Posts

N.C. NAACP prepares for next leader after Rev. Barber

N.C. NAACP prepares for next leader after Rev. Barber
May 18
07:45 2017

BY CASH MICHAELS 

FOR THE CHRONICLE

RALEIGH —According to sources at the N.C. NAACP, the successor to President Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II, who has announced that he is stepping down next month after 12 years, will come from the four vice presidents currently under his wing – First Vice President Carolyn Q. Coleman, Second Vice President Carolyn McDougal, Third Vice President Rev. Dr. T. Anthony Spearman and Fourth Vice President Courtney Patterson.

Coleman is a veteran civil rights activist, member of the national NAACP Board, and the Guilford County Commissioner Board. McDougal is a human resource officer with People’s Choice Home Care Inc. in Dunn. Spearman is senior pastor of St. Phillip A.M.E. Zion Church in Greensboro, and president of the N.C. Council of Churches. Patterson is retired and lives in Kinston.

The N.C. NAACP is “strong in our legal victories; strong in our organizational structure; strong financially and strong in the clarity of agenda,” Barber told reporters during a teleconference last Thursday.

A meeting to determine who will succeed Barber is reportedly scheduled for next Monday. Whoever is chosen is expected to serve out the balance of the president’s term until the October state convention, then run for election then.

Among the candidates expected to throw his hat back into the ring, sources say, is the former state NAACP leader who lost his post to Barber in 2005 – Melvin “Skip” Alston of Greensboro.

Alston, who was also a Greensboro businessman and a Guilford County commissioner, had served as N.C. NAACP president from 1996 until he was ousted by Barber. That campaign was filled with tension and accusations of irregularities.

Alston’s tenure was controversial at the time, and just the mere mention of the possibility that he may run again has some rank-and-file members of the state conference shaking their heads, saying that it was Barber’s strong, principled and bold leadership that made the North Carolina chapter one of the best in the nation.

It is clear that whoever succeeds Barber already knows they have a hard act to follow.

There were tears, but they were tears of joy, and of pride, as at least one hundred supporters, civic and religious leaders, and N.C. NAACP members came together Monday at Davie Presbyterian Church in Raleigh to say “goodbye” to the man who has led them since 2005, challenging racism, sexism, voter suppression and more.

Barber listened intently as some whom he has inspired, some he’s mentored, and some he has also taken sage counsel from over the past 12 years, paid tribute to him before he formally stepped down.

“When you made your announcement that you would be stepping down as the NAACP president, one of the critics of the movement said this, he said, ‘I just wish Barber would have been a negotiator rather than an agitator,'” Rev. Nancy Petty said. “Rev. Barber, we’re sending you into the world to be an agitator.”

Barber announced late last week that he was broadening the focus of his successful moral leadership campaign to a national scope, joining with other social justice “servant leaders” to address poverty, and other social ills that have been too long ignored by government and the political parties.

“Our work is not over here in North Carolina, but as you know, extremism is at work in other states and has gained power in all three branches of our federal government, much as it did here four years ago,” Barber said. “This moment requires us to push into the national consciousness, not from the top down but from the bottom up.”

In calling for a “moral revival” for the nation, Barber, his nonprofit advocacy group “Repairers of the Breach,” and other prominent social and religious activists like the Rev. James Forbes, pastor emeritus of Riverside Church in N.Y., are working toward the 50th anniversary of the historic Poor People’s Campaign, which Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. started before he was assassinated in 1968.

About Author

Cash Michaels

Cash Michaels

Related Articles

Search wschronicle.com

Featured Sponsor

Receive Chronicle Updates

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Categories

Archives

More Sponsors