‘But we have a real-world example, where I was falsely accused in 2019.’

Fairfax said that the other four on the stage – former governor Terry McAuliffe; former state delegates Jennifer Carroll Foy and Lee Carter; and McClellan – all rushed to judgement.

Fairfax is accused by Meredith Watson of raping her in 2000, while Vanessa Tyson says he assaulted her in 2004. 

On Tuesday night, Tyson tweeted after the debate: ‘Let me be very clear: I DO NOT regret coming forward publicly about the traumatic sexual assault that took place in Boston in July 2004. 

‘I stand behind my decision to come forward and the statement I made in February 2019. There was NO conspiracy against any elected official.’ 

Fairfax vehemently denies their allegations.

Fairfax is pictured in April 2020, gaveling in the Virginia Senate in Richmond

Fairfax is pictured in April 2020, gaveling in the Virginia Senate in Richmond 

One of Fairfax's accusers on Tuesday night said she stood by her allegations

One of Fairfax’s accusers on Tuesday night said she stood by her allegations

‘Everyone here on this stage called for my immediate resignation, including Terry McAuliffe three minutes after a press release came out,’ said Fairfax.

‘He treated me like George Floyd, he treated me like Emmett Till, no due process, immediately assumed my guilt.

‘I have a son and I have a daughter. I never want my daughter to be assaulted. I don’t want my son to be falsely accused. 

‘And yet this is the real world that we live in. 

‘And so we need to speak truth to power and be very clear about how it impacts people’s lives.’

It is not the first time that Fairfax has compared him to black people killed at the hands of white people.

In 2019, when the sexual assault allegations were first made, Fairfax compared himself to Jim Crow-era lynching victims in a surprise Senate speech, as he resists widespread calls to resign. 

Vanessa Tyson (pictured) accused Fairfax of forcing her to perform oral sex in his hotel room during the Democratic National Convention in Boston in 2004

Vanessa Tyson (pictured) accused Fairfax of forcing her to perform oral sex in his hotel room during the Democratic National Convention in Boston in 2004

‘I’ve heard much about anti-lynching on the floor of this very Senate, where people were not given any due process whatsoever, and we rue that,’ Fairfax said, referencing legislation the General Assembly passed expressing ‘profound regret’ for lynchings in Virginia between 1877 and 1950. 

‘And we talk about hundreds, at least 100 terror lynchings that have happened in the Commonwealth of Virginia under those very same auspices,’ he said.

‘And yet we stand here in a rush to judgment with nothing but accusations and no facts and we decide that we are willing to do the same thing.’

When he finished his five-minute impromptu speech, stunned senators sat in awkward silence.

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