RICHMOND BEAT: Westboro Baptist Church Targets Del. Roem for Richmond Protest

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Member of the Westboro Baptist Church holds incendiary protest signs.

By Rosemarie O’Connor of Capital News Service

RICHMOND — Westboro Baptist Church is planning to visit Virginia Commonwealth University and the Virginia State Capitol on March 11, though it’s unclear how much access the group will have to university grounds.

The Westboro Baptist Church is infamous for its posters that feature slurs against the LGBTQ community and its practice of picketing soldiers’ funerals. The Southern Poverty Law Center calls the church “arguably the most obnoxious and rabid hate group in America.”

According to the VCU policies and events website, members of the public may use university property “only by invitation” from a university employee or student.

However, the public may reserve the Park Plaza amphitheater without an invitation “no more than five days in advance of the desired date of use.”

VCU prohibits expression that is not protected by law, such as obscenity and fighting words.

VCU officials tweeted that they are aware of the WBC’s plans to demonstrate “on City of Richmond public property, near campus.”

“While their views are antithetical to VCU's core values of diversity and inclusion, their free speech — and ours — is a guaranteed constitutional right,” the tweet said.

Danica Roem (D) is sworn in as Virginia Delegate representing the 13th District, which includes Manassas, Manassas Park and Gainesville.

A press release from Westboro Baptist Church for the State Capitol event includes hateful language toward Del. Danica Roem, D-Prince William, Virginia’s first transgender woman elected to the General Assembly.

Roem, who has inspired the LGBTQ community, said in a 2017 MSNBC interview: “You can champion inclusion, you can champion equality and equity and you can win.” She has also said that she wants the press to focus on her policies, not her gender.

She defeated 13-term incumbent Robert G. Marshall, who unsuccessfully sponsored legislation known widely as the “bathroom bill,” which would have required people to use the restroom that corresponded with the gender on their birth certificate.

In a social media post, Roem wrote: "My response to the Westboro Baptist Church protesting my existence — and please use this quote in its entirety as I put the amount of thought the situation warrants into it: 

“Meh.”

She further invited people to donate to her campaign. 

When members of the Westboro Baptist Church visited Richmond in 2010, they encountered hundreds of counter-protesters. They visited the Virginia Holocaust Museum in Shockoe Bottom along with other Jewish cultural centers.

The group’s final stop during the 2010 visit was Hermitage High School on Hungary Spring Road in Henrico County, where church members faced hundreds of young counter-demonstrators. Westboro Baptist Church did not visit VCU that year, but students staged a silent anti-hate rally anyway.

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