Crusade for Voters president and VP step down

Most mystery dinner theater productions come with a shoe-leather-tough steak, but last night’s planned political assassination of Antione Green, president of the Richmond Crusade for Voters skipped the dinner course and went straight to indigestion, resulting in heavy collateral damage for both Green and Crusade vice president, James “J.J.” Minor.

“The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars,
But in ourselves, that we are underlings.”

Most mystery dinner theater productions come with a shoe-leather-tough steak, but last night’s planned political assassination of Antione Green, president of the Richmond Crusade for Voters skipped the dinner course and went straight to indigestion, resulting in heavy collateral damage for both Green and Crusade vice president, James “J.J.” Minor.

It was a dizzying evening of political jockeying for the 200 people in attendance that swung between discussion of arcane points of the Crusade’s procedural bylaws and a free-for-all of shouts, jeers and insults. Nearly three hours later, both Green and Minor had resigned their respective posts with the Crusade, each citing fatal conflicts of interest for their roles in other political organizations or issues.

The meeting and its body count underscore a growing shift in black political circles, in part created by the vacuum left by Gov. L. Douglas Wilder’s effective withdrawal from the scene and the resurgence of Wilder’s longtime political rival, State Sen. Henry Marsh. Marsh, a mentor to many current city leaders, including Mayor Dwight C. Jones, is seen by many younger Crusade members as resistant to a progressive movement in the local black community that shadows a similar national movement.

“It’s the Marsh Democrats against… well, against everybody else,” said Carrie Cox, chairwoman of the Crusade’s membership committee, expressing anger and frustration before Green’s resignation announcement. She called Minor’s claims of conflict “the pot calling the kettle black” and a clear political maneuver.

Green has been under fire since his March 1 slip before a General Assembly education committee appearance testifying on behalf of proposed charter school law changes. Green also serves as chief executive officer of the proposed Patrick Henry School of Science and Arts charter in Richmond, and members of the committee he addressed were members both of the Assembly’s black caucus and the Crusade.

Prior to his testimony Green repeatedly was asked if he was there representing both the Crusade and the charter school. He now says he was mistaken when he replied “yes.”

The night of Green’s appearance, the Crusade’s executive committee met at O’Toole’s Irish Pub on Forest Hill Avenue to consider his mistake. Minor assailed Green for the comments, saying his own phone had been ringing off the hook with complaints and calls for Green either to explain himself or to step down.

Green later emailed a letter of apology to the organization’s membership, explaining the slip as being unintentional but inexcusable.

But the controversy continued to simmer, the spark fanned by a variety of interests within the Crusade who’ve been unhappy with Green’s role with the charter school. Last night, forces rallied against Green, led at times by Marsh, revealing deep rifts in the Crusade, which was founded in 1956 to register voters, combat school inequality and Massive Resistance to desegregation.

Minor, whose mother is Del. Delores McQuinn, a close political ally of Marsh and Mayor Dwight Jones, also shared in the assault. He said Green’s testimony at the General Assembly gave the false impression that the Crusade endorsed charter schools, when in fact “this body voted no to what? Charter schools.”

In a move that Green’s supporters claim as proof of conspiracy, Minor convened a meeting of the group’s executive committee just before last night’s meeting. Only a handful of the executive committee were invited – all opponents of Green — with Minor saying he “called all I knew about.” None of the members who attended the March 1 meeting at O’Tooles were notified.

Minor’s meeting voted to report out a recommendation that Green step down or that a vote be taken on his removal.

Attempts by Green’s supporters to suppress the coupe were futile. “This is ugly,” summarized City Councilman Marty Jewell, a former Crusade president credited with recruiting Green to the organization nearly a decade ago. Jewell said he suspects Marsh and Jones are behind the push to remove Green. “In my 32 years here [in the Crusade] this is the second time I know of [when a president was removed by force].”

The last time, Jewell says, the organization presented a “long bill of particulars” against the then-president, Charles Chambliss, while in this Green’s case “this young man made one mistake.”

In the end, it was another former Crusade president, Terone Green (no relation to Antione Green) who brokered the solution that called for both Green and Minor to step down. It was a solution that he said best protected the interests of all parties, but that also may well serve to leave open the question and debate over charter schools, an issue that some black political leaders see as a solution while others view as a return to segregationist policies of Massive Resistance and White Flight from Richmond Public Schools.

“To me, this will elevate the argument – the debate,” Terone Green said.
Marsh disagreed. “It’s going to keep the peace,” he said of the resignations, but he called charter schools “a different issue” and Antione Green’s misrepresentation of that issue “a serious mistake.”

