The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Activist known for his get-out-the-vote mobilizati­on

He helped build teams in Atlanta mayoral campaigns.

- By Phil Kloer MICHAEL LANGFORD Staff writer Ernie Suggs contribute­d to this story.

Michael Langford had just graduated from Morris Brown College in October 1980 when he helped organize more than 300 people to search for bodies and clues in the Atlanta Child Murders case. Their first search discovered the remains of 7-year-old LaTonya Wilson in some brush near her northwest Atlanta home.

Years later, in 2021, Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms appointed Langford to her Anti-Violence Advisory Council, which was tasked with reviewing the city’s approach to violent crime.

In the four decades in between, Langford was a businessma­n, community activist and get-out-the-vote mobilizer who was connected, whether as insider or as outsider, to the line of Atlanta mayors that goes back to Maynard Jackson in the 1970s.

“In every city in this country, whether it’s Cleveland or New York or San Francisco, there’s always a guy who’s known for getting out the vote. Michael Langford was that guy for Atlanta,” said Vincent Fort, former Georgia state senator and Atlanta mayoral candidate.

“He was an impeccable organizer,” said Derrick Boazman, former Atlanta City Councilman and one of Langford’s closest friends. “If it was a mound of ants, somehow he could get them organized.”

“The brother wrote the blueprint for how to maintain connection­s to your community if you were going to be in politics,” Boazman said.

Michael Langford died Nov. 16, 2021, of sarcoidosi­s at Emory Midtown Hospital. He was 63.

He was born Oct. 7, 1958, in Atlanta to Arthur Sr. and Florence Langford, and got into politics as a teenager attending community meetings with his father. He was close to his older brother, Arthur Langford Jr., an Atlanta City Councilman and Georgia state senator. Arthur Jr. founded the United Youth Adult Conference (UYAC), a community-driven organizati­on that provides leadership training to teens, and Michael stepped in as president after his brother’s death in 1994.

He built teams of volunteers in the mayoral campaigns of Jackson and Andrew Young. Those community roots helped him become field operations chief for Bill Campbell’s mayoral run in 1993, and then to become Campbell’s director of community affairs.

Langford was Campbell’s director of community affairs for eight years. Campbell said that he probably would not have been elected mayor of the city twice without the man he called “perhaps the most influentia­l political activist over the last 50 years in Atlanta.”

“His remarkable skills in community context made him a genius in analyzing get out the vote efforts, in mobilizing communitie­s of color and having his instincts on the issues that mattered to communitie­s that had been underserve­d,” Campbell said. “That is why he was so widely appreciate­d. He was not as publicly heralded. His efforts were obvious, but his fingerprin­ts were rarely seen.”

Former Mayor Shirley Franklin recalled: “Michael was as likely to be on the side with me as on the other side protesting something. But it was never personal. It was always kind and profession­al. He stood up around issues of housing affordabil­ity, getting top quality community policing, environmen­tal issues.

“He was always willing to collaborat­e with other people and to listen,” Franklin added. “He was a good listener, actually. He had a point of view, but he didn’t try to talk over you, he didn’t try to talk you down.”

Langford was a regional vice president of Westcare, a national nonprofit that works with people with mental health and addiction issues. He also was head of Diversifie­d Resolution­s, Inc., a public relations and management consulting firm that worked with corporate, not-for-profit and political clients.

When the Langford brothers organized the first citizen searches in the Atlanta Child Murders case in 1980, “they took it upon themselves to step forward, and in many ways set the tone that each of us needs to do what we can to protect our children,” said Franklin.

In May 2019, Bottoms appointed Langford to the Atlanta Children’s Memorial Task Force to decide how the city should memorializ­e the victims of the Atlanta Child Murders.

For many years on Christmas Eve, Langford organized members of UYAC and others to sing Christmas carols and deliver food baskets to elderly residents in Atlanta neighborho­ods such as Mechanicsv­ille and Pittsburgh.

“He just wanted to make sure people had a basket and felt loved,” his son, Michael Jr., recalled. “He’d call them in advance and let them know so they weren’t surprised or scared to see all those people in their yard.”

When he died, Langford was working on canvassing for mayoral candidate Andre Dickens.

“He was doing what he did best,” Vincent Fort said, “which was getting people to the polls.”

Survivors include his children, Mickiaya, Alvin, Michael Jr., and Arthur; mother Florence; sisters Cathy Lindsey (Willie) and Gloria Langford; former wife Tracy Woods; fiancé Allison Robinson; and six grandchild­ren.

A public viewing will be held 2-6 p.m. Tuesday at Willie A. Watkins Historic West End Chapel, 1003 Ralph David Abernathy Blvd. in Atlanta. A Celebratio­n of Life Service for will be at noon Wednesday at West Hunter Street Baptist Church, 1040 Ralph David Abernathy Blvd., Atlanta.

 ?? AJC FILE ?? Michael Langford “was an impeccable organizer,” said Derrick Boazman, former city councilman and one of Langford’s closest friends.
AJC FILE Michael Langford “was an impeccable organizer,” said Derrick Boazman, former city councilman and one of Langford’s closest friends.

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