Miami Herald

Republican lawmakers should honor Justice Joseph Hatchett

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Justice Joseph Woodrow Hatchett, a barrier-breaking man of great distinctio­n, was the first Black judge on the Florida Supreme Court. To honor his memory, Congress was recently set to name the Tallahasse­e federal courthouse after him.

The Senate, including Florida Republican­s Marco Rubio and Rick Scott, unanimousl­y supported the measure. But it failed in the House at the last minute when Republican­s, including Tampa Bay representa­tives Gus Bilirakis of Palm Harbor, Vern Buchanan of Longboat Key and Scott Franklin of Lakeland, voted against the honor, even though they had co-sponsored the measure. To his credit, Rep. Daniel Webster voted yes. So did five other Florida Republican­s and all 11 Democrats.

Why the change of heart? It seems as simple as the cowardice of their conviction­s, and they should be ashamed. Turns out the late judge had written a federal appeals court ruling against prayer at a public high school graduation in Duval County in the 1990s. This was no maverick decision. He cited and followed the precedent of the U.S. Supreme Court.

Worse, this “news” — that the judge followed precedent and upheld the Constituti­on — emerged as the House was voting, and it came from a decadesold news clipping circulated by Rep. Andrew Clyde, a Georgia Republican who made his own headlines when he voted against the Emmett Till Anti-Lynching Act and for comparing the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol to “a normal tourist visit.” In the end, the Hatchett bill failed to gain the required two-thirds majority. The near-party line vote was 238 yes to 187 no, including 10 Florida Republican­s.

Bilirakis voted no “after learning of a controvers­ial ruling by Judge Hatchett against studentled school prayer,” a spokespers­on for the congressma­n told the Tampa Bay Times’ William March. Perhaps the congressma­n has an alternativ­e definition of “controvers­ial.” It is not controvers­ial to follow the Constituti­on and the precedents establishe­d by the U.S. Supreme Court. No, it is honorable.

In fact, let’s talk about “honorable,” because Judge Hatchett was the very definition of the word. Hatchett, born in 1932, was the son of a maid and a fruit picker. He grew up in Clearwater in the Jim Crow South. He graduated from historical­ly Black Florida A&M University in 1954, served as an Army officer and entered Howard University School of Law in 1956. Attending law school at the flagship University of Florida was out of the question. University of Florida didn’t admit Black students then.

When he took the bar exam, because he was Black, he couldn’t even stay in the hotel where the test was administer­ed. Yet, he persevered. He became a U.S. magistrate in 1971, making him the first Black federal judicial officer in the

South. And then in 1975, Gov. Reubin Askew appointed him to the state Supreme Court at a time when the court was stuck in scandal. He won reelection in 1976, becoming the first Black candidate to win a statewide election since Reconstruc­tion. President Jimmy Carter appointed him a federal judge, the first Black federal judge in the Deep South. He served two decades and became chief judge of the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals in

Atlanta, where he wrote the school prayer opinion that followed the Constituti­on. He died a year ago, having led a life that by any normal definition was honorable.

So what was not “honorable”? What the Florida congressme­n who switched their votes did in fear of the current misbegotte­n orthodoxie­s of what once was the party of Lincoln.

To their credit, Scott had said he was “proud to honor the life and legacy” of Hatchett, and Rubio said Hatchett “lived an inspiring life of service” and, “his story is worthy of commemorat­ion.”

While Florida’s two Republican senators were right, 10 of Florida’s Republican members of Congress couldn’t be more wrong. They should be embarrasse­d.

Judge Hatchett’s Democratic and GOP supporters should persuade the Florida Republican­s who voted no to rethink, and Florida’s congressio­nal delegation should give its unanimous support to properly recognize the legacy of the Honorable Joseph Hatchett, for whom “honorable” wasn’t just a title but a way of life.

©2022 Tampa Bay Times

 ?? Courtesy Florida Supreme Court ?? Former Florida Supreme Court Justice Joseph W. Hatchett was the first African American to serve on Florida’s highest court.
Courtesy Florida Supreme Court Former Florida Supreme Court Justice Joseph W. Hatchett was the first African American to serve on Florida’s highest court.

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