The Day

NAACP president ousted in board vote

- By JANELL ROSS

The national board of the NAACP voted Friday to dismiss the organizati­on’s president, the Rev. Cornell William Brooks, just three years after putting Brooks in charge of the nation’s largest and perhaps best-known civil rights organizati­on.

NAACP Board Chairman Leon Russell said the change is necessary to better position the organizati­on to combat the onslaught of civil rights assaults and rollbacks the board expects under President Donald Trump and Attorney General Jeff Sessions and to prepare the organizati­on to shape the country in the next century.

While Brooks has been present at social justice demonstrat­ions across the country, Russell says the board is looking for a leader who can focus on strengthen­ing the local chapters and navigating local, regional and state policymaki­ng processes.

For instance, Brooks was among the activists arrested in January at the office of now-Attorney General Jeff Sessions, then a Republican senator, during a sit-in protesting his nomination for the cabinet position.

“I think Cornell was good at raising the issue in terms of going out and being able to do the protest part of it,” Russell said. “But we are now at the point where the issues are raised. Everyone is aware of them. But it’s time to put on the table to actualize solutions.”

Brooks could not be immediatel­y reached for comment.

Russell said the board will launch a search for a new president with the aim completing that process by the year’s end. In the interim, he, the organizati­on’s national staff and local branches will maintain day-today operations.

When Brooks was appointed president and chief executive in May 2014, he was best known as a minister, head of the New Jersey Institute for Social Justice and a former trial attorney for the Lawyer’s Committee for Civil Rights Under the Law.

He arrived a few months after the NAACP’s national office underwent a round of staff cuts and a significan­t budget shortfall. The organizati­on was also wrestling with a series of incidents that called into question its willingnes­s to stand against corporate and individual wealthy donors. The most prominent incident came in April 2014, when the NAACP Los Angeles branch was preparing to bestow a second award on former L.A. Clippers owner Donald Sterling as a taped conversati­on of him using racial slurs became public.

The organizati­on has recorded some wins during Brooks’ tenure. In North Carolina, the NAACP state conference president, local chapters and other organizati­ons staged ongoing protests at the state capitol known as Moral Mondays and pushed civil rights concerns into the national news. The NAACP of North Carolina, working with lawyers from the Advancemen­t Project, also helped overturn North Carolina’s voter ID law, a ruling the Supreme Court decided not to reconsider this month.

Brooks also staged a Justice Tour — holding events around the country to discuss social justice concerns — and led a seven-day protest march from Ferguson, Mo., to the state capitol building to protest the fatal shooting of unarmed black teen Michael Brown by a police officer.

Yet some of the organizati­on’s critics have said that Brooks has struggled to continue some of the progress made under his predecesso­r, Ben Jealous, who they say turned around a period of declining membership and supported public conversati­ons about the maintain organizati­on’s relevancy in the 21st century.

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