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Ernie Chambers

Ernest William Chambers (born July 10, 1937)[1] is an American politician and civil rights activist who represented North Omaha's 11th District in the Nebraska State Legislature from 1971 to 2009 and again from 2013 to 2021. He could not run in 2020 due to term limits.[2]

Ernie Chambers
Ernie Chambers as a Nebraska Senator
Member of the Nebraska Legislature
from the 11th district
In office
January 9, 2013 – January 6, 2021
Preceded byBrenda Council
Succeeded byTerrell McKinney
In office
January 6, 1971 – January 7, 2009
Preceded byGeorge W. Althouse
Succeeded byBrenda Council
Personal details
Born
Ernest William Chambers

(1937-07-10) July 10, 1937 (age 86)
Omaha, Nebraska, U.S.
Political partyIndependent
Other political
affiliations
New Alliance (1988)
Residence(s)Omaha, Nebraska, US
Alma materCreighton University (BA, JD)

Chambers is the longest-serving state senator in Nebraska history, having represented North Omaha for 46 years.[3] For most of his career, Chambers was the only nonwhite senator.[4] He is the only African-American to have run for governor and the first to have run for the U.S. Senate in Nebraska history.[5][6] For years he was the only openly atheist member of any state legislature in the United States.[7]

Early life edit

Chambers was born in the Near North Side neighborhood[5] of Omaha, Nebraska,[8] to Malcolm Chambers, a local minister,[5] and Lillian Chambers. His father's family originally came from Mississippi and his mother's family originally came from Louisiana.[8] He has six siblings,[9] who were all born in Omaha.[8]

In 1955, Chambers graduated from Omaha Tech High School. In 1959, he graduated from Creighton University with a B.A. in history, with minors in Spanish and philosophy. He attended Creighton University School of Law in the early 1960s and completed his degree in 1979.

He refused to join the Nebraska State Bar Association, so was unable to practice law; in 2015, he explained his refusal on the grounds that he had earned the right to practice by passing law school, and should not have to pay the Bar Association dues as well.[10][9]

Career edit

Omaha Post Office edit

In 1963, when Chambers was 25, he worked for the Omaha Post Office. He has said he was fired for insubordination because he spoke out against the management at the Post Office calling the black staff "boys". He picketed the Postmaster General's speech in Omaha with a sign that read, "I spoke against discrimination in the Omaha Post Office and was fired."[5][11]

Summer 1966 riots edit

During a series of heat waves in 1966, there were two disturbances in Omaha. In July, the Nebraska National Guard was summoned to restore order after police and black teenagers clashed three nights in a row.[12] In early August, a series of riots occurred over three nights. Chambers worked as a spokesperson for the community during both conflicts, meeting with Mayor A.V. Sorenson and helping to end the riots.[12]

During this period, Chambers emerged as a prominent leader in the North Omaha community, where he successfully negotiated concessions from the city's leaders on behalf of North Omaha's African-American youth.[12] Chambers headed a committee of the Near North Side Police-Community Relations Council, collated information, and presented numerous complaints about the police to city officials.[12] The African-American community had previously been led by more established organizations like Omaha Urban League and the local chapter of the NAACP, not an emerging young anti-establishment leader like Chambers.[12]

Chambers was working as a barber at the time, and appeared in the Oscar-nominated 1966 documentary film A Time for Burning, where he talked about race relations in Omaha.[13]

Nebraska Legislature edit

In 1968, Chambers ran for a position on the Omaha School Board, but was not elected.[14] He also failed as a write-in candidate for the Omaha City Council in 1969.[5][14] In 1970 he was elected to represent North Omaha's 11th District in the Nebraska State Legislature, replacing George W. Althouse, who had been appointed to replace Senator Edward Danner, who had died in office.[5] During the election, a policeman was killed in a deserted house by a bomb. Two Black Panthers, David Rice and Edward Poindexter, were charged in the death. Chambers protested, as he thought the men had been framed by COINTELPRO.[5]

Chambers was reelected to the Legislature in every ensuing election through 2004. On April 25, 2005, Chambers became Nebraska's longest-serving state senator, having served for more than 35 years.[15] He was not allowed to seek reelection in 2008 because of a constitutional amendment Nebraska voters passed in 2000 that limits Nebraska state legislators to two consecutive four-year terms. But the amendment permits senators to seek reelection to their office after sitting out for four years, and Chambers defeated incumbent Brenda Council in 2012 by a "landslide".[16]

Chambers also ran for the United States Senate in 1988 as a New Alliance Party candidate.[17] He petitioned to be included on the 1974 ballot for governor of Nebraska and also ran for governor in 1994, receiving 0.43% of the vote.[18][19]

South African divestment edit

Because of a legislative resolution Chambers introduced in 1980, Nebraska became the first state to divest from South Africa in protest of apartheid.[20][21] Upon discovering that the University of Nebraska held several hundred gold Krugerrands as an investment, Chambers introduced a nonbinding resolution calling for reinvestment of state pension funds that had been invested directly or indirectly in South Africa.[22] The resolution argued that apartheid was contrary to Nebraska's principles of human rights and legal equality.[23]

Nebraska's divestment caused little immediate change in business practices; David Packard of Hewlett-Packard said, "I'd rather lose business in Nebraska than with South Africa."[24] But other state governments and eventually the federal government followed Nebraska's example, contributing to the end of apartheid. Chambers spearheaded a stronger 1984 law mandating divestment, resulting in Nebraska's public employee pension funds divesting $14.6 million in stocks issued by companies that did business with South Africa. Archbishop Desmond Tutu later visited Lincoln, where he remarked that Nebraska had helped to end apartheid. The state government conspicuously did not invite Chambers to Tutu's speaking event.[25]

Marsh v. Chambers edit

Chambers filed a lawsuit in 1980 attempting to end the Legislature's practice of beginning its session with a prayer offered by a state-supported chaplain, arguing that it was unconstitutional under the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment.[26] The district court held that the prayer did not violate the Constitution, but that state support for the chaplain did. The 8th Circuit Court of Appeals held that both practices violated the Constitution,[27] but in Marsh v. Chambers (1983), the Supreme Court held by a 6–3 vote that both practices were constitutional because of the United States' "unique history".[28]

1986 NCAA student athletes as state employees edit

Chambers has promoted recognizing NCAA student athletes as state employees since the 1980s, arguing that they are generating revenue for their universities without any legal benefits for doing so, which encourages illegal payments and gifts. A bill on this issue was passed by the Legislature but was unable to overcome the governor's veto. After it was revealed that requiring student athletes to be recognized as state employees would jeopardize any university's NCAA standing, the language of the bill was changed so that a university could allow for players to be paid a stipend, after which the bill passed and was signed by the governor in 2003.[29]

1989 Franklin scandal edit

According to The New York Times, unidentified people present at a closed meeting reported that Chambers claimed he heard credible reports of "boys and girls, some of them from foster homes, who had been transported around the country by airplane to provide sexual favors, for which they were rewarded."[30]

Investigating what became known as the Franklin child prostitution ring allegations, a Nebraska grand jury was convened to investigate the allegations and possibly return indictments. Eventually, the grand jury ruled the entire matter was "a carefully crafted hoax," although they failed to identify the perpetrators of the hoax.[31]

 
Chambers repeatedly sought to outlaw hunting mountain lions, saying "these animals should not be killed for the love of killing."[32]

