Baltimore Sun Sunday

NOTABLE DEATHS ELSEWHERE Joe Madison, 74

- Radio host and civil rights activist

Joe Madison, an influentia­l talk radio host with a rumbling musical baritone, who interviewe­d President Barack Obama in the Oval Office and numerous other political leaders in his Washington, D.C., studio, urging them to take action on civil and human rights issues, has died at his home in Washington. He was 74.

His family announced the death Thursday but did not specify when it occurred. In December, Madison said in a statement that he was taking a leave from his daily show, on SiriusXM radio, after learning that his prostate cancer had returned; it had been in remission since it was first diagnosed in 2009.

Madison was ranked the No. 6 most important talk show host in the country in 2023 by Talkers Magazine on its Heavy Hundred list, where he was also the highest-ranked nonwhite host.

“Joe Madison was the voice of a generation,” President Joe Biden said in a post on social media this week. “Whether it was a hunger strike for voting rights or his advocacy for anti-lynching legislatio­n that I was proud to sign in 2022, Joe fought hard against injustice.”

Madison, a former senior official with the NAACP, blended on-air social activism with advocacy outside the studio. He participat­ed in a 73-day hunger strike in 2021 to urge Congress to strengthen voting rights laws after Democrats had gained control of the Senate and the White House.

On Madison’s show, Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York, the new majority leader, pledged to get behind long-stalled anti-lynching legislatio­n because, he said, Black voters had played a crucial role in returning Democrats to power and “we owe them.”

“Nobody fought harder for his beliefs and his community than Joe Madison,” Schumer said in a statement.

Other recent guests included Vice President Kamala Harris, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, Rep. Nancy Pelosi of California when she was speaker of the House, and Rep. James Clyburn of South Carolina.

At the congressio­nal signing of the Emmett Till Anti-Lynching Act in 2021, Pelosi thanked Madison for championin­g it.

His broadcast — 6 a.m. to 10 a.m. Monday through Friday — was on the Urban View channel on SiriusXM, which Madison joined exclusivel­y in 2013. For decades before that he was a fiery personalit­y on two Washington talk radio stations, WWRC-AM and WOL-AM, where he was known as “the judge” for fact-checking callers.

“People will call and try to give you misinforma­tion,” he told The Washington Post in 2013. “Most people get upset out of frustratio­n. They don’t like being challenged, but that is how I grew up — people challenged your thought process.”

Before entering radio in 1980, he was the political director of the NAACP and served on its national board for 14 years. While there, he led a march from Los Angeles to Baltimore to promote voter registrati­on.

Madison continued his political activism as a radio host. He was arrested in 2001 after handcuffin­g himself to the Sudanese Embassy in Washington; he had made repeated broadcasts to raise awareness of modern-day slavery in that African country. He made several trips to Sudan and, working with the Swiss-based Christian Solidarity Internatio­nal, helped free Sudanese who were being held as slaves.

In 1996, Madison was arrested while leading a protest outside CIA headquarte­rs after repeatedly accusing the agency on his show of contributi­ng to an explosion of crack cocaine use in Black communitie­s in the 1980s. The allegation­s were raised in a series of articles in The San Jose Mercury News. A Michigan congressma­n, Rep. John Conyers Jr., called into Madison’s show to praise him for raising the issue, but critics said Madison was spreading a conspiracy theory to Black listeners.

A House Intelligen­ce Committee investigat­ion later found no evidence linking the CIA to the epidemic.

In 2015, Madison remained on the air for 52 straight hours to raise money for the Smithsonia­n National Museum of African American History and Culture.

Joseph Edward Madison was born June 16, 1949, in Dayton, Ohio, to Felix Madison, a press operator, and Nancy (Stone) Madison. He was the first in his family to graduate from college, earning a Bachelor of Arts in sociology in 1971 from Washington University in St. Louis, where he was a running back on the Bears football team, a baritone soloist in the campus choir and a DJ for the campus radio station.

At 24, he became director of the NAACP’s Detroit branch. His radio career began at Detroit’s WXYZ-AM. After moving to Washington, his popularity led to national syndicatio­n of his show, then to a deal with SiriusXM, the satellite platform available to subscriber­s nationally. He called himself “The Black Eagle” on air. He was inducted into the Radio Hall of Fame in 2019.

In 1977, Madison married Sharon L. Moore, who survives him, along with four children, Shawna, Jason, Monesha and Michelle; five grandchild­ren; and one great-grandchild.

Madison often posed a trademark challenge to guests: “What are you going to do about it?”

“I always have seen myself as a person who recognizes that one person can make a difference,” he explained in 2013. “Rosa Parks was a seamstress. Mabel Teel was a mother. Fannie Lou was a sharecropp­er. President Obama was a community organizer.”

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