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Republican party chairman Lee Atwater, a white man, resigns from predominantly Black Howard University’s board.
1989 (Mar 7)
Lee Atwater, chairman of the Republican National Committee, resigned as a member of the board of trustees of predominantly Black Howard University in Washington, D.C. The resignation came as several hundred Black students continued a sit-in that began as a protest against Atwater's selection to the board. During the demonstrations, which began on March 3, 1989, students took over the school's administration building. Although city police stormed the captured building on March 7, they left without removing or arresting any protestors at the request of Howard president James A. Cheek. In announcing his resignation, Atwater remarked, "The opposition of some students to my service on the board appears to me to be counterproductive to Howard University and is a distraction to the work that I want to do in fulfilling George Bush's and my efforts to provide equal opportunity to all Americans ... I would never forgive myself if someone was hurt in one of these episodes." Although Atwater's appointment to the Howard University Board of Trustees had been seen by some political analysts ""as symbolic of his drive to broaden the Republican Party's appeal to Blacks," others, including Democratic party and civil rights leaders, had accused the Republican leader of orchestrating “subtly racist appeals” during the 1988 presidential campaign. One Republican television ad, for example, featured Willie Horton, a convicted Black rapist, in the party's attack on crime. Regina Davis, a twenty-year-old business management major at Howard, applauded Atwater's resignation, saying, "If you're going to appoint someone, they should have the same views as the people they're going to represent." But Atwater's resignation did not bring an immediate end to the protests, as students continued to press their demands for better housing and security, improvements in student services, and the appointment of more Blacks to Howard's board of trustees.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.