1993 LGBT anti-discrimination bill edit

Nebraska's LGBT community has considered Chambers an ally since the 1970s.[33] In 1993, he co-sponsored a bill to prohibit employment discrimination by sexual orientation.[34] The bill faced fierce opposition. Opponents of the anti-discrimination legislation formed a Nebraska chapter of the Traditional Values Coalition and brought activist Lou Sheldon to Lincoln to organize antigay rallies outside the Capitol building.[35]

Despite the opposition, Chambers sponsored another LGBT anti-discrimination bill in 1995.[36] He continued to support similar measures throughout his career in the legislature. None of them has been successful.[37]

2006 Omaha Public Schools controversy edit

In April 2006, Chambers introduced legislative bill (LB) 1024, an amendment to a bill that would divide the Omaha Public Schools district into three different districts.[38] The bill and its amendment were created in response to an effort by the district to "absorb a string of largely white schools that were within the Omaha city limits but were controlled by suburban or independent districts."[39] Omaha Schools claimed that the usurpation was necessary to avoid financial and racial inequity, but supporters of LB 1024 contested the district's expansion, favoring more localized control. The bill received national attention and some critics called it "state-sponsored segregation".[40]

LB 641, passed in 2007, repealed and superseded LB 1024, restoring pre-2006 Omaha-area school district boundaries, after which a "learning community" was created to equalize student achievement in Douglas and Sarpy counties.[41][42]

2007 lawsuit against God edit

Some members of the Nebraska legislature attempted to ban frivolous lawsuits from Nebraska's court system in 2007. Chambers believed that this attempt was misguided, and that access to the court system should not be restricted. To dramatize his point that the court system must be entirely open, Chambers filed a lawsuit against God[43] in Douglas County district court in September 2007.[44] It argued that God has caused "widespread death, destruction, and terrorization of millions upon millions of the Earth's inhabitants."[43]

Nebraska media inaccurately reported that Chambers's lawsuit against God was intended as an ironic protest against frivolous lawsuits. Chambers clarified that, on the contrary, his lawsuit against God "emphasized that attempts by the Legislature to prohibit the filing of any lawsuit would run afoul of the Nebraska Constitution's guarantee that the doors to the courthouse must be open to everyone."[45]

The Westboro Baptist Church filed an amicus brief in the lawsuit arguing that Chambers did not have standing to sue, and that he was "fully deserving of the outpourings of God's fierce wrath." In response, Chambers voiced disagreement with the church but argued that the church's access to the court system must be protected, just like his.[46]

The lawsuit was dismissed in October 2008 because a summons notifying God of the lawsuit could not be delivered to the defendant, who has no listed address. Chambers countered that, because of God's omniscience, God had been notified,[47] but decided not to pursue the suit further.[45]

Capital punishment edit

Chambers is a firm opponent of the death penalty, and introduced a bill to repeal Nebraska's capital punishment law at the start of each legislative session, 36 times over 40 years.[48][49] The bill, LB268,[50] passed the legislature in 1979 but could not overcome Governor Charles Thone's veto; the issue remained a primary focus of his while in office.[51]

In 2015, Chambers again introduced LB268. The measure passed the legislature over Governor Pete Ricketts's veto. Following the veto, a petition drive was undertaken to reject the bill and maintain capital punishment. Enough signatures were secured to suspend LB268 until the November 2016 general election; in the election, 60% of the votes cast favored rejecting the repeal and keeping the death penalty.[52][53][54]

Assorted legislation edit

  • Chambers has long advocated on behalf of David Rice and Ed Poindexter, who were convicted of the murder of an Omaha police officer; Amnesty International considers them political prisoners.
  • Often clashing with fellow senators, Chambers has taken on several issues of concern to rural Nebraskans during his tenure, such as a bill requiring landowners to manage the population of black-tailed prairie dogs on their property and a proposed constitutional amendment to preserve the right to fish, trap and hunt in the state. Chambers described the latter measure as one of the most "asinine, simple-minded pieces of trash" ever considered by the legislature.[55] In 2004 Chambers co-authored an opinion piece with U.S. Representative Tom Osborne opposing a set of initiatives that would allow casino gambling and slot machines in Nebraska.[56] Chambers also opposed proposed funding of the state's ethanol plant incentive programs, calling them "a boondoggle".[57]
  • Chambers has long supported feminist goals. For example, he argued forcefully in favor of a law against sexually assaulting one's spouse in 1975 that made Nebraska the first US state to outlaw marital assault.[58]
  • In 2006, Chambers withdrew support from two tax incentive bills that would have provided funding for Omaha and Lincoln civic building projects. He said he withdrew support because Omaha business leaders had insulted the legislature and the North Omaha community he represents by criticizing the passage of LB 1024. He was also insulted by the Omaha City Council's refusal to name a North Omaha park after him despite that neighborhood's request to do so.[59]
  • In 2015, Chambers introduced LB473, opposing the Keystone XL pipeline.[60]
  • In 2016, Chambers filibustered a bill that would have changed Nebraska's congressional district method of electoral college vote splitting into a winner-take-all system like that of other US states. Because the vote-splitting method was preserved, one district in Nebraska assigned an electoral college vote to Joe Biden in the 2020 presidential election.[61]

Outreach activities edit

  • On November 4, 2008, Chambers was elected to the new Douglas and Sarpy Counties' Learning Community Board; he was sworn in during 2009.
  • Chambers hosted a weekly call-in public-access television cable TV show on Omaha's Community Telecast, Inc. (CTI22), broadcast on Cox Channel 22.[62]
  • In 2014, after ending his regular Omaha Star column, Chambers said he was going to write a blog.[63]
  • Chambers distributes "Erniegrams" to other legislators that consist of typed poems and commentary about recent events and legislative topics in the current session, as well as photocopied articles and political cartoons of note, which are sometimes posted by other legislators on Twitter as Chambers does not use computers.[64][65]

Controversy edit

Term limit law edit

In 2000, a term-limit amendment was passed that essentially forced Chambers—and half of Nebraska's state senators[66]—out of office in 2008.[67][68][69] The amendment required legislators sit out one term, after which they could run for election. In 2012, Chambers was once again elected to represent north Omaha's 11th district in the Nebraska Unicameral, defeating Brenda Council by 3,408 votes, with 10,336 votes cast. He was forced to sit out the 2020 election due to the same law.[16]

"My ISIS is the police" edit

On March 20, 2015, during a Judiciary Committee hearing on allowing guns in bars (LB 635), Chambers said, "My ISIS is the police."[70][71] He said his comments were intended to criticize the failure to prosecute Alvin Lugod, the Omaha police officer who fatally shot Danny Elrod on February 23.[72] Although fellow senators did not react to his comments during the hearing,[73] there was backlash. Omaha Police Chief Todd Schmaderer responded, "The comments that Senator Ernie Chambers made today at the Nebraska Unicameral are not only reprehensible but are completely without merit." Omaha Mayor Jean Stothert also criticized Chambers, saying in a press release that he should be looking for ways to improve public safety instead of "comparing police officers to terrorists."[72][74]

Governor Pete Ricketts called Chambers's comments "irresponsible" and asked for an apology.[75] Stothert, Police Chief Todd Schmaderer, and Nebraska Attorney General Doug Peterson were also critical, and the hashtag #supportblue was organized in response to Chambers's comments. Senator David Schnoor of Scribner called for his resignation.[75]

Senator Bob Krist of Omaha said he regretted that he had not immediately protested the remark.[76] Several other senators disagreed with Chambers's opinion but defended his right to express it. Senator Dave Bloomfield of Hoskins remarked, "It's a wonderful opportunity to pile onto Senator Chambers."[76] Chambers said he would continue to be vocal in his criticism of the police and would not apologize.[73]

