McLEAN, Virginia — George Mason University is free to rename its law school for the late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia after a state council decided Tuesday it had no oversight role in the matter.
The school announced plans to rename the school for Scalia back in March. The new name is connected to a $10 million grant from the Charles Koch Foundation and a $20 million matching grant from an anonymous donor. The anonymous contribution is contingent on renaming the school.
The Charles Koch Foundation is affiliated with the billionaire industrialist who has a long history of supporting conservative and libertarian causes. It donates to universities across the country but George Mason, which has developed a reputation as a conservative powerhouse in law and economics, receives more money from the foundation by far than any other school in the country.
Opponents who objected to Scalia’s conservative legacy had wanted the State Council for Higher Education in Virginia (SCHEV) to reject the name change. The council had been scheduled to vote on the matter Tuesday at a meeting in Lexington. But after receiving advice from the state attorney general’s office, the council instead adopted a resolution stating the name change can go forward without council approval.
David Rehr, the law school’s senior associate dean, said the name change will be official on July 1. It will be called the Antonin Scalia Law School. It was initially going to be the Antonin Scalia School of Law, but the name was subjected to online mockery because it produced a vulgar acronym.









