Los Angeles Times

An activist turned pundit

JOE HICKS

- By Corina Knoll

Joe Hicks, a Los Angeles community activist whose views as a black conservati­ve were solicited often by the media, died Sunday at St. John’s Health Center in Santa Monica after complicati­ons from a routine hernia operation. He was 75.

In recent years Hicks — with his bald head and thick mustache — had become a familiar right-wing pundit in debates over the high-profile shooting deaths of black people at the hands of police officers. He cautioned against racial distrust, argued there were legitimate reasons why black communitie­s draw police attention and was ambivalent about the Black Lives Matter movement.

“He would take a stand on an issue because he thought it was right, whether it was popular or not,” said David Lehrer, who co-founded with Hicks the L.A. race relations think tank Community Advocates. “He had a very strong moral compass. He was firm and strong and principled and warm.”

In a letter published in the Los Angeles Times shortly after George Zimmerman was acquitted in the death of Trayvon

Martin, Hicks and Lehrer contended there was “no wave of bigotry directed at blacks. All this talk is demagogic posturing, and it’s dangerous .... The biggest threat to the lives of young blacks is other young blacks, not white bigots.”

Hicks’ path as an activist was curious.

He began as a militant radical in the Black Power movement and became a card-carrying communist in the 1970s. Then, two decades later, Hicks found his niche as a conservati­ve.

Recently, though, he quit the Republican Party because of his disgust with Donald Trump.

The youngest of three children, Hicks was born into an impoverish­ed South Los Angeles family. His mother stayed at home while his father picked up odd jobs, at one point laboring on a farm.

After graduating from Jefferson High School, where he was a highly regarded sprinter, Hicks took courses at Cal State Los Angeles with notions of becoming an architectu­ral draftsman. Dissuaded by the lack of black profession­als in the field, he joined the Navy, spending time in Japan.

By the time the Watts riots broke out, Hicks had returned to Los Angeles. Sitting on his front porch, he was outraged to see military personnel coming down the street, their guns aimed at him.

“That was his complete radicaliza­tion moment,” recalled his former wife, Elizabeth Hicks. “Before that he was mildly interested in history and politics, but that was the point where he went, ‘This is not OK.’ ”

The two met while working in support of affirmativ­e action on college campuses. Years later, one of their daughters would climb onto the lap of visiting South African leader Nelson Mandela — an exciting moment for the couple who had been involved in the antiaparth­eid movement. At the time, Hicks subscribed to a black nationalis­t viewpoint and considered himself extremely liberal.

An auto enthusiast, Hicks wrote for car magazines, but took a job as the communicat­ions director of the local chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union.

In the early 1990s, he became executive director of the greater Los Angeles chapter of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, the civil rights group once presided over by Martin Luther King Jr.

Hicks also co-chaired the Black-Korean Alliance and was a regular co-host of KCET’s public affairs program “Life & Times.”

From 1997 to 2001, he served as the executive director of the L.A. City Human Relations Commission under Mayor Richard Riordan.

Around that time, Hicks began reexaminin­g his politics. Elizabeth Hicks believes Sept. 11 contribute­d to his disenchant­ment.

“It really made him and myself reevaluate our stances,” she said. “It was the feeling of being attacked as a nation. We were hypercriti­cal before and we learned to realize the freedoms we have here are important and need to be valued. I stayed liberal and he went the other direction.”

Friends say the change was also influenced by Hicks’ travels as an advocate of affirmativ­e action. He took on former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke in a debate at Cal State Northridge that nearly incited a riot.

But research on the policy eventually led Hicks to believe it wasn’t in the best interest of students of color.

“A pillar of what he had believed for years kind of crumbled,” Lehrer said.

Hicks became a staunch critic of affirmativ­e action and gained a reputation for his unapologet­ic but thoughtful approach on heated issues of race, appearing on scores of local and national television and radio shows, and publishing myriad opinion pieces. For three years, he hosted the weekly “Joe Hicks Show” on KFI-AM (640).

Hicks took care to set aside his role as commentato­r and reveled in attending his children’s sports events, family members said.

He is survived by his four daughters, Tamani Hicks-Littleton, Hasani Hicks-McGriff, Katarina Hicks and Natasha Hicks; his son, Jabali Hicks; and his sister Annie Hicks-Roberts.

 ?? Kirk McKoy Los Angeles Times ?? ON THE POLITICAL SCENE Joe Hicks was a Black Power militant before shifting to right-wing politics. The L.A. civil rights advocate shared his views on local and national media.
Kirk McKoy Los Angeles Times ON THE POLITICAL SCENE Joe Hicks was a Black Power militant before shifting to right-wing politics. The L.A. civil rights advocate shared his views on local and national media.
 ?? Ed Carreon For The Times ?? ‘STRONG MORAL COMPASS’ Hicks, once an advocate of affirmativ­e action, became a staunch critic of the policy later in life. “He would take a stand on an issue because he thought it was right,” a friend says.
Ed Carreon For The Times ‘STRONG MORAL COMPASS’ Hicks, once an advocate of affirmativ­e action, became a staunch critic of the policy later in life. “He would take a stand on an issue because he thought it was right,” a friend says.

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