Residency challenge edit

On November 8, 2016, Chambers was reelected to the legislature, defeating his opponent, John Sciara, by a vote of 7,763 to 1,726. In January 2017, Sciara filled a protest challenge to the legislature, claiming Chambers did not live in the district he was elected to represent and was thus ineligible to hold office. Chambers denied the allegation, calling it "busybody, gossipy, vengeful cud that already has been chewed."[77] On April 20, 2017, Nebraska state senators voted 42-0 to dismiss Sciara's challenge, following the recommendation of a special legislative committee formed to evaluate the claim.[78][79]

Legacy edit

 
The Ernie Chambers Memorial Hearing Room in the Nebraska Capitol

Chambers is a longtime civil rights activist and the most prominent and outspoken African-American leader in the state.[80] He has been called "the Maverick of Omaha" and the "angriest black man in Nebraska",[80] and has called himself a "Defender of the Downtrodden".[81]

In the 1990s, the apartment complex Strehlow Terrace was renamed Ernie Chambers Court.[82] In 2008, a room at the Nebraska Capitol used for Judiciary Committee meetings was named the Ernie Chambers Memorial Hearing Room.[83]

Awards edit

The Freedom from Religion Foundation awarded Chambers a plaque naming him a "Hero of the First Amendment" at their annual convention in 2005 in Orlando.[84]

Chambers was offered a Distinguished Service award from the American Humanist Association in 2007, but he turned it down.[85] He accepted a Lifetime Achievement Award from the association in 2016 at its 75th anniversary conference in Chicago.[86]

Personal life edit

Aside from a stint in the United States Army, Chambers has lived in Nebraska all his life.[5][87] He is known for his casual attire of blue jeans and short-sleeved sweatshirts,[88] even when in session at the Nebraska Legislature.[89][90] He often brings his dog with him to work.[67] Chambers is a sketch artist, a therapeutic activity he adopted during long legislative sessions.[91]

Chambers was married to Jacklyn Adele (née Lee) Chambers (January 31, 1940 – July 15, 2000), with whom he had four children before they divorced.[68][92]

Atheism edit

Chambers is an atheist. He views Christianity as a tool of oppression that white people use against Black Americans. For example, in 1965 he called the shooting of fellow Omaha native Malcolm X a "brutal, American-Christian style assassination."[93] Chambers is very familiar with and quotes frequently from the Bible, which he jokingly calls "the Bibble".[94]

For years Chambers was the only openly atheist member of any state government in the nation. A 2015 State Legislatures Magazine survey confirmed that he was the only atheist in a state legislature.[7] He was still the only one in the nation in 2017 according to Kurt Andersen in The Atlantic.[95] In 2019 another atheist, Megan Hunt, joined Chambers in the Nebraska legislature.

Despite not being religious, in January 2009 Chambers obtained credentials as a non-denominational minister so he could officiate at weddings.[89]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Ernest Chambers – United States Public Records". FamilySearch. Retrieved March 26, 2015.
  2. ^ Star, Lincoln Journal. . Hastings Tribune. Archived from the original on January 3, 2021. Retrieved January 4, 2021.
  3. ^ "Facts and figures from Ernie Chambers' time in Nebraska Legislature". Omaha World-Herald. Omaha, NE. August 9, 2020. Retrieved November 8, 2020.
  4. ^ Stoddard, Martha (August 9, 2020). "'Once-in-a-lifetime lawmaker' Ernie Chambers winds down historic career in Nebraska Legislature". Omaha World-Herald. Retrieved October 22, 2020.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Steed, Camille; Aylward, Pat; Valentine, Julie (1997). . Lincoln: Nebraska ETV Network. OCLC 46454011. Archived from the original (Video interview, 59 min.) on March 1, 2019. Retrieved March 26, 2015.
  6. ^ Huggins, Rachel (May 28, 2015). "The eccentric lawmaker who helped end Nebraska's death penalty once sued God and compared cops to ISIS". Vox. Retrieved May 29, 2015.
  7. ^ a b Kurtz, Karl (December 2015). "Who We Elect: The Demographics of State Legislatures". State Legislatures Magazine. National Conference of State Legislatures. Retrieved October 21, 2020.
  8. ^ a b c "Ernest Chambers – United States Census, 1940". FamilySearch. Retrieved March 26, 2015.
  9. ^ a b . Omaha World-Herald. Archived from the original on March 29, 2015. Retrieved March 26, 2015.
  10. ^ "Voices: Ernie Chambers" January 13, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, deathpenalty.org, July 10, 2015; retrieved January 11, 2017.
  11. ^ Biga, Leo Adam (2006). "Goodwin's Spencer Street Barber Shop: We Cut Heads and Broaden Minds, Too". The Omaha Reader. Retrieved March 26, 2015.
  12. ^ a b c d e Taylor, Jr., Dr. Quintard. "Manual – Chapter 9 The Civil Rights Movement in the West". History 313: The History of African Americans in the West. University of Washington. Retrieved March 26, 2015. Online resource, see Larsen in Further reading, pp. 272-74
  13. ^ Carter, Ed. A Time for Burning (PDF) (Report). Library of Congress. p. 1. Retrieved February 7, 2019. The film wastes no time getting to the core of racial injustice, with perhaps the most compelling and significant sequence, early in the film when the church's young pastor, William (Bill) Youngdahl, visits Chambers in his barbershop. Another film might have lauded the pastor for making the effort to hear Chambers out, but he has to sweat his way (literally) through Chambers' soft-spoken, eloquent, and blistering assessment of the racial divide in Omaha and the United States.
  14. ^ a b Fletcher, Adam F.C. (March 21, 2019). "A Biography of Ernie Chambers". North Omaha History. Retrieved November 8, 2020.
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  27. ^ Chambers v. Marsh, 675 F.2d 228 (8th Cir. 1982).
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  33. ^ Tetreault, Pat. "Forty years of history in the Heartland". Out History. Retrieved October 10, 2020.
  34. ^ Loudon, Sharon (October 6, 1993). "'Pro-family' coalition leader opposes job sex bias law". Lincoln Journal ( ). Retrieved October 10, 2020.
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  38. ^ Keyes, Allison (April 24, 2006). "NAACP Threatens Suit Over Omaha Redistricting". News & Notes. NPR. Retrieved March 26, 2015.
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  42. ^ "Neb. Governor Signs Bill Repealing Racially Charged Breakup Of Omaha School District". News on 6. Oklahoma. May 24, 2007. Retrieved November 8, 2020.
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  46. ^ Abourezk, Kevin (November 5, 2007). "Protesters of military funerals weigh in on suit against God". Lincoln Journal Star. Retrieved October 16, 2008.
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  54. ^ Berman, Mark (November 9, 2016). "Nebraska and California voters decide to keep the death penalty", washingtonpost.com; retrieved January 16, 2017.
  55. ^ Jenkins, Nate (March 3, 2005). "Chambers takes aim at hunting measure". Lincoln Journal Star. Retrieved May 24, 2006.
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  58. ^ Ross, Joann M. (2015). Making Marital Rape Visible: A History of American Legal and Social Movements Criminalizing Rape in Marriage (PhD). University of Nebraska.
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  70. ^ "Judiciary Committee Hearing on Allowing Guns in Bars (LB 635), March 20, 2015" (Video of Nebraska Legislative Hearing). Nebraskans Against Gun Violence. YouTube. March 20, 2015. Archived from the original on December 22, 2021. Retrieved March 26, 2015. Time of comment is at 51m25s
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  77. ^ Bureau, Martha Stoddard / World-Herald (January 4, 2017). "Ernie Chambers takes Legislature seat amid residency challenge".
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  79. ^ Stoddard, Martha (April 21, 2017). "Senators dismiss challenge to Ernie Chambers' residency". Omaha World-Herald. Retrieved May 23, 2017.
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  81. ^ "Sen. Ernie Chambers: District 11 – Biography". Nebraska Legislature. Retrieved March 26, 2015. Official Nebraska Legislature lists 'Occupation: Defender of the Downtrodden.'
  82. ^ "Chambers Court". WOWT NBC Omaha. October 26, 2005. Retrieved March 26, 2015.
  83. ^ Young, JoAnne (November 11, 2008). "Room at state Capitol dedicated to Chambers". Lincoln Journal Star. Retrieved October 10, 2020.
  84. ^ Gaylor, Annie Laurie (November 12, 2005). "Special Awards". Freedom From Religion Foundation. Orlando, Florida. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
  85. ^ Young, JoAnne (August 7, 2007). "Chambers: Thanks, but no thanks for consolation prize". Lincoln Journal Star. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
  86. ^ "Humanist, Atheist, Agnostic and Nonreligious Elected Officials". Center for Freethought Equality. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
  87. ^ Norman, Andrew; Adams, Sara (2013). "4: Making a Difference (Ernie Chambers and Christopher Rodgers)". Then and Now: A look at people in your neighborhood (iBook). Omaha Public Schools. pp. 14–16. Retrieved March 26, 2015. An iBook on a topic of Omaha and Nebraska history as it relates to African American History (3rd grade book series)
  88. ^ "Sen. Ernie Chambers: What will he do? - Associated Press". starherald.com. March 31, 2006. Retrieved August 21, 2019.
  89. ^ a b Young, Joanne (July 10, 2010). "Ernie Chambers shows a softer, romantic side". Lincoln Journal Star. Retrieved March 26, 2015.
  90. ^ Meyerson, Collier (May 28, 2015). . Fusion. Fusion Media Network. Archived from the original on May 30, 2015. Retrieved May 29, 2015.
  91. ^ Schulte, Grant (March 22, 2015). "Longtime Nebraska senator flexes a second skill: sketching". Fox News. Associated Press. Retrieved March 26, 2015.
  92. ^ (PDF). Lincoln, Nebraska: Nebraska Legislature Reference Bureau. 1970. p. 252. ISBN 9781343208117. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 28, 2017.
  93. ^ Chatelain, Dirk (June 29, 2019). "In Ernie Chambers' letters to The World-Herald, see the shift in his ideology". Omaha World-Herald. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
  94. ^ Connor, Goodwin (November 6, 2020). "The Black Nebraska Lawmaker Who May Have Delivered the Presidency to Joe Biden". The American Prospect. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
  95. ^ Andersen, Kurt (September 2017). "How America Lost its Mind" (PDF). The Atlantic. p. 89. Retrieved June 7, 2021.

