Mary Frances Berry to be Replaced by Bush
Leaders of a divided federal civil-rights
watchdog agency accused President Bush of deepening racial divisions,
in a parting shot after years of sparring with his administration. Mary
Frances Berry, chairperson of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, and
Vice Chairperson Cruz Reynoso delivered a 166-page report to the White
House harshly criticizing the administration for setting back race
relations and failing to promote civil rights in any meaningful way.
But the report is not an official document, because four of the eight
commissioners, all of them Republican appointees, voted against
adopting it and rejected the charges as politically biased. "Sadly,
the spiraling demise of hope for social justice and healing has
deepened over the past four years, largely due to a departure from and
marginalization of long-established civil rights priorities, practices
and laws," Berry and Reynoso wrote in a letter to Bush. [more]