Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire
  • omnibus

Barack Obama vs. Charles Hamilton Houston
22 Nov 2006
🖨️ Print Article

by Bruce A. Dixon

"You have a large number of people who never heard of Charlie Houston. But you're going to hear about him. [T]hat man was the engineer of all of it... if you do it legally, Charlie Houston made it possible...." -- Thurgood Marshall 

Barack Obama vs. the Legacy of Charles Hamilton Houston 

A Black Agenda Radio Commentary by Bruce Dixon

"For masterminding the decades long legal battle to overturn segregation that culminated in the 1954 Brown vs. Board of Education decision, Charles Hamilton Houston became known as "the man who beat Jim Crow".

Barack Obama was the first African American president of the Harvard Law Review. But Harvard Law selected its first black editor more than seventy years earlier in the mid-1920s. That brother was Charles Hamilton Houston. But Houston and Obama have much more in common than their prestigious Harvard Law degrees.

 

Observing the violence and abuse heaped upon black people while he was an army lieutenant in World War 1, Houston devoted his life to fighting for the legal and human rights of African Americans. He became dean of Howard University Law School, where he trained and mentored a generation of civil rights lawyers including Thurgood Marshall himself. He taught young lawyers that an attorney is either an engineer for social change or a parasite upon society. Houston and Marshall, who later became the first black justice of the Supreme Court crisscrossed the country, especially the South, defending hundreds of poor blacks accused of murder and other crimes, challenging racial injustice and Jim Crow laws in education and public accommodation from sleepy rural courthouses to the Supreme Court. For masterminding the decades long legal battle to overturn segregation that culminated in the 1954 Brown vs. Board of Education decision, Charles Hamilton Houston became known as "the man who beat Jim Crow".

What Charlie Houston and Barack Obama have in common, besides their leadership at the Harvard law Review is their involvement with legalized segregation in American life. While Charles Hamilton Houston spent his entire career fighting to end legal segregation in American life, Barack Obama, in his first 2 years on the Senate Judiciary Committee, by declining to fight, filibuster or meaningfully oppose judicial thugs, neo-segregationists and members of the ultra right wing Federalist Society from appointment to the Supreme Court, may have already undone a large part of Charlie Houston's legacy.

"Obama, in his first 2 years on the Senate Judiciary Committee... may have already undone a large part of Charlie Houston's legacy."

It's popular among American whites these days to declare that they "just don't see race." This is of course an expression of white privilege, since only whites in America have the luxury of such selective blindness. Black and brown people, profiled, pre-judged and and selectively policed, are not permitted to forget who, what and where they are. Since its December 4 oral arguments in a case designed to undo the historic 1954 ruling against legal segregation, the court, its majority decisively tipped by the two right wing judges Obama failed to vigorously oppose, appears poised next year to enact a prohibition against "seeing race" into law, initially in any proposed remedies to unlawful segregation. Inevitably even gathering or sharing of data that might reveal the presence of unlawful segregation or discrimination may be prohibited.

Charlie Houston, died in 1950, a full decade before Senator Obama was born. The legacy of his 3 decades of legal struggle for human rights was the end of Jim Crow. The unraveling of that legacy with no meaningful opposition on the part of the only black senator is the fruit of Barack Obama's first two years on the Judiciary Committee. Charlie Houston is turning over in his grave. We can only imagine what is yet to come.

For Black Agenda Radio, I'm Bruce Dixon.

The audio for this Black Agenda Radio commentary is no longer available.

 

 

More Stories


  • Tracie Canada
    Roberto Sirvent, BAR Book Forum Editor
    BAR Book Forum: Tracie Canada’s Book, “Tackling the Everyday”
    10 Sep 2025
    In this series, we ask acclaimed authors to answer five questions about their book. This week’s featured author is Tracie Canada.  Canada is the Andrew W. Mellon Assistant Professor of…
  • Jill Clark-Gollub
    Why the SanctionsKill Campaign Supports BDS
    10 Sep 2025
    The SanctionsKill campaign exposes how US economic warfare kills civilians across the Global South. Meanwhile, the Palestinian-led BDS movement represents a legitimate tool of grassroots resistance…
  • Joshua Reaves
    From Refusal to Resilience: How Hurricane Katrina Birthed A Global Health Vanguard
    10 Sep 2025
    The US government left Black residents to die after Hurricane Katrina, refusing Cuba's offer of emergency doctors. This racist neglect exposed a truth that the US state would rather sacrifice its own…
  • Jacqueline Luqman
    The Military Occupation of Washington, DC: Then and Now
    10 Sep 2025
    The current military occupation of DC is not an anomaly but an escalation of a long war on Black communities. The current occupation is merely a more visible form of this ongoing political…
  • Sarah B.
    Gaza to Donbass: How Israel and Ukraine Built a Fascist, Transnational War Machine
    10 Sep 2025
    From Bandera to Ben-Gurion, a new axis of ethno-supremacy is rising, fueled by U.S. backing. Same guns. Same flags. Same ideology. Gaza and Donbass are not separate wars. They are one machine.
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us