Further reading edit

  • Larsen, Lawrence Harold, Barbara J. Cottrell, and Harl A. Dalstrom. The Gate City: A History of Omaha. Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press, 1982. "Black Omaha: From Non-Violence to Black Power." pp. 272–274. ISBN 978-0-803-27967-4 OCLC 36556292
    • See also: Excerpt at Quintard Taylor "History 313: The History of African Americans in the West."
  • Steed, Camille, Pat Aylward, and Julie Valentine. Ernie Chambers: Still Militant After All These Years. March 1, 2019, at the Wayback Machine Lincoln: Nebraska ETV Network, 1997. Video, 59 min. OCLC 46454011
  • Ali Johnson, Tekla Agbala. Free Radical Ernest Chambers, Black Power, and the Politics of Race. Lubbock: Texas Tech University Press, 2012. ISBN 978-0-896-72729-8 OCLC 795173877

External links edit

ernie, chambers, this, article, about, politician, civil, rights, activist, cyclist, ernest, chambers, cyclist, militia, officer, journalist, author, ernest, chambers, ernest, william, chambers, born, july, 1937, american, politician, civil, rights, activist, . This article is about the politician and civil rights activist For the cyclist see Ernest Chambers cyclist For the militia officer journalist and author see Ernest J Chambers Ernest William Chambers born July 10 1937 1 is an American politician and civil rights activist who represented North Omaha s 11th District in the Nebraska State Legislature from 1971 to 2009 and again from 2013 to 2021 He could not run in 2020 due to term limits 2 Ernie ChambersErnie Chambers as a Nebraska SenatorMember of the Nebraska Legislature from the 11th districtIn office January 9 2013 January 6 2021Preceded byBrenda CouncilSucceeded byTerrell McKinneyIn office January 6 1971 January 7 2009Preceded byGeorge W AlthouseSucceeded byBrenda CouncilPersonal detailsBornErnest William Chambers 1937 07 10 July 10 1937 age 86 Omaha Nebraska U S Political partyIndependentOther politicalaffiliationsNew Alliance 1988 Residence s Omaha Nebraska USAlma materCreighton University BA JD Chambers is the longest serving state senator in Nebraska history having represented North Omaha for 46 years 3 For most of his career Chambers was the only nonwhite senator 4 He is the only African American to have run for governor and the first to have run for the U S Senate in Nebraska history 5 6 For years he was the only openly atheist member of any state legislature in the United States 7 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Omaha Post Office 2 2 Summer 1966 riots 2 3 Nebraska Legislature 2 3 1 South African divestment 2 3 2 Marsh v Chambers 2 3 3 1986 NCAA student athletes as state employees 2 3 4 1989 Franklin scandal 2 3 5 1993 LGBT anti discrimination bill 2 3 6 2006 Omaha Public Schools controversy 2 3 7 2007 lawsuit against God 2 3 8 Capital punishment 2 3 9 Assorted legislation 3 Outreach activities 4 Controversy 4 1 Term limit law 4 2 My ISIS is the police 4 3 Residency challenge 5 Legacy 5 1 Awards 6 Personal life 6 1 Atheism 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life editChambers was born in the Near North Side neighborhood 5 of Omaha Nebraska 8 to Malcolm Chambers a local minister 5 and Lillian Chambers His father s family originally came from Mississippi and his mother s family originally came from Louisiana 8 He has six siblings 9 who were all born in Omaha 8 In 1955 Chambers graduated from Omaha Tech High School In 1959 he graduated from Creighton University with a B A in history with minors in Spanish and philosophy He attended Creighton University School of Law in the early 1960s and completed his degree in 1979 He refused to join the Nebraska State Bar Association so was unable to practice law in 2015 he explained his refusal on the grounds that he had earned the right to practice by passing law school and should not have to pay the Bar Association dues as well 10 9 Career editOmaha Post Office edit In 1963 when Chambers was 25 he worked for the Omaha Post Office He has said he was fired for insubordination because he spoke out against the management at the Post Office calling the black staff boys He picketed the Postmaster General s speech in Omaha with a sign that read I spoke against discrimination in the Omaha Post Office and was fired 5 11 Summer 1966 riots edit During a series of heat waves in 1966 there were two disturbances in Omaha In July the Nebraska National Guard was summoned to restore order after police and black teenagers clashed three nights in a row 12 In early August a series of riots occurred over three nights Chambers worked as a spokesperson for the community during both conflicts meeting with Mayor A V Sorenson and helping to end the riots 12 During this period Chambers emerged as a prominent leader in the North Omaha community where he successfully negotiated concessions from the city s leaders on behalf of North Omaha s African American youth 12 Chambers headed a committee of the Near North Side Police Community Relations Council collated information and presented numerous complaints about the police to city officials 12 The African American community had previously been led by more established organizations like Omaha Urban League and the local chapter of the NAACP not an emerging young anti establishment leader like Chambers 12 Chambers was working as a barber at the time and appeared in the Oscar nominated 1966 documentary film A Time for Burning where he talked about race relations in Omaha 13 Nebraska Legislature edit In 1968 Chambers ran for a position on the Omaha School Board but was not elected 14 He also failed as a write in candidate for the Omaha City Council in 1969 5 14 In 1970 he was elected to represent North Omaha s 11th District in the Nebraska State Legislature replacing George W Althouse who had been appointed to replace Senator Edward Danner who had died in office 5 During the election a policeman was killed in a deserted house by a bomb Two Black Panthers David Rice and Edward Poindexter were charged in the death Chambers protested as he thought the men had been framed by COINTELPRO 5 Chambers was reelected to the Legislature in every ensuing election through 2004 On April 25 2005 Chambers became Nebraska s longest serving state senator having served for more than 35 years 15 He was not allowed to seek reelection in 2008 because of a constitutional amendment Nebraska voters passed in 2000 that limits Nebraska state legislators to two consecutive four year terms But the amendment permits senators to seek reelection to their office after sitting out for four years and Chambers defeated incumbent Brenda Council in 2012 by a landslide 16 Chambers also ran for the United States Senate in 1988 as a New Alliance Party candidate 17 He petitioned to be included on the 1974 ballot for governor of Nebraska and also ran for governor in 1994 receiving 0 43 of the vote 18 19 South African divestment edit Because of a legislative resolution Chambers introduced in 1980 Nebraska became the first state to divest from South Africa in protest of apartheid 20 21 Upon discovering that the University of Nebraska held several hundred gold Krugerrands as an investment Chambers introduced a nonbinding resolution calling for reinvestment of state pension funds that had been invested directly or indirectly in South Africa 22 The resolution argued that apartheid was contrary to Nebraska s principles of human rights and legal equality 23 Nebraska s