When the College of Charleston selected South Carolina Lt. Gov. Glenn McConnell to be its next president, it did so under a haze of controversy and dissent from students and faculty alike.
And in newly released documents, it appears that the school’s board of trustees appointed the polarizing figure against the advice of the search committee it paid to find a new president, and against the protestations of board members who feared McConnell would be a divisive figure in the college community.
Members of the college’s presidential search committee even warned the board of the possibility of public fallout if the board went outside of the list of final candidates it recommended, according to The Post and Courier and minutes from a board of trustees meeting provided to msnbc by a student organization.
McConnell has long been an outsized and contentious figure in the state. As a member of the legislature, McConnell fought hard to keep the Confederate flag flying over the state capitol building. He’s been a Confederate sympathizer and an avid Civil War re-enactor. In more recent years, McConnell ignited a maelstrom after a photo of him dressed as a Confederate general and posing with a pair of African Americans in slave garb went viral.
His appointment earlier this month sparked widespread protests, as students, clergy and local civil rights organizations said McConnell’s appointment muddies the college’s image and hurts efforts to diversify its student body.
During the search process, Sharon Kingman — a member of the presidential search committee and chair of the College of Charleston Foundation, a non-profit fundraiser for the school — and six other search committee members wrote a letter to the board of trustees saying that if “the politicization of this process occurs, the consequences will be far-reaching,” according to The Post and Courier. The letter reportedly went on to say that reputable search firms would no longer work with the college and that the erosion of trust would damage the school’s ability to recruit faculty and staff in the future.
But it also could cause “nearly every constituent group on campus” to lose confidence in the board of trustees, the letter said.
The letter was signed by a number of faculty leaders, including the speaker of the faculty Senate, an assistant athletic director, dean of the School of Education, Health and Human Performance and president of the Student Government Association (SGA).
The board hired McConnell in late March to the $300,000-a-year job, though he was reportedly not among the search committees list of finalists. A wide umbrella group of demonstrators held rallies and protests on campus demanding McConnell’s removal. Petitions were circulated. And the SGA and faculty Senate both gave the board a vote of no-confidence.
McConnell, who has never worked in higher education, beat out a handful of finalists with extensive experience working in colleges and universities, including University of West Florida Provost Martha Saunders and Dennis Encarnation, a consultant and fellow at Harvard University.
Before becoming lieutenant governor, McConnell spent about three decades as a state legislator, rising to the post of president of the state Senate. Opponents of his appointment as college president say the legislature essentially strong-armed the board of trustees into tapping McConnell for the position.
Kingman, the search committee member, told The Post and Courier that lawmakers pressured trustees to select McConnell despite the committee’s recommendations.









