Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Mississipp­i politico, civil rights figure Charles Evers has died

- By Emily Wagster Pettus

JACKSON, MISS. » Charles Evers, the older brother of slain civil rights leader Medgar Evers and a longtime figure in Mississipp­i politics, died Wednesday. He was 97.

Evers died of “natural causes” at a home in the Jackson, Mississipp­i, suburb of Brandon, where he was surrounded by relatives, Rankin County Coroner David Ruth told The Associated Press. Ruth said the cause of death was not the coronaviru­s, and no autopsy is planned.

Charles and Medgar Evers both served in the military during World War II, and they became active in the NAACP when they returned to their home state of Mississipp­i and continued to face discrimina­tion.

Medgar Evers had been field secretary for the Mississipp­i NAACP for more than eight years when he was assassinat­ed outside his Jackson home in June 1963. In 1968, a former fertilizer salesman and self-avowed white supremacis­t, Byron De La Beckwith, went on trial twice in the killing, but all-white juries deadlocked and did not convict him.

The case was later revived, and a jury of eight African Americans and four white people convicted Beckwith of murder in 1994. The Mississipp­i Supreme Court upheld that conviction in 1997.

“Before, the killer of a Black man would go free. Now we know you just can’t go out and kill a Black man or woman and nothing is done,” Charles Evers said after that Supreme Court decision. “Justice finally came.”

Charles Evers was appointed to lead the Mississipp­i NAACP after his brother was killed. In 1969, he was elected mayor of the southweste­rn Mississipp­i town of Fayette, becoming the first Black mayor of a multiracia­l town in the state since Reconstruc­tion.

During his widely varied career, Charles Evers ran several businesses in Chicago and Mississipp­i. A Mississipp­i Blues Trail marker commemorat­es his career as a concert promoter with blues legend B.B. King, and it notes that Charles Evers was once in the bootleg liquor business.

Republican U.S. Sen. Roger Wicker of Mississipp­i said in a statement Wednesday that Charles Evers was one of his favorite people, with a career that “covered the spectrum from his roguish youth to a respected civil rights leader, mayor, businessma­n and radio host.”

“Charles Evers was never afraid to challenge the accepted norms or fly in the face of political correctnes­s,” Wicker said. “As an elected official, he navigated the circuitous route from Freedom Democrat to Independen­t to

Republican . ... He used his powerful personalit­y and platform to change Mississipp­i for the better.”

Evers ran unsuccessf­ully for an open U.S. House seat as a Democrat in 1968. He served on the Democratic National Committee in the mid-1970s.

He ran as an independen­t for Mississipp­i governor in 1971 and for a U.S. Senate seat in 1978. Although he lost those elections, Evers influenced the outcome of the Senate race by drawing support away from the Democratic candidate. That led to a victory by Republican Thad Cochran, who later became chairman of the powerful Appropriat­ions Committee and remained in the Senate until early 2018.

Evers endorsed Ronald Reagan for president in 1980, and served as a delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1996. He publicly supported Democrat Barack Obama for president in 2008 and 2012. Then, after the 2016 presidenti­al election, Evers cast one of Mississipp­i’s six electoral votes for Republican Donald Trump.

Trump on Tuesday tweeted a photo of Evers sitting with him in the White House.

“I am deeply saddened by the loss of my friend Charles Evers,” Trump wrote. “Charles was a trail blazer in politics and a fearless leader, alongside his brother Medgar, for Civil Rights.”

On the day Evers cast the electoral vote for Trump, he described himself as an “independen­t Republican.”

“I’m a great believer in earning something. Democrats always want to give away something,” Evers said after the electors voted.

He said he is a longtime supporter of Trump.

“He’s a multimilli­onaire,” Evers said. “I like rich folks. Can’t nobody buy him.”

 ?? ROGELIO V. SOLIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Charles Evers, brother of slain civil rights leader Medgar Evers, attends the funeral for blues legend B.B.
King at Bell Grove Missionary Baptist Church in Indianola, Miss., May 30, 2015. Evers, a longtime figure in Mississipp­i politics, died Wednesday, July 22, 2020. He was 97.
ROGELIO V. SOLIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Charles Evers, brother of slain civil rights leader Medgar Evers, attends the funeral for blues legend B.B. King at Bell Grove Missionary Baptist Church in Indianola, Miss., May 30, 2015. Evers, a longtime figure in Mississipp­i politics, died Wednesday, July 22, 2020. He was 97.

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