divestment caused little immediate change in business practices David Packard of Hewlett Packard said I d rather lose business in Nebraska than with South Africa 24 But other state governments and eventually the federal government followed Nebraska s example contributing to the end of apartheid Chambers spearheaded a stronger 1984 law mandating divestment resulting in Nebraska s public employee pension funds divesting 14 6 million in stocks issued by companies that did business with South Africa Archbishop Desmond Tutu later visited Lincoln where he remarked that Nebraska had helped to end apartheid The state government conspicuously did not invite Chambers to Tutu s speaking event 25 Marsh v Chambers edit See also Marsh v Chambers Chambers filed a lawsuit in 1980 attempting to end the Legislature s practice of beginning its session with a prayer offered by a state supported chaplain arguing that it was unconstitutional under the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment 26 The district court held that the prayer did not violate the Constitution but that state support for the chaplain did The 8th Circuit Court of Appeals held that both practices violated the Constitution 27 but in Marsh v Chambers 1983 the Supreme Court held by a 6 3 vote that both practices were constitutional because of the United States unique history 28 1986 NCAA student athletes as state employees edit Chambers has promoted recognizing NCAA student athletes as state employees since the 1980s arguing that they are generating revenue for their universities without any legal benefits for doing so which encourages illegal payments and gifts A bill on this issue was passed by the Legislature but was unable to overcome the governor s veto After it was revealed that requiring student athletes to be recognized as state employees would jeopardize any university s NCAA standing the language of the bill was changed so that a university could allow for players to be paid a stipend after which the bill passed and was signed by the governor in 2003 29 1989 Franklin scandal edit According to The New York Times unidentified people present at a closed meeting reported that Chambers claimed he heard credible reports of boys and girls some of them from foster homes who had been transported around the country by airplane to provide sexual favors for which they were rewarded 30 Investigating what became known as the Franklin child prostitution ring allegations a Nebraska grand jury was convened to investigate the allegations and possibly return indictments Eventually the grand jury ruled the entire matter was a carefully crafted hoax although they failed to identify the perpetrators of the hoax 31 nbsp Chambers repeatedly sought to outlaw hunting mountain lions saying these animals should not be killed for the love of killing 32 1993 LGBT anti discrimination bill edit Nebraska s LGBT community has considered Chambers an ally since the 1970s 33 In 1993 he co sponsored a bill to prohibit employment discrimination by sexual orientation 34 The bill faced fierce opposition Opponents of the anti discrimination legislation formed a Nebraska chapter of the Traditional Values Coalition and brought activist Lou Sheldon to Lincoln to organize antigay rallies outside the Capitol building 35 Despite the opposition Chambers sponsored another LGBT anti discrimination bill in 1995 36 He continued to support similar measures throughout his career in the legislature None of them has been successful 37 2006 Omaha Public Schools controversy edit In April 2006 Chambers introduced legislative bill LB 1024 an amendment to a bill that would divide the Omaha Public Schools district into three different districts 38 The bill and its amendment were created in response to an effort by the district to absorb a string of largely white schools that were within the Omaha city limits but were controlled by suburban or independent districts 39 Omaha Schools claimed that the usurpation was necessary to avoid financial and racial inequity but supporters of LB 1024 contested the district s expansion favoring more localized control The bill received national attention and some critics called it state sponsored segregation 40 LB 641 passed in 2007 repealed and superseded LB 1024 restoring pre 2006 Omaha area school district boundaries after which a learning community was created to equalize student achievement in Douglas and Sarpy counties 41 42 2007 lawsuit against God edit See also Lawsuits against God nbsp Wikinews has related news Nebraska Senator sues GodJudge in Nebraska says thou shalt not sue God Some members of the Nebraska legislature attempted to ban frivolous lawsuits from Nebraska s court system in 2007 Chambers believed that this attempt was misguided and that access to the court system should not be restricted To dramatize his point that the court system must be entirely open Chambers filed a lawsuit against God 43 in Douglas County district court in September 2007 44 It argued that God has caused widespread death destruction and terrorization of millions upon millions of the Earth s inhabitants 43 Nebraska media inaccurately reported that Chambers s lawsuit against God was intended as an ironic protest against frivolous lawsuits Chambers clarified that on the contrary his lawsuit against God emphasized that attempts by the Legislature to prohibit the filing of any lawsuit would run afoul of the Nebraska Constitution s guarantee that the doors to the courthouse must be open to everyone 45 The Westboro Baptist Church filed an amicus brief in the lawsuit arguing that Chambers did not have standing to sue and that he was fully deserving of the outpourings of God s fierce wrath In response Chambers voiced disagreement with the church but argued that the church s access to the court system must be protected just like his 46 The lawsuit was dismissed in October 2008 because a summons notifying God of the lawsuit could not be delivered to the defendant who has no listed address Chambers countered that because of God s omniscience God had been notified 47 but decided not to pursue the suit further 45 Capital punishment edit Chambers is a firm opponent of the death penalty and introduced a bill to repeal Nebraska s capital punishment law at the start of each legislative session 36 times over 40 years 48 49 The bill LB268 50 passed the legislature in 1979 but could not overcome Governor Charles Thone s veto the issue remained a primary focus of his while in office 51 In 2015 Chambers again introduced LB268 The measure passed the legislature over Governor Pete Ricketts s veto Following the veto a petition drive was undertaken to reject the bill and maintain capital punishment Enough signatures were secured to suspend LB268 until the November 2016 general election in the election 60 of the votes cast favored rejecting the repeal and keeping the death penalty 52 53 54 Assorted legislation edit Chambers has long advocated on behalf of David Rice and Ed Poindexter who were convicted of the murder of an Omaha police officer Amnesty International considers them political prisoners Often clashing with fellow senators Chambers has taken on several issues of concern to rural Nebraskans during his tenure such as a bill requiring landowners to manage the population of black tailed prairie dogs on their property and a proposed constitutional amendment to preserve the right to fish trap and hunt in the state