The Capital

A STRONG NATIONAL VOICE IS STILLED

Rep. Cummings rose from segregated childhood to powerful political voice in Baltimore, Washington

- By Jeff Barker

U.S. Rep. Elijah Cummings — the son of sharecropp­ers who rose to become a House committee chairman and Baltimore icon — often spoke of the need to leave a legacy for “generation­s unborn,” but said he was unsure how his own contributi­ons might be remembered.

“I’m here for a season and a reason,” the veteran Democratic lawmaker said this summer in his Capitol Hill office, sitting below framed photograph­s of civil rights leaders Nelson Mandela and Coretta Scott King. “I don’t know why I’m here, I don’t know how long I’ll be here, but I’m here. And I’m going to make the best of it.”

Colleagues defined Cummings’ legacy as his devotion to Baltimore and civil rights, and his adherence to civility in a fractured political climate, even as he pursued an impeachmen­t inquiry into President Donald Trump from his role as chairman of the House Oversight and Reform Committee.

Cummings, 68, died about 2:45 a.m. Thursday due to complicati­ons from longstandi­ng health problems. He was a patient of Gilchrist Hospice Care, a member of his staff said.

“He used to always say, ‘Our children are our living messengers to a future we will never see,’” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said. “He wanted to be sure that that future was going to be better for them and that they would bring with them our values.”

Other members of Congress said Cummings would be remembered for preaching calm, and his frequent exhortatio­ns of “We are better than this!”

He “brought peace where there was no peace,” House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, a Southern Maryland Democrat, said on the House floor. He recalled Cummings walking the streets of Baltimore, counseling against violence during unrest following the 2015 death of Freddie Gray from injuries suffered in police custody. Cummings was among the speakers at Gray’s funeral, asking people if they truly “saw” Gray before he died.

His constituen­ts framed his legacy as that of a father figure and a civil rights icon, ranking him with the late Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and the Rev. Jesse Jackson.

“He stood up, put himself out there so we could get a better life,” said Matthew Hubbard, 45, a barber in West Baltimore.

As part of his own thinking about his legacy, Cummings said he tried to set an example for younger members of his committee, such as the outspoken progressiv­es Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, Ayanna Pressley of Massachuse­tts and Rashida Tlaib of Michigan.

“One day, they’ll be sitting in Pelosi’s shoes,” Cummings said. “Nelson Mandela said … the greatest person and the strongest person is the one who was able to hold their emotions in when they feel they should strike out. And I believe in that. If you ever hear me raise my voice, it’s because I believe that somebody is trying to get something over on me.”

Cummings had been absent from Capitol Hill in recent weeks while he was sick. But his death came as a surprise, as it was not known publicly he was in hospice care, when medical

and other services are provided for people who are terminally ill. Cummings’ staff did not say why or when he was moved to hospice care and did not respond to questions about the cause of death.

Bishop Walter Thomas of New Psalmist Baptist Church, where Cummings worshiped for nearly 40 years, said he spoke with Cummings as he was going into hospice and said the congressma­n was there “for only a matter of hours.” Thomas declined to comment further, citing pastoral confidenti­ality.

The congressma­n’s wife, Maya Rockeymoor­e Cummings, said in a statement that “he worked until his last breath.”

Cummings had not participat­ed in a House roll call vote since Sept. 11. He missed a key committee hearing in mid-September, and his office said then he had undergone a medical procedure. Statements from his office suggested he would be back in a week or so, and later that he would return when the House came back Tuesday from a recess, but Cummings did not appear.

“I did not know he was this gravely ill,” said Larry Gibson, a University of Maryland law professor and civil rights activist who knew Cummings for more than 50 years and said he spoke with him last week. “He would tell me I was his mentor. He was my brother. He was my friend.”

Cummings had other health issues in recent years. In 2017, he underwent a procedure to correct a narrowing of the aortic valve in the heart. The surgery led to an infection that kept him in the hospital longer than expected. He was later hospitaliz­ed for a knee infection, but he said this summer that his health was fine. In recent years, Cummings used a wheelchair to get around and braced himself with a walker when he stood.

According to state law, Republican Gov. Larry Hogan will need to announce plans by Oct. 28 for a primary and a general election to fill the vacancy.

The committee Cummings chaired is among three panels leading the impeachmen­t inquiry of Trump, a Republican. Under House rules, Rep. Carolyn Maloney of New York becomes acting chairwoman because she ranked second in seniority on the committee, said a senior Democratic leadership aide. A caucus process to elect a permanent chair has not yet been announced.

Previously a trial attorney and Maryland state delegate, Cumming had been a member of Congress since 1996. He became a national figure in 2019 as chairman of the committee. With Democrats assuming the House majority after the 2018 elections, he won the ability to demand documents related to Trump’s personal finances and policies, as well as possible abuses at federal agencies.

Hogan called Cummings “a fierce advocate for civil rights and for Maryland for more than three decades. Congressma­n Cummings leaves behind an incredible legacy of fighting for Baltimore city and working to improve people’s lives.”

In the U.S. House, Cummings voted in 2002 against a U.S. military invasion of Iraq, citing insufficie­nt evidence that the country had weapons of mass destructio­n. He chaired the Congressio­nal Black Caucus in 2003 and 2004.

