The Mercury News

Lucius Barker, former Stanford political science chair, was 92

- By Richard Sandomir

Lucius J. Barker, a revered political scientist, former chair of Stanford’s political science department and whose profession­al expertise in race in American politics informed his personal role as a delegate for Jesse Jackson at the 1984 Democratic National Convention, died on June 21 at his home in Menlo Park. He was 92.

His daughters, Heidi Barker and Tracey Barkerstev­ens, said the cause was complicati­ons of Alzheimer’s disease.

Barker, who joined Stanford in 1990, was teaching at Washington University in St. Louis in 1984 when he joined Jackson’s presidenti­al campaign. He was known as a popular, if tough, political science professor with scholarly interests in constituti­onal law, civil liberties and the political impact of race.

To Barker, Jackson’s campaign represente­d an extraordin­ary chance for African Americans to participat­e in the political process and “another opportunit­y to work for the objectives for which Martin Luther King and others fought and died,” he wrote in “Our Time Has Come: A Delegate’s Diary of Jesse Jackson’s 1984 Presidenti­al Campaign” (1988).

As Barker contemplat­ed entering the local caucus in Missouri that led to his selection as a delegate, he thought that being part of Jackson’s campaign would be an objective academic pursuit that would help his continuing research into race and politics.

But he did not stay a neutral observer for long. He wrote that he was disappoint­ed that February when Jackson used the term “Hymie” to refer to Jews, but accepted his apology. And, he later wrote, as the convention in San Francisco opened he morphed from a “cloistered scholar to an open activist delegate.”

In his book, Barker described being upset that some Black leaders supported the party’s eventual nominee, former Vice President Walter Mondale, and tearful as he listened to Jackson’s stirring convention speech.

“What makes ‘Our Time Has Come’ stand out are Barker’s personal observatio­ns,” in particular “the pride he personally and Blacks generally felt in having a Black man run a serious race for his party’s presidenti­al nomination,” David E. Rosenbaum wrote in his review in The New York Times.

Barker would later work as a volunteer for Barack Obama’s two presidenti­al campaigns and attend Obama’s first inaugurati­on, in 2009.

Lucius Jefferson Barker was born on June 11, 1928, in Franklinto­n, Louisiana, about 60 miles north of New Orleans. His father, Twiley Barker Sr., was a teacher and principal at a Black high school in Franklinto­n. His mother, Marie (Hudson) Barker, taught elementary school there.

“There was a Black and white side of town; white schools, Black schools everything was separate,” Heidi Barker said in an interview.

At the historical­ly Black Southern University and

A&M College in Baton Rouge, Barker, inspired by a young professor, switched his major from pre-med (his family had hoped he would be a physician like the uncle he was named for) to politics.

After graduating, he earned master’s and doctoral degrees in political science at the University of Illinois, Urbana-champaign, where his brother Twiley Jr. had preceded him.

During one summer while he was in graduate school, Barker went to register to vote in Franklinto­n and was forced by the registrar to answer questions about the Constituti­on, including one about the 14th Amendment. Such questions were typical of the obstacles placed in front of Black people in the South to prevent them from registerin­g. But they were easy for him to answer.

According to an account of his career he gave in 1992 to PS: Political Science & Politics, a publicatio­n of the American Political Science Associatio­n, Barker was confident enough to poke intellectu­al fun at the white registrar.

When he was asked to explain the due process clause of the 14th Amendment, he said he could not. The registrar was apparently gleeful that he might be able to deny Barker the right to vote. “You don’t know!” the registrar said.

“No, I don’t, and neither does the Supreme Court,” Barker said, citing several cases in which the court had been unable to explain what the clause meant.

Barker was successful­ly registered. He would later administer the test to his students.

He would endure other racist incidents in graduate school and beyond, like being denied the right to eat at a lunch counter and, when he was a professor, being told by security that he couldn’t park in a faculty parking lot.

Barker began his teaching career as a fellow at the University of Illinois. He then went back to Southern University; moved to the University of Wisconsin-milwaukee;

and returned to the University of Illinois in 1967 as a professor and assistant chancellor. In 1969, he joined Washington University, where he served for a time as chair of the political science department.

Michael Mcfaul, who was hired by Barker and at Stanford and would be appointed U.S. ambassador to Russia in 2012, called him a “giant in political science” in a post on Twitter after his death, adding, “We could use his wisdom and insights right now.”

Among Barker’s published works are two textbooks: “Civil Liberties and the Constituti­on” (1970), which he edited with his brother and closest friend, Twiley Jr., and “Black Americans and the Political System” (1976), written with Jesse J. Mccorry. That book was later revised and republishe­d as “African Americans and the American Political System.”

In addition to his daughters, Barker is survived by two grandsons. His wife, Maude (Beavers) Barker, died in May.

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