Cornell Brooks
**FILE** Cornell Brooks (Freddie Allen/AMG/NNPA)

Why did the NAACPโ€™s national board vote to part ways with their president, Cornell William Brooks? Several longtime members contacted by the NNPA Newswire were shocked to hear the news. Brooks, 56, has served in the position since May 2014. Some NAACP insiders said that there was a lack of communication between the NAACPโ€™s large board of directors and Brooks. Others say that a lack of fundraising prowess was the reason.

On the day the board voted to end Brooksโ€™ tenure as president (his current contract expires on June 30), NAACP Board Chairman Leon Russell announced that the 108 year-old organization is โ€œre-toolingโ€ and embarking on โ€œan organization-wide refreshโ€ in response to the โ€œaudacious challengesโ€ in โ€œtodayโ€™s volatile political, media and social climates.โ€

During an interview with American Urban Radio Networks, Brooks was asked why he was being let go. He responded: โ€œI canโ€™t point to any substantive reason. What I can point to is this: the NAACP over the course of less than three years, is more visible, more vocal, growing in members, donors, presence in the courts and in communities across the country.โ€

Brooks continued: โ€œWeโ€™ve had nine court victories against voter suppression in ten months. We not only demonstrated in Flint, we filed suit in Flintโ€ฆonline membership is up 87 percent and online paper membership is up seven percent. Online donations are up 800 percent,โ€ Brooks added. On May 21, Brooks was bombarded on Twitter with positive praise from well-wishers for his three years as NAACP President.

Brooks was also instrumental in spotlighting the damage President Donald Trumpโ€™s Attorney General Jeff Sessions will likely do to voting rights with a demonstration in Alabama that resulted in Brooksโ€™ highly publicized arrest.

During a May 19 media call on the end of Brooksโ€™ presidency, NAACP National Board Chairman Leon Russell and Vice Chair Derrick Johnson told reporters that the search for a new leader will start immediately and focus on, โ€œrenewed nimbleness and vigilance so that we can aggressively respond to the current climate of political unrest as well as the assault on human rights.โ€

Russell also added that, โ€œwe donโ€™t have a job description in front of us.โ€

Russell said that there would be a, โ€œsystem-wide and strategic revisiting of processes โ€ฆ that will ensure the NAACP can address these 21st century challenges.โ€

Russell also said that he and Johnson would manage the day-to-day NAACP operations on an interim basis until a replacement for Brooks is found. They also announced a NAACP โ€œlistening tourโ€ in an effort to be informed โ€œby the people we serveโ€ and to โ€œharness grassroots energyโ€ while at the same time listening also to current staff, past leaders in the Civil Rights Movement and โ€œphilanthropicโ€ groups.

The NAACP makes this startling leadership change at an incredibly crucial time. President Donald Trump is reeling amidst accusations of collusion with the Russian government, during the 2016 election season and obstruction of justice involving former FBI Director Jim Comeyโ€™s investigation of it. Attorney General Sessions easily represents one of the biggest threats to policy issues disproportionately impacting African Americans.

But the NAACP has clearly taken a back seat in terms of national attention. Younger, tighter and more focused movements such as Black Lives Matter, Color of Change and now The Indivisible Movement have leveraged social media and narrowed priorities to push there agendas as the NAACP has remained in a traditionalist managerial model that would appear ill-suited for the times.

The vote by the 64-member NAACP national board to part ways with Brooks took place during a quarterly board meeting in Florida and on the same day that Dr. Rev. William Barber stepped down as NAACP North Carolina State President. Barber has led the Moral Mondays movement in North Carolina and won political and public relations attention as a result. He is now focused on a diverse โ€œpoor peopleโ€™s campaignโ€ modeled after Dr. Martin Luther Kingโ€™s own work.

Lauren Victoria Burke is a speaker, writer and political analyst. She appears on โ€œNewsOne Nowโ€ with Roland Martin every Monday. Lauren is also a frequent contributor to the NNPA Newswire and BlackPressUSA.com. Connect with Lauren by email at LBurke007@gmail.com and on Twitter @LVBurke.

This correspondent is a guest contributor to The Washington Informer.

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