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NAACP President Resigns
B-NOW News Staff
NAACP President Bruce S. Gordon is quitting the civil rights
organization, leaving after just 19 months at the helm,
he told The Associated Press on Sunday. Gordon cited growing
strain with board members over the group’s management style
and future operations.
“I believe that any organization that’s going to be effective
will only be effective if the board and the CEO are aligned
and I don’t think we are aligned,” Gordon said. “This compromises
the ability of the board to be as effective as it can be.”
He spoke by phone from Los Angeles, where he had just attended
the taping of the NAACP Image Awards. Dennis C. Hayes, general
counsel of the Baltimore-based National Association for
the Advancement of Colored People, is expected to serve
as interim president, Gordon said.
Hayes filled the same role after Kweisi Mfume resigned the
presidency in 2004 after nine years.
Gordon said that while the NAACP is an advocacy organization,
it needs to be more focused on service and finding solutions.
“I’m used to a CEO running an organization, with the board
approving strategy and policy,” Gordon said. “But the NAACP
board is very much involved.”
Gordon said he made the decision in recent weeks and told
the board at its annual meeting in New York City in mid-February.
Leaders apparently surprised NAACP leaders were surprised
by his decision and engaged in
hours of discussion, he said.
“They expressed disappointment,” Gordon said. “We attempted
to see whether there was a way to continue but that didn’t
happen.”
Gordon sounded weary as he boarded a flight home to New
York City on Sunday.
“I don’t view this as I’m right and they’re wrong. I view
this as I see things one way and they see things a different
way,” he said. “That misalignment between the CEO and the
board is unhealthy.”
Asked about his plans after leaving the NAACP, Gordon said:
“I’m going to catch my breath.”
“What I’ve clearly learned in my tenure here is that all
is not well in black America, that’s for sure,” he said.
“I believe I have a lot to offer. I’ve got to find a way
to be engaged that optimizes what it is I bring to the table.
My intention is not to disengage, but to find a different
way.”
A surprise choice to lead Gordon, 61, was a surprise pick
for the NAACP's top post. When he took over on Aug. 1, 2005,
he had no track record in traditional civil rights circles.
He had spent 35 years in the telecommunications industry
and retired in 2003 from his post as president of the Retail
Markets Group for Verizon Corp.
Critics said he wouldn't be a good fit for the nearly 98-year-old
organization.
However, he smoothed strained relations between the NAACP
and the White House, meeting with President Bush three times
in less than a year. He used his corporate ties to lend
quick assistance to black New Orleans residents after Hurricane
Katrina. And he hired a number of key national employees
whose reputations inspired staff members.
Gordon "brought a level of competence that we hadn't had,"
Julian Bond, chairman of the board, said last year.
Bond also has acknowledged that, with 64 members, the NAACP's
board of directors is large and sometimes unwieldy. But
he has defended it, saying it allows a wide range of members
voices to be heard.
Information provided by
the Associated Press
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