(Image courtesy of Antione M. Green)

  • error

    Report an error

Chris Dovi

Notice: Comments that are not conducive to an interesting and thoughtful conversation may be removed at the editor’s discretion.

  1. Kate Falcon on said:

    What an underwhelming display of dysfunction!

    I hope Chris Dovi will ask Henry Marsh why it is acceptable for Marsh to be on the payroll of CCP (an alternative disciplinary school for RPS students), a school that fundamentally functions as a charter school and NOT acceptable for Green to serve on the board of the Patrick Henry School and receive no pay for his services?

    Would that Henry Marsh (and others) could devote as much energy to holding RPS accountable for low graduation rates and high suspension and truancy rates.

  2. Vicki Beatty on said:

    What a shame. I have the utmost respect for Antoine and know he will land on his feet. The hypocracy by Marsh (as stated by Falcon in the 1st comment) is business as usual in Richmond.

  3. Carol A.O. Wolf on said:

    I am sorry to see this happen, particularly since the work Antione Green was (and, hopefully, shall continue to be) doing with the PHSSA community is bringing about community unity, the schism within the Crusade for Voters notwithstanding.

    Regardless of where one stands on the question of charter schools, this much is clear: the staus quo is not getting our children — or our community — where we need to be. The PHSSA group cannot solve the problems of RPS, but it is a beginning.

    Charter schools, such as this one I recently read about in Chicago — Charter school in tough neighborhood gets all its seniors into college – chicagotribune.com — offer great hope.

    We should all be as happy as these young men in Chicago! Follow the link …. the photo is a must-see…http://www.chicagotribune.com/features/happynews/chi-100305chicago-charter-school-graduates,0,2406746.story

    Don’t Richmond’s children all deserve better educational choices and opportunities?

    Isn’t that what we all want?

  4. Ms. 4Real; on said:

    Wow, Carol Wolf at it again.

  5. VaSpirit on said:

    Carol Wolf, at it again, challenge the issue with re-organized facts..your good girl. You were not there! Mr. Green, answered 3 times to the General Assembly that he spoke as the CEO of Patrick Henry and the President of The Crusades for Voter!…He did it! So, the organinzation handled their business.

    The same people who voted him in, asked him to step aside..get over it.

  6. Kate Falcon on said:

    The same people who have time to fight against doing anything progressive for the kids in this community are the same ones who are content to build jails and allow the public schools to get away with suspending and expelling more kids than they graduate.

    They are the same people who will spin lies and sugarcoat stories about our schools and never demand that the School Board or the administration explain why our kids’ SAT scores continue to be so low, despite supposed increases in SOL scores.

    They are the same people who will rubberstamp budget cuts instead of asking hard questions about whose niece has a job at Huguenot high school or why it is we still don’t have a full-time chief financial officer for our schools, considering the city schools budget is more than a quarter-billion dollars.

    They are the same people who have no problem cutting teachers and increasing class sizes instead of cutting a bloated central administration and systematically driving out teachers and families who ask “uncomfortable” questions.

    Thank God Carol Wolf actually gives a damn about what happens to the kids in our schools and to our tax dollars.

    You should read her latest blog posting at: http://saveourschools-getrealrichmond.blogspot.com/

    And, get over it … yourself.

  7. Kate Falcon on said:

    TYPOE: paragraph should read —

    They are the same people who have no problem cutting teachers and increasing class sizes instead of cutting a bloated central administration THAT IS systematically driving out teachers and families who ask “uncomfortable” questions.

  8. Carol A.O. Wolf on said:

    Thanks, Kate.

  9. VaSpirit on said:

    Kate and Carol, great friends tell each other the truth!…Carol was in on all those “large administrations, she forgot to tell you the number today compared to when she sat on school board.

    Truth on a blog, they just don’t go together.

  10. Kate Falcon on said:

    You want some truth? Here’s some: Shuffling positions and titles might “look” like a reduction in the number of administrators drawing down big money, but it is really just a shell game designed to make sure that the CUBS (cousin, uncles, brothers & sisters) get and keep jobs with RPS.

    Think of what RPS does as a game of “three-card monte” with human beings. The “victims” in this game, however, are the children and families who are stuck in a school system run by a bunch of incompetents. The “victims” are also our hard-working teachers and principals who come to work every day and do their damnedest to do right by the kids.

  11. Antione Green on said:

    Carol, Vicki, and Kate, Chris, and RVA News: Thanks for your continued support!!!!!!!!

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked with an asterisk (*).

Or report an error instead