Cummings was a staunch advocate for transit, which he viewed as crucial for providing a “better future” for Baltimorea­ns, especially those living in the city’s impoverish­ed areas. The congressma­n urged Amtrak to move forward with the renovation of Baltimore’s Penn Station, which he said “should be an economic engine,” and was a staunch supporter of the proposed Red Line, a planned east-west light rail project in Baltimore that Hogan canceled.

Cummings clashed with Trump and his administra­tion over a number of issues, including the high cost of prescripti­on drugs, a longtime concern of his. His committee engaged in a protracted court fight with the administra­tion over subpoenas — challenged by the president — of Trump’s personal and financial records.

Cummings said he had just a single one-on-one conversati­on with the president. It was in 2017 when both were working on plans to lower drug prices.

The Democrat recalled saying: “Mr. President, you’re now 70-something, I’m 60-something. Very soon you and I will be dancing with the angels. The thing that you and I need to do is figure out what we can do — what present can we bring to generation­s unborn?”

Cummings resented Trump’s tweet over the summer that four Democratic congresswo­men of color — Ocasio-Cortez, Pressley, Tlaib and Rep. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota — should “go back” to other countries. He said it recalled the summer of 1962, when white mobs taunted and threw rocks and bottles at Cummings and other African American kids seeking to integrate the Riverside Park pool in South Baltimore.

“I don’t think these Republican­s or Trump fully understand what it feels like to be treated like less than a dog,” Cummings told The Sun.

In July, Trump began a weeklong series of tweets and comments attacking the congressma­n, his hometown of Baltimore and his congressio­nal district, which Trump called “rat and rodent infested.” Cummings chose not to respond directly, but in a National Press Club speech decried “racist language” used by the nation’s leaders and urged them to “work together for the common good.”

“God has called me to this moment. I did not ask for it,” he said in the speech.

In a tweet Thursday, Trump sent his “warmest condolence­s” to Cummings’ family and friends and said: “I got to see first hand the strength, passion and wisdom of this highly respected political leader. His work and voice on so many fronts will be very hard, if not impossible, to replace!”

Cummings was known for his booming — and sometimes intimidati­ng — observatio­ns during committee hearings. He did not hesitate to tell witnesses when he thought they were dodging his pointed questions.

“I felt like you were trying to pull a fast one on me, I’ve got to be honest with you, man,” Cummings told U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross in March during a hearing into how the Trump administra­tion came to develop a census question — later withdrawn — about citizenshi­p status. Ross said he had testified truthfully.

Cummings was born in 1951 and raised in Baltimore, where he continued to live. He was one of seven children of Robert Cummings Sr. and Ruth Elma Cummings, who were sharecropp­ers on land where their ancestors were enslaved. The couple moved to Baltimore in the late 1940s from South Carolina. Cummings often told a story of how his mother had witnessed Americans beaten while seeking the right to vote.

“Her last words were: ‘Do not let them take our votes away from us,’ ” he said.

As a child, Cummings struggled in elementary school and was assigned to special education courses; he wanted to be a lawyer, but a school counselor recommende­d trade school.

However, after showing promise in high school at Baltimore City College, he won Phi Beta Kappa honors at Howard University in Washington. He earned a bachelor’s degree in political science. He graduated from the University of Maryland School of Law and passed the state bar in 1976.

Cummings joined a small Baltimore law firm and later set up his own practice, pooling expenses with two other lawyers. He soon transition­ed to his second aspiration as a public servant.

In 1982, with the support of several establishe­d city officials, Cummings ran for state delegate and won. He served in the General Assembly for 14 years and became the first African American in Maryland history to be named speaker pro tem of the House of Delegates.

In late 1995, Cummings decided to run in the 7th Congressio­nal District after Kweisi Mfume announced he would resign to become the head of the national NAACP. The present district boundaries encompass parts of the city of Baltimore and sections of the counties of Baltimore and Howard.

“Common law and experience teach us that politics change people, but Elijah was a person who changed politics. He put a human face on it. He made it real,” Mfume said.

As he rose to political prominence, Cummings struggled with finances. For two winters as a congressma­n, he said, he lived without heat. He told The Sun in 1999 that was in part because he was helping to support three children: two daughters and a son.

His daughters graduated from Howard, Cummings’ alma mater. He posted a photo in 2016 in honor of his youngest’s graduation day, saying on Twitter: “I was so proud to watch my daughter, Adia, walk across the stage.”

Cummings was an active member of New Psalmist — he was there habitually, sitting up front, for an early Sunday service — and was married to Rockeymoor­e Cummings, who was elected chair of the Maryland Democratic Party in December 2018.

“It’s been an honor to walk by his side on this incredible journey,” his wife said in her statement. “I loved him deeply and will miss him dearly.”

Thomas, longtime pastor of New Psalmist, said he was waiting to hear from Rockeymoor­e Cummings on funeral plans, but expected the service would be held in the 4,000-seat sanctuary.

 ?? KENNETH K. LAM/BALTIMORE SUN FILE ??
KENNETH K. LAM/BALTIMORE SUN FILE
 ?? ANDRE CHUNG/BALTIMORE SUN ?? U.S. Rep. Elijah Cummings, pictured here in 1997, died about 2:45 a.m. Thursday due to complicati­ons from longstandi­ng health problems.
ANDRE CHUNG/BALTIMORE SUN U.S. Rep. Elijah Cummings, pictured here in 1997, died about 2:45 a.m. Thursday due to complicati­ons from longstandi­ng health problems.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States