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HOUSE PASSES RANGEL'S RESOLUTION HONORING A. PHILIP RANDOLPH
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
PRESS RELEASE
CONGRESSMAN CHARLES RANGEL
Contact: Emile Milne/Robin M. Peguero 202 225-4365 December 15, 2009
Elbert Garcia 212 663-3900
HOUSE PASSES RANGEL'S
RESOLUTION
HONORING A. PHILIP
RANDOLPH
Congressman
Charles B. Rangel released the following
statement today after the House passed −
by a vote of 395 to 23 − his resolution
honoring A. Philip Randolph and his work in
ending discrimination and promoting equal
employment opportunities for all
Americans:
"A. Philip Randolph was an inspirational figure of his times who demonstrated an unyielding struggle for human rights that impacted marginalized groups in society. With a hand in both the Civil Rights Movement and Labor Movement, Randolph was a tireless and highly effective advocate for African American rights during the 1930s and 1940s, focused particularly on employment rights. His great life's work is an American story of struggle and triumph, and it is long overdue that his legacy be acknowledged and celebrated in the records of Congress.
He led the effort to
organize the Pullman Company − one of the most powerful
businesses in the nation. This led to the
formation of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car
Porters, an organization that advanced the
claims of African-Americans to dignity,
respect, and a decent livelihood. His
successful negotiations with the Pullman
Company encouraged him to put pressure on
President Franklin D. Roosevelt to end
employment discrimination against Blacks in the
federal government. In 1955, Randolph was
elected vice president of the newly merged
AFL-CIO and he was a leading force behind the
1963 March on Washington, in which more than
250,000 Americans joined together under the
slogan of "Jobs and Freedom." The march led in
part to the signing of the Civil Rights Act of
1964.
His commitment to bettering America cannot be listed or measured quantifiably − it was the leading cause of his life and one he accomplished many times over. We owe many of the rights and freedoms we enjoy to his hard work. Today, the House revisited that illustrious segment of our history and chose to honor the man and his legacy as a storied example of an American fighting for a more perfect union."
Click to View [H. Res 150]