Chambers described the latter measure as one of the most asinine simple minded pieces of trash ever considered by the legislature 55 In 2004 Chambers co authored an opinion piece with U S Representative Tom Osborne opposing a set of initiatives that would allow casino gambling and slot machines in Nebraska 56 Chambers also opposed proposed funding of the state s ethanol plant incentive programs calling them a boondoggle 57 Chambers has long supported feminist goals For example he argued forcefully in favor of a law against sexually assaulting one s spouse in 1975 that made Nebraska the first US state to outlaw marital assault 58 In 2006 Chambers withdrew support from two tax incentive bills that would have provided funding for Omaha and Lincoln civic building projects He said he withdrew support because Omaha business leaders had insulted the legislature and the North Omaha community he represents by criticizing the passage of LB 1024 He was also insulted by the Omaha City Council s refusal to name a North Omaha park after him despite that neighborhood s request to do so 59 In 2015 Chambers introduced LB473 opposing the Keystone XL pipeline 60 In 2016 Chambers filibustered a bill that would have changed Nebraska s congressional district method of electoral college vote splitting into a winner take all system like that of other US states Because the vote splitting method was preserved one district in Nebraska assigned an electoral college vote to Joe Biden in the 2020 presidential election 61 Outreach activities editOn November 4 2008 Chambers was elected to the new Douglas and Sarpy Counties Learning Community Board he was sworn in during 2009 Chambers hosted a weekly call in public access television cable TV show on Omaha s Community Telecast Inc CTI22 broadcast on Cox Channel 22 62 In 2014 after ending his regular Omaha Star column Chambers said he was going to write a blog 63 Chambers distributes Erniegrams to other legislators that consist of typed poems and commentary about recent events and legislative topics in the current session as well as photocopied articles and political cartoons of note which are sometimes posted by other legislators on Twitter as Chambers does not use computers 64 65 Controversy editTerm limit law edit In 2000 a term limit amendment was passed that essentially forced Chambers and half of Nebraska s state senators 66 out of office in 2008 67 68 69 The amendment required legislators sit out one term after which they could run for election In 2012 Chambers was once again elected to represent north Omaha s 11th district in the Nebraska Unicameral defeating Brenda Council by 3 408 votes with 10 336 votes cast He was forced to sit out the 2020 election due to the same law 16 My ISIS is the police edit On March 20 2015 during a Judiciary Committee hearing on allowing guns in bars LB 635 Chambers said My ISIS is the police 70 71 He said his comments were intended to criticize the failure to prosecute Alvin Lugod the Omaha police officer who fatally shot Danny Elrod on February 23 72 Although fellow senators did not react to his comments during the hearing 73 there was backlash Omaha Police Chief Todd Schmaderer responded The comments that Senator Ernie Chambers made today at the Nebraska Unicameral are not only reprehensible but are completely without merit Omaha Mayor Jean Stothert also criticized Chambers saying in a press release that he should be looking for ways to improve public safety instead of comparing police officers to terrorists 72 74 Governor Pete Ricketts called Chambers s comments irresponsible and asked for an apology 75 Stothert Police Chief Todd Schmaderer and Nebraska Attorney General Doug Peterson were also critical and the hashtag supportblue was organized in response to Chambers s comments Senator David Schnoor of Scribner called for his resignation 75 Senator Bob Krist of Omaha said he regretted that he had not immediately protested the remark 76 Several other senators disagreed with Chambers s opinion but defended his right to express it Senator Dave Bloomfield of Hoskins remarked It s a wonderful opportunity to pile onto Senator Chambers 76 Chambers said he would continue to be vocal in his criticism of the police and would not apologize 73 Residency challenge edit On November 8 2016 Chambers was reelected to the legislature defeating his opponent John Sciara by a vote of 7 763 to 1 726 In January 2017 Sciara filled a protest challenge to the legislature claiming Chambers did not live in the district he was elected to represent and was thus ineligible to hold office Chambers denied the allegation calling it busybody gossipy vengeful cud that already has been chewed 77 On April 20 2017 Nebraska state senators voted 42 0 to dismiss Sciara s challenge following the recommendation of a special legislative committee formed to evaluate the claim 78 79 Legacy edit nbsp The Ernie Chambers Memorial Hearing Room in the Nebraska Capitol Chambers is a longtime civil rights activist and the most prominent and outspoken African American leader in the state 80 He has been called the Maverick of Omaha and the angriest black man in Nebraska 80 and has called himself a Defender of the Downtrodden 81 In the 1990s the apartment complex Strehlow Terrace was renamed Ernie Chambers Court 82 In 2008 a room at the Nebraska Capitol used for Judiciary Committee meetings was named the Ernie Chambers Memorial Hearing Room 83 Awards edit The Freedom from Religion Foundation awarded Chambers a plaque naming him a Hero of the First Amendment at their annual convention in 2005 in Orlando 84 Chambers was offered a Distinguished Service award from the American Humanist Association in 2007 but he turned it down 85 He accepted a Lifetime Achievement Award from the association in 2016 at its 75th anniversary conference in Chicago 86 Personal life editAside from a stint in the United States Army Chambers has lived in Nebraska all his life 5 87 He is known for his casual attire of blue jeans and short sleeved sweatshirts 88 even when in session at the Nebraska Legislature 89 90 He often brings his dog with him to work 67 Chambers is a sketch artist a therapeutic activity he adopted during long legislative sessions 91 Chambers was married to Jacklyn Adele nee Lee Chambers January 31 1940 July 15 2000 with whom he had four children before they divorced 68 92 Atheism edit Chambers is an atheist He views Christianity as a tool of oppression that white people use against Black Americans For example in 1965 he called the shooting of fellow Omaha native Malcolm X a brutal American Christian style assassination 93 Chambers is very familiar with and quotes frequently from the Bible which he jokingly calls the Bibble 94 For years Chambers was the only openly atheist member of any state government in the nation A 2015 State Legislatures Magazine survey confirmed that he was the only atheist in a state legislature 7 He was still the only one in the nation in 2017 according to Kurt Andersen in The Atlantic 95 In 2019 another atheist Megan Hunt joined Chambers in the Nebraska legislature Despite not being religious in January 2009 Chambers obtained credentials as a non denominational minister so he could officiate at weddings 89 See also editAfrican Americans in Omaha Nebraska Civil rights movement in Omaha Nebraska List of riots and civil unrest in Omaha Nebraska History of North Omaha Nebraska Timeline of racial tension in