Skip navigation

NAACP chairman calls Bush to convention

Julian Bond urges president to address organization at its annual meeting

Image: Julian Bond
Haraz N. Ghanbari / AP
Julian Bond, chairman of the NAACP National Board of Directors, speaks Sunday during the group’s annual convention.
Slideshow
Image:  Bill Richardson
  Breaking Barriers: U.S. minority leaders
From the first Hispanic governor (in 1853) to the first African-American to be elected president, learn about how ethnic barriers have been broken in the United States through the years.

more photos

Video: Race & ethnicity  
Meet Tiana, Disney’s first black princess
Nov. 26: Little girls lining up in New York and Los Angeles for the limited preview of Disney’s “The Princess and the Frog” will witness a first: a princess who happens to be African-American. NBC’s Chris Jansing reports.

Slideshow
Image: Dr. Martin Luther King
  Martin Luther King Jr.
See the civil rights leader in speeches and marches from Alabama to Washington.

more photos

updated 10:55 p.m. ET July 16, 2006

WASHINGTON - Julian Bond blasted the war in Iraq and conservative attacks on voting rights, yet the NAACP’s chairman Sunday also urged President Bush to attend the civil rights group’s annual convention.

“This year the convention has come to the president and we hope and pray he is coming to us,” said Bond, speaking about a mile from the White House at the city’s convention center.

Bush has avoided the conventions since taking office in 2001, making him the first sitting president in decades not to have spoken to the group. His schedule for Wednesday lists an event with the notation “TBA,” or to be announced.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

Bond said Bush’s presence would show that he hears the concerns of African-Americans. “We have values, we vote our values, and we demand to be valued in return,” he said.

More than 2000 gathered for Bond’s hour-long keynote speech, which kicked off the 97th convention of the Baltimore-based National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.

Bond urged lawmakers to raise the minimum wage, condemned attacks on school integration and said the war in Iraq “has weakened rather than strengthened America’s defenses, including our levees.”

He added, “Our troops may be fighting to secure democracy abroad, but we can’t secure our democracy at home.”

Voting irregularities and biased laws still hit minorities hardest, said Eleanor Holmes Norton, the District of Columbia’s nonvoting Democratic delegate to the House of Representatives.

“The United States has a ways to go before a black or brown voter has nothing to worry about when he or she goes to the polls,” she said.

“We might call it voting while black,” said Bond.

He called on lawmakers to renew expiring portions of the Voting Rights Act. The House voted last week to renew it, but the Senate has yet to act. NAACP members planned to lobby for the legislation on Wednesday.

Bond criticized Republicans for being unethical and said “some of the Democrats won’t take their own side in a fight.”

His frustrated tone reflected the diminished status of the NAACP and other civil rights groups at a time when conservatives dominate Washington and public policy tackling racial discrimination is being dismantled.

The six-day convention also will include analysis of how well industries serve minority communities. Since 1997, the NAACP has graded banks, phone companies, hotels and other companies, and the latest report cards are slated to be released on Monday.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Sponsored LinksGet listed here
Online College Courses
Boost your career with an online Degree. Pick from Leading Colleges!
www.EarnMyDegree.com

Sponsored links

Resource guide