"This is about admitting wrong," Keel told Sputnik Radio's Loud & Clear on Thursday. "We're asking for our Democratic leadership to just air it out, and let's start new. We can't go forward unless we do that, and that begins with the resignation of Ralph Northam."
Within the last six days, Virginia's Democratic leadership has begun collapsing on itself after three of its high-level members were caught up in scandal after scandal. It first began last week when a photo emerged from Northam's 1984 medical school yearbook of two people, one in blackface and the other sporting a Ku Klux Klan hood and robes.
Northam later admitted and then denied being in the picture before revealing that he had previously darkened his face to look like Michael Jackson for a 1984 dance contest.
The next scandal centered around Virginia Lt. Gov. Justin Fairfax, who was accused by a woman named Vanessa Tyson of committing sexual assault during an encounter at the 2004 Democratic National Convention in Boston. Fairfax has strongly rejected the accusations, and Tyson released a statement on Wednesday saying, "What began as consensual kissing quickly turned into a sexual assault."
Taking note of the crumbling pieces, State Attorney General Mark Herring on Wednesday came clean about a 1980 incident in which he, too, appeared in blackface to impersonate rapper Kurtis Blow. This revelation came days after Herring called on Northam to resign over his offense.
"This political moment is about naming the legacy of white supremacy in Virginia politics," Keel told host John Kiriakou.
"Yes, blackface is offensive, but racist policies do destroy lives, and we see institutional racism playing out here locally in Richmond with the Navy Hill development, and… we also see the institution of racism playing out statewide due to the construction of Mountain Valley and Atlantic Coast pipelines."
In August 2017, the city of Charlottesville, Virginia, saw chaos as a result of a series of clashes between protesters and members of a white nationalist rally. The weekend rally claimed the life of counterprotester Heather Heyer after 20-year-old James Alex Fields plowed his car into a group of demonstrators. Nineteen others were injured in the attack.
Two state troopers were also killed during the weekend after their helicopter, which they were using to monitor the rally, crashed outside of the city.
"Charlottesville really exemplified the fact that there are white supremacist, neo-Nazis ready and willing to take arms and to continue to harm and destroy black communities, indigenous communities and communities of color," Keel told Kiriakou.
"And then those very folks are supported by policies and are supported by a government that allows them to continue to cause terror. That's what Charlottesville was and is."
Virginia has a lot of work to do in order to right its wrongs, Keel said, noting that it ultimately begins with "elected leaders stepping down when asked [or] when demanded to step down."
"And the ones who are there already need to truly take a firm stance on protecting and supporting marginalized communities who need them," she said.