Home / Full timeline / Thurgood Marshall states in a televised interview that President Ronald Reagan ranks at “the bottom” among presidents in “protecting and advancing civil rights.”
Thurgood Marshall states in a televised interview that President Ronald Reagan ranks at “the bottom” among presidents in “protecting and advancing civil rights.”
1987 (Sep 13)
Thurgood Marshall, at that time the only Black American ever to sit on the United States Supreme Court, said in a televised interview that President Ronald Reagan ranked at "the bottom” among presidents in “protecting and advancing civil rights.” “Honestly," Marshall said, "I think he's down with [Herbert] Hoover and that group—[Woodrow] Wilson—when we [Blacks] really didn't have a chance." Marshall went on to say that Reagan, "as the 'gatekeeper' of fairness and justice in America, had neglected his job.... I don't care whether he's the president, the governor, the mayor, the sheriff, whoever calls the shots determines whether we have integration, segregation, or decency. ... That starts exactly with the president." Marshall's remarks were broadcast on television stations affiliated with the Ganett Broadcasting Company. Marshall's off-the-bench criticisms were rare both for him and for any justice of the United States Supreme Court. When excerpts were published in newspapers prior to the actual telecast, President Reagan's advisor for domestic affairs, Gary Bauer, called them "outrageous." He said President Reagan's policies had permitted Blacks and other minorities to “enter the economic mainstream of the country." He specifically cited the president's endorsement of the 1986 tax reform act, which he claimed removed the federal tax burden from millions of poor people, and the president's proposals to help low income families buy public housing and to receive cash vouchers to pay for their children's tuition at better schools. Justice Marshall's criticisms echoed those of other Black American leaders who had complained for several years that the president had "tried to undercut minority hiring programs, school busing to achieve integration, the Voting Rights Act, and other efforts to prevent discrimination and advance the social and economic conditions of minorities.” The Justice Department, for example, had joined several cases in federal courts to argue against affirmative action in employment, contending that employers should exercise total “color blindness" in hiring and promotions. The government also took the side of the Norfolk, Virginia, School Board in a case challenging the use of busing to achieve racial desegregation in public schools. While domestic advisor Bauer had defended “a colorblind approach,” saying "if people are looking for us to meet certain quotas all the time, they're going to be very disappointed,” B.J. Cooper, a White House deputy press secretary, countered that Reagan's critics overlooked “the administration's crackdown on cases of racial violence and its commitment to enforce fair employment and fair housing laws.” He claimed that the administration had prosecuted 55 cases of racial violence involving 137 defendants, including 75 Ku Klux Klansmen, since Reagan took office. “That compares,” Cooper added, "with 22 cases involving 52 defendants, of whom 35 were Klansmen, in the previous Democratic administration of President Jimmy Carter.”
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.