Revive U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, by Jesse L. Jackson Sr.
12/17/2020, 6 p.m.
A new president takes office with the sense of possibility that comes with a new dawn. This is particularly true for President-elect Joe Biden, who will be taking office after the divisive turmoil of Donald Trump’s years in office.
President-elect Biden inherits truly fearsome troubles, among them the spiking pandemic, the collapsing economy, corrosive inequality, catastrophic climate change and entrenched structural racism. He stood up for Black Lives Matter and has promised a new day for civil rights, with particular emphasis on police reform.
America’s institutionalized racism goes far beyond the police, of course. We’ve witnessed the spread of brazen voter suppres- sion schemes since the U.S. Supreme Court disemboweled the federal Voting Rights Act. Our public schools grow ever more separate and unequal. Blacks and Latinos have suffered disproportionately in the economic collapse surrounding the pandemic and from the pandemic itself. The racial gap in housing, health care, wealth and more grow worse. And now, as America grows more diverse, discrimination against other minorities, from Latinos to Native Americans, demands redress.
President-elect Biden no doubt will appoint an attorney general sensitive to these concerns. Across the government,
civil rights divisions will be revived and recharged. Action on voting rights, on reducing mass incarceration, on police reform will follow. As part of this renewed commitment, the new president should consider steps to revive and empower the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, preferably with new leadership, new authority and adequate staffing, to undertake the crucial mission of monitoring civil rights progress, investigating abuses and recommending remedies.
The commission was created under President Eisenhower, a Republican, in the 1957 Civil Rights Act. Its mission was “the continuous appraisal of the status of civil rights and the efficiency of the machinery with which we hope to improve that status.” It was charged with collecting data, holding hearings, providing a clearing house and coordination of state and private agencies working in civil rights. It would issue regular reports and make recommendations in regard to remedying civil rights abuses.
In its early years, the commission played a vital role. Its prestigious members helped develop the case and formulate the reforms that informed the early civil rights acts, the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and the Fair Housing Act of 1968, among others. In the 1980s, President Reagan sought to weaken the commission, reducing its staff and resources. After illegally attempting to fire three of the commissioners, President Reagan forced a compromise in which eight commissioners would serve staggered six-year terms, with half appointed by the president and two by the Speaker of the House and two by the president pro tempore of the U.S. Senate. Since that time, the commission has declined in stature and effectiveness.
President-elect Biden should revive the commission. He should appoint a new director of national stature and commit the resources needed to rebuild the staff and the functions of the commission. He should seek new legislation to give the president power to nominate the commissioners, investing them with greater authority.
An active commission could help spearhead the investigations and reforms vital to addressing civil and human rights in this country. It could review how civil rights legislation should be updated to address the challenges of a much more diverse country. It could hold hearings on voter suppression and gerrymandering — and on reviving the Voting Rights Act — to bring public attention to what is a growing problem. It could investigate the challenge of reforming police forces into effective agencies of public safety.
As the new president selects the officials who will work to fulfill his pledges of civil rights and criminal justice reform, he would be wise to include revival of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights as a central element in that agenda.
The writer is founder and president of the national Rainbow PUSH Coalition.