Berry's last valiant stand for civil rights enforcement
Thursday, December 9, 2004 at 10:37PM
TheSpook
No way was Dubya going to let the likes of Mary Frances Berry
call him out any longer. This week in a not-so-shocking move, President
George W. Bush replaced Berry, the longtime chairwoman of the U.S.
Civil Rights Commission, with Gerald A. Reynolds, a Kansas City
regulatory attorney who, amid protests from women and civil rights
groups, served out a recess appointment in 2003 as head of the Office
of Civil Rights in the Department of Education. Berry, however, is not
going gently into the noxious night. She argues that she and fellow
commission member and vice chairman Cruz Reynoso, who is also being
replaced, have until midnight Jan. 21, 2005 to finish their terms. I
wouldn't be surprised if Berry, 66, who successfully sued President
Ronald Reagan and won her spot back on the commission after he fired
her in 1984, sues Bush too. To be sure, I'd look forward to it --
because chances are that may be one of the last times that many of us
will get to see a black person on that commission put up a fight that
is driven by a passion for concerns about what is happening to civil
rights in this country. What's happening doesn't bode well for those
rights -- rights that so many of our forebears lost their lives over. In
a recent 165-page report critiquing the Bush administration's civil
rights record, the commission basically said that Bush has dragged his
feet on civil rights enforcement and, in many cases, has worked harder
to recast such rights rather than protect them. [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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