Omaha Nebraska Timeline of North Omaha Nebraska history History of Omaha NebraskaReferences edit Ernest Chambers United States Public Records FamilySearch Retrieved March 26 2015 Star Lincoln Journal New faces in the Legislature include some familiar ones Hastings Tribune Archived from the original on January 3 2021 Retrieved January 4 2021 Facts and figures from Ernie Chambers time in Nebraska Legislature Omaha World Herald Omaha NE August 9 2020 Retrieved November 8 2020 Stoddard Martha August 9 2020 Once in a lifetime lawmaker Ernie Chambers winds down historic career in Nebraska Legislature Omaha World Herald Retrieved October 22 2020 a b c d e f g h Steed Camille Aylward Pat Valentine Julie 1997 Ernie Chambers Still Militant After All These Years Lincoln Nebraska ETV Network OCLC 46454011 Archived from the original Video interview 59 min on March 1 2019 Retrieved March 26 2015 Huggins Rachel May 28 2015 The eccentric lawmaker who helped end Nebraska s death penalty once sued God and compared cops to ISIS Vox Retrieved May 29 2015 a b Kurtz Karl December 2015 Who We Elect The Demographics of State Legislatures State Legislatures Magazine National Conference of State Legislatures Retrieved October 21 2020 a b c Ernest Chambers United States Census 1940 FamilySearch Retrieved March 26 2015 a b The Life and Times of Ernie Chambers Omaha World Herald Archived from the original on March 29 2015 Retrieved March 26 2015 Voices Ernie Chambers Archived January 13 2017 at the Wayback Machine deathpenalty org July 10 2015 retrieved January 11 2017 Biga Leo Adam 2006 Goodwin s Spencer Street Barber Shop We Cut Heads and Broaden Minds Too The Omaha Reader Retrieved March 26 2015 a b c d e Taylor Jr Dr Quintard Manual Chapter 9 The Civil Rights Movement in the West History 313 The History of African Americans in the West University of Washington Retrieved March 26 2015 Online resource see Larsen in Further reading pp 272 74 Carter Ed A Time for Burning PDF Report Library of Congress p 1 Retrieved February 7 2019 The film wastes no time getting to the core of racial injustice with perhaps the most compelling and significant sequence early in the film when the church s young pastor William Bill Youngdahl visits Chambers in his barbershop Another film might have lauded the pastor for making the effort to hear Chambers out but he has to sweat his way literally through Chambers soft spoken eloquent and blistering assessment of the racial divide in Omaha and the United States a b Fletcher Adam F C March 21 2019 A Biography of Ernie Chambers North Omaha History Retrieved November 8 2020 For the Record Lincoln Journal Star Associated Press April 24 2005 Retrieved March 26 2015 a b Burbach Christopher Chambers return to Lincoln follows strange campaign season Omaha World Herald Archived from the original on January 30 2013 Retrieved November 7 2012 Thomas Richard C June 1 1989 Election Results for the U S President U S Senate and the U S House of Representatives PDF Federal Election Commission United States of America Federal Election Commission Retrieved November 8 2020 Beermann Allen J December 2 1974 Official Report of the Board of State Canvassers of the State of Nebraska General Election Held November 5 1974 PDF Nebraska Library Commission Retrieved November 8 2020 Beermann Allen J Englert Ralph December 5 1994 Official Report of the Board of State Canvassers of the State of Nebraska General Election Held November 8 1994 PDF Nebraska Library Commission Retrieved November 8 2020 Lansing Paul 1981 The Divestment of United States Companies in South Africa and Apartheid Nebraska Law Review 60 2 301 Retrieved June 6 2021 Catania Sara 2006 The Importance of Being Ernie Mother Jones Retrieved June 6 2021 Barker Karlyn February 8 1985 States Cities Fight Apartheid The Washington Post Retrieved June 6 2021 South Africa Divestment Hearing and Markups Before the Subcommittee on Fiscal Affairs and Health of the Committee on the District of Columbia House of Representatives Ninety eighth Congress Second Session on H Con Res 216 and H Res 372 University of Michigan U S Government Printing Office 1984 p 316 Knight Richard 1990 Sanctions Disinvestment and U S Corporations in South Africa Sanctioning Apartheid Africa World Press Kelly Michael December 11 2013 Fight against apartheid came to Nebraska in 1980s with gift of South African gold coins Omaha World Herald Retrieved June 6 2021 Chambers v Marsh 504 F supp 585 U S District Court for the District of Nebraska 1980 Chambers v Marsh 675 F 2d 228 8th Cir 1982 Frank MARSH State Treasurer et al Petitioners v Ernest CHAMBERS LII Legal Information Institute Retrieved July 16 2020 Dopirak Dustin February 17 2004 Debate rages over paying college athletes The Daily Collegian Penn State Retrieved March 26 2015 Robbins William December 18 1988 A Lurid Mysterious Scandal Begins Taking Shape in Omaha The New York Times Retrieved March 26 2015 Robbins Williams July 29 1990 Omaha Grand Jury Sees Hoax in Lurid Tales The New York Times Retrieved March 26 2015 Young JoAnne February 21 2019 Chambers keeps up fight to stop mountain lion hunting in Nebraska Lincoln Journal Star Retrieved November 5 2020 Tetreault Pat Forty years of history in the Heartland Out History Retrieved October 10 2020 Loudon Sharon October 6 1993 Pro family coalition leader opposes job sex bias law Lincoln Journal nbsp Retrieved October 10 2020 Reeves Bob January 11 1994 2 000 expected to protest homosexual job rights bill The Lincoln Star Retrieved October 11 2020 Knapp Fred February 28 1995 Ban on gay job bias fails to win support Lincoln Journal Retrieved October 12 2020 LGBTQ Non Discrimination in Nebraska Freedom for all Americans February 15 2018 Retrieved October 11 2020 There are currently no explicit comprehensive statewide non discrimination protections for gay lesbian bisexual or transgender people in Nebraska Keyes Allison April 24 2006 NAACP Threatens Suit Over Omaha Redistricting News amp Notes NPR Retrieved March 26 2015 Montgomery Rick April 27 2006 Omaha schools Divide and conquer Seattle Times Knight Ridder Newspapers Retrieved March 26 2015 Dillon Sam April 15 2006 Law to Segregate Omaha Schools Divides Nebraska The New York Times Retrieved May 24 2006 Raikes January 17 2007 LB641 Change provisions relating to schools learning communities school governance and school finance Nebraska Legislature Retrieved November 8 2020 Neb Governor Signs Bill Repealing Racially Charged Breakup Of Omaha School District News on 6 Oklahoma May 24 2007 Retrieved November 8 2020 a b Chambers says lawsuit against God has a point Fremont Tribune Associated Press August 6 2008 Retrieved October 10 2020 Hearing set in suit against God Fremont Tribune Associated Press August 5 2008 Retrieved October 10 2020 a b Chambers Ernie January 27 2011 Former senator clarifies statement The Daily Nebraskan Lincoln Nebraska Retrieved October 16 2008 Abourezk Kevin November 5 2007 Protesters of military funerals weigh in on suit against God Lincoln Journal Star Retrieved October 16 2008 Suit against God tossed over lack of address NBC News October 15 2008 Retrieved October 10 2020 Associated Press May 27 2015 Nebraska abolishes death penalty in landmark override vote KETV Retrieved May 29 2015 Genoways Ted May 28 2015 Inside the Unlikely Coalition That Just Got the Death Penalty Banned in Nebraska Mother Jones Retrieved May 29 2015 Chambers Ernie January 14 2015 