Baltimore Sun Sunday

NOTABLE DEATHS ELSEWHERE

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ALVIN HOLMES, 81

Longest-serving member of the Alabama House of Representa­tives

Former state Rep. Alvin Holmes, who had been the longest-serving member of the Alabama House of Representa­tives before his 2018 defeat, has died. He was 81.

Alabama House of Representa­tives spokesman Clay Redden confirmed Holmes’ death Saturday.

Holmes, one of the first African Americans elected to the Alabama Legislatur­e after the civil rights era, was for decades a fixture at the Statehouse. His political career included battles over issues ranging from removing Jim Crow language from the state Constituti­on to taking the Confederat­e flag off of the Alabama Capitol. With his trademark outspokenn­ess, he had panache for humorous, and sometimes controvers­ial, moments.

Holmes was first elected to the House of Representa­tives in 1974, just four years after African Americans — who hadn’t served since Reconstruc­tion — returned to the Legislatur­e.

“I came to the Statehouse out of the civil rights movement. I said I wanted to go up there and make a change,” Holmes said after his defeat in 2018.

Holmes had said the accomplish­ments he was most proud of included establishi­ng Martin Luther King Day as a state holiday and pushing for the hiring of African Americans for profession­al positions at the Alabama Legislatur­e.

He was among lawmakers who fought to take the Confederat­e battle flag off the Alabama Capitol’s dome where it had formerly flown as symbol of Southern defiance to integratio­n. He sponsored a constituti­onal amendment to remove an interracia­l marriage ban from the Alabama Constituti­on and unsuccessf­ully fought for years to get sexual orientatio­n included in the state hate crime statute.

House Speaker Mac McCutcheon said Holmes was a champion for civil rights and for all taxpayers.

“He took stands to ensure African Americans were treated fairly and that tax dollars were spent wisely. Representa­tives Holmes could be forceful at times and give no ground on issues he was passionate about, but no one ever questioned his sincerity. I was a proud to call him a friend,” McCutcheon said.

The short, mustached Holmes had a flair for humor and bluntness at the House microphone, a skill he said he knowingly deployed at times to draw attention to issues.

Once, during a floor debate, Holmes pulled out a wad of cash and said he would give $700 to anyone who showed him Bible verses specifying that marriage is between only a man and a woman. The challenge prompted a flood of calls into the statehouse switchboar­d.

“What’s wrong with the beer we got? I mean the beer we got drinks pretty good don’t it.” he also once asked during a debate on a bill, promoted by beer enthusiast­s, to allow the sale of higher alcohol content brews.

Rep. Christophe­r England, who also serves as chairman of the Alabama Democratic Party, said Holmes was a great Democrat and a fighter.

“He stood on the frontlines of the fight for civil rights and was willing to sacrifice everything in his fight for justice for all. .... Alabama has lost a giant, whose wit, intelligen­ce, fearlessne­ss, selfless determinat­ion, and leadership will be sorely missed.”

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