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Tuesday, April 12, 2022
House G.O.P., Banding Together, Kills Bid to Honor Pioneering Black Judge. (NY Times)
As my friend James David Pleasant said once about the Establishment here in St. Augustine, Florida, "they will say and do anything."
Unprincipled, unethical, unAmerican, racist Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives blocked a routine courthouse naming for an heroic African-American Florida Judge Joseph Woodrow Hatchett, who opened doors for Blacks in our Florida and federal judiciary.
These shameless rebarbative, retromingent, Dull Republicans will do anything to appease bigots.
I opined about the mysterious House Republican blockade of naming the Tallahassee courthouse for Judge Hatchett last week.
From The New York Times.
House G.O.P., Banding Together, Kills Bid to Honor Pioneering Black Judge
A right-wing congressman persuaded fellow Republicans to abruptly turn against a routine measure to name a federal courthouse in Florida for a Black State Supreme Court justice.
WASHINGTON — In a bitterly divided Congress, it was a rare measure that had been expected to sail through without a fight.
A bill to name a federal courthouse in Tallahassee after Justice Joseph W. Hatchett, the first Black man to serve on the Florida Supreme Court — sponsored by the state’s two Republican senators and backed unanimously by its 27 House members — was set to pass the House last month and become law with broad bipartisan support.
But in a last-minute flurry, Republicans abruptly pulled their backing with no explanation and ultimately killed the measure, leaving its fate unclear, many of its champions livid and some of its newfound opponents professing ignorance about what had happened.
Asked what made him vote against a measure that he had co-sponsored, Representative Vern Buchanan, Republican of Florida, was brief and blunt: “I don’t know,” he said.
The real answer is as much an allegory about the state of House Republicans in 2022 as it is about a federal building in Florida. With little notice and nothing more than a 23-year-old news clipping, a right-wing, first-term congressman mounted an 11th-hour effort on the House floor to persuade his colleagues that Judge Hatchett, a trailblazing judge who broke barriers as the first Black State Supreme Court justice south of the Mason-Dixon line, was undeserving of being honored.
The objector was Representative Andrew Clyde of Georgia. Shortly before the House vote, he began circulating anAssociated Press article from 1999about an appeals court decision that Judge Hatchett wrote that year that struck down a public school policy allowing student-approved prayers at graduation ceremonies in Florida. The decision, which overruled a lower court, held that the policy violated constitutional protections of freedom of religion.
“He voted against student-led school prayer in Duval County in 1999,” Mr. Clyde, a deacon at his Baptist church in Bogart, Ga., said in an interview. “I don’t agree with that. That’s it. I just let the Republicans know that information on the House floor. I have no idea if they knew that or not.”
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