LB268 Eliminate the death penalty and change and eliminate provisions relating to sentencing Nebraska Legislature Retrieved May 29 2015 Walton Don May 20 2015 Death penalty repeal passes Legislature awaits veto Lincoln Journal Star Retrieved May 29 2015 Duggan Joe Paul Hammel and Martha Stoddard May 28 2015 Hours of suspense emotion lead up to a landmark vote for legislators on repealing death penalty omaha com retrieved January 16 2017 Hammel Paul October 16 2015 Death penalty supporters put repeal on hold till 2016 vote Omaha World Herald retrieved January 16 2017 Berman Mark November 9 2016 Nebraska and California voters decide to keep the death penalty washingtonpost com retrieved January 16 2017 Jenkins Nate March 3 2005 Chambers takes aim at hunting measure Lincoln Journal Star Retrieved May 24 2006 Chambers Ernie Osborne Tom July 1 2004 Damage from casinos would be long lasting PDF Gambling With The Good Life Archived from the original PDF on March 17 2006 Retrieved May 24 2006 Walton Don April 6 2004 Ethanol fund gap divides senators Lincoln Journal Star Retrieved May 24 2006 Ross Joann M 2015 Making Marital Rape Visible A History of American Legal and Social Movements Criminalizing Rape in Marriage PhD University of Nebraska Hicks Nancy April 11 2006 Bill that would aid Lincoln arena is dead Lincoln Journal Star Retrieved May 24 2006 Pipeline foes appeal to Nebraska lawmakers in testy hearing The Washington Post Associated Press March 11 2015 Retrieved March 26 2015 dead link Batchelor Tom November 5 2020 Ernie Chambers Praised by Biden Supporters As Nebraska s Split Electoral Votes Could Decide Election Newsweek Retrieved November 5 2020 General Weekly Program Schedule Community Telecast Archived from the original on June 1 2009 Retrieved March 26 2015 Hammel Paul November 28 2014 Sen Ernie Chambers quits Omaha Star column plans blog Omaha World Herald Retrieved March 26 2015 Don Walton Legislature rolling toward spring showdown Public News Press February 3 2019 Retrieved August 21 2019 Erniegram hashtag on Twitter twitter com Retrieved August 21 2019 Bauer Scott March 25 2006 Impact of term limits on state s unicameral government feared Lincoln Journal Star Retrieved March 26 2015 a b Gordon Ed January 24 2006 Sen Ernie Chambers a Solo Act in Nebraska Audio interview includes transcript News amp Notes NPR Retrieved March 26 2015 a b Saulny Susan April 29 2008 Statehouse Journal An Irascible Firebrand Quieted by Term Limits The New York Times Retrieved March 26 2015 Catania Sara February 2006 The Importance of Being Ernie Mother Jones Retrieved May 29 2015 Judiciary Committee Hearing on Allowing Guns in Bars LB 635 March 20 2015 Video of Nebraska Legislative Hearing Nebraskans Against Gun Violence YouTube March 20 2015 Archived from the original on December 22 2021 Retrieved March 26 2015 Time of comment is at 51m25s Young Joanne March 26 2015 Transcript of Ernie Chambers comments on LB635 Transcript of legislative hearing Lincoln Journal Star Retrieved March 26 2015 a b Hammel Paul March 25 2015 Ernie Chambers faces criticism for comparing police to ISIS Omaha World Herald Retrieved March 26 2015 a b Young Joanne March 26 2015 Senator calls out Chambers for comments on police Lincoln Journal Star Retrieved March 26 2015 Young Joanne March 26 2015 Senator calls out Sen Ernie Chambers for comments on police Lincoln Journal Star Retrieved March 26 2015 a b Hammel Paul Stoddard Martha March 26 2015 List of critics grows after Ernie Chambers my ISIS is the police comments Omaha World Herald Retrieved March 26 2015 a b Walton Don March 26 2015 Chambers remarks stir senatorial backlash Lincoln Journal Star Retrieved March 26 2015 Bureau Martha Stoddard World Herald January 4 2017 Ernie Chambers takes Legislature seat amid residency challenge Stoddard Martha April 9 2017 Nebraska legislative committee rules in favor of Ernie Chambers on question of residency Omaha World Herald Retrieved May 23 2017 Stoddard Martha April 21 2017 Senators dismiss challenge to Ernie Chambers residency Omaha World Herald Retrieved May 23 2017 a b Beckel Michael January 5 2006 The Maverick of Omaha Sen Ernie Chambers talks race and politics Mother Jones Retrieved March 26 2015 Sen Ernie Chambers District 11 Biography Nebraska Legislature Retrieved March 26 2015 Official Nebraska Legislature lists Occupation Defender of the Downtrodden Chambers Court WOWT NBC Omaha October 26 2005 Retrieved March 26 2015 Young JoAnne November 11 2008 Room at state Capitol dedicated to Chambers Lincoln Journal Star Retrieved October 10 2020 Gaylor Annie Laurie November 12 2005 Special Awards Freedom From Religion Foundation Orlando Florida Retrieved June 7 2021 Young JoAnne August 7 2007 Chambers Thanks but no thanks for consolation prize Lincoln Journal Star Retrieved June 7 2021 Humanist Atheist Agnostic and Nonreligious Elected Officials Center for Freethought Equality Retrieved June 7 2021 Norman Andrew Adams Sara 2013 4 Making a Difference Ernie Chambers and Christopher Rodgers Then and Now A look at people in your neighborhood iBook Omaha Public Schools pp 14 16 Retrieved March 26 2015 An iBook on a topic of Omaha and Nebraska history as it relates to African American History 3rd grade book series Sen Ernie Chambers What will he do Associated Press starherald com March 31 2006 Retrieved August 21 2019 a b Young Joanne July 10 2010 Ernie Chambers shows a softer romantic side Lincoln Journal Star Retrieved March 26 2015 Meyerson Collier May 28 2015 Meet Ernie Chambers who led Nebraska s death penalty ban and also sued God once Fusion Fusion Media Network Archived from the original on May 30 2015 Retrieved May 29 2015 Schulte Grant March 22 2015 Longtime Nebraska senator flexes a second skill sketching Fox News Associated Press Retrieved March 26 2015 1970 1971 Nebraska Blue Book PDF Lincoln Nebraska Nebraska Legislature Reference Bureau 1970 p 252 ISBN 9781343208117 Archived from the original PDF on January 28 2017 Chatelain Dirk June 29 2019 In Ernie Chambers letters to The World Herald see the shift in his ideology Omaha World Herald Retrieved June 7 2021 Connor Goodwin November 6 2020 The Black Nebraska Lawmaker Who May Have Delivered the Presidency to Joe Biden The American Prospect Retrieved June 7 2021 Andersen Kurt September 2017 How America Lost its Mind PDF The Atlantic p 89 Retrieved June 7 2021 Further reading editLarsen Lawrence Harold Barbara J Cottrell and Harl A Dalstrom The Gate City A History of Omaha Lincoln Nebraska University of Nebraska Press 1982 Black Omaha From Non Violence to Black Power pp 272 274 ISBN 978 0 803 27967 4 OCLC 36556292 See also Excerpt at Quintard Taylor History 313 The History of African Americans in the West Steed Camille Pat Aylward and Julie Valentine Ernie Chambers Still Militant After All These Years Archived March 1 2019 at the Wayback Machine Lincoln Nebraska ETV Network 1997 Video 59 min OCLC 46454011 Ali Johnson Tekla Agbala Free Radical Ernest Chambers Black Power and the Politics of Race Lubbock Texas Tech University Press 2012 ISBN 978 0 896 72729 8 OCLC 795173877 Free Radical Ernest Chambers at Project MUSE PDF External links editSen Ernie Chambers District 11 at Nebraska State Legislature Appearances on C SPAN Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ernie Chambers amp oldid 1213709127, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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