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Wikipedia

John Conyers

John James Conyers Jr.[a] (May 16, 1929 – October 27, 2019) was an American politician of the Democratic Party who served as a U.S. representative from Michigan from 1965 to 2017. Conyers was the sixth-longest serving member of Congress and the longest-serving African American member of Congress in history.

John Conyers
44th Dean of the United States House of Representatives
In office
January 3, 2015 – December 5, 2017
Preceded byJohn Dingell
Succeeded byDon Young
Member of the
U.S. House of Representatives
from Michigan
In office
January 3, 1965 – December 5, 2017
Preceded byLucien Nedzi
Succeeded byBrenda Jones
Constituency1st district (1965–1993)
14th district (1993–2013)
13th district (2013–2017)
Ranking Member of the House Judiciary Committee
In office
January 3, 2011 – December 5, 2017
Preceded byLamar Smith
Succeeded byJerry Nadler
In office
January 3, 1995 – January 3, 2007
Preceded byHamilton Fish IV
Succeeded byLamar Smith
Chair of the House Judiciary Committee
In office
January 3, 2007 – January 3, 2011
Preceded byJim Sensenbrenner
Succeeded byLamar Smith
Chair of the House Oversight Committee
In office
January 3, 1989 – January 3, 1995
Preceded byJack Brooks
Succeeded byWilliam F. Clinger Jr.
Personal details
Born
John James Conyers Jr.

(1929-05-16)May 16, 1929
Detroit, Michigan, U.S.
DiedOctober 27, 2019(2019-10-27) (aged 90)
Detroit, Michigan, U.S.
Resting placeDetroit Memorial Park Cemetery
Warren, Michigan, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
Other political
affiliations
Democratic Socialists of America
Spouse
(m. 1990)
Children2
RelativesIan Conyers (grand-nephew)
EducationWayne State University (BA, LLB)
Signature
Military service
Allegiance United States
Branch/service United States Army
Years of service1948–1950
1950–1957
UnitArmy National Guard
Battles/warsKorean War

After serving in the Korean War, Conyers became active in the civil rights movement. He also served as an aide to Congressman John Dingell before winning election to the House in 1964. He co-founded the Congressional Black Caucus in 1969 and established a reputation as one of the most left-wing members of Congress. Conyers joined the Congressional Progressive Caucus after it was founded in 1991. Conyers supported creation of a single-payer healthcare system and sponsored the United States National Health Care Act. He also sponsored a bill to establish Martin Luther King Jr. Day as a federal holiday, and was the first congressperson to introduce legislation in support of reparations for the descendants of African American slavery.

Conyers ran for Mayor of Detroit in 1989 and 1993, but he was defeated in the primary both times.

Conyers served as the ranking Democratic member on the House Committee on the Judiciary from 1995 to 2007 and again from 2011 to 2017. He served as chairman of that committee from 2007 to 2011 and as chairman of the House Oversight Committee from 1989 to 1995. As the longest-serving current member of Congress, Conyers was the dean of the House of Representatives from 2015 to 2017. By November 2017, he was the last remaining member of Congress who had served since the presidency of Lyndon B. Johnson. In the wake of allegations that he had sexually harassed female staff members and secretly used taxpayer money to settle a harassment claim, Conyers resigned from Congress on December 5, 2017.

Early life, education, and early career edit

Conyers was born and raised in Detroit, the son of Lucille Janice (Simpson) and John James Conyers, a labor leader.[1] Among his siblings was younger brother William Conyers. After graduating from Northwestern High School, Conyers served in the Michigan National Guard from 1948 to 1950; the U.S. Army from 1950 to 1954; and the U.S. Army Reserves from 1954 to 1957. Conyers served for a year in Korea during the Korean War as an officer in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and was awarded combat and merit citations.[2]

After his active military service, Conyers pursued a college education. He earned both his BA (1957) and LL.B. (1958) degrees from Wayne State University. After he was admitted to the bar, he worked on the staff of Congressman John Dingell. He also served as counsel to several Detroit-area labor union locals. From 1961 to 1963, he was a referee for Michigan's workmen's compensation department.[3]

Conyers became one of the leaders of the civil rights movement. He was present in Selma, Alabama, on October 7, 1963, for the voter registration drive known as Freedom Day.[4]

U.S. House of Representatives edit

Elections edit

In 1964, Conyers ran for an open seat in what was then the 1st District, and defeated Republican Robert Blackwell with 84% of the vote.[5] He was reelected 13 times with even larger margins. After the 1990 United States Census, Michigan lost a congressional district, and there was redistricting. Conyers's district was renumbered as the 14th district.[6]

 
Conyers's official portrait

In 1992, Conyers won re-election to his 15th term in his new district, which included western suburbs of Detroit, with 82% of the vote against Republican nominee John Gordon.[7] He won re-election another nine times after that. His worst re-election performance was in 2010, when he got 77% of the vote against Republican nominee Don Ukrainec.[8] In 2013, his district was renamed as the 13th district.

In total, Conyers won re-election twenty-five times and was serving in his twenty-sixth term. He was the dean of the House as longest-serving current member, the third longest-serving member of the House in history, and the sixth longest-serving member of Congress in history. He was the second-longest serving member of either house of Congress in Michigan's history, trailing only his former boss, Dingell. He was also the last member of the large Democratic freshman class of 1964 who was still serving in the House.[9]

In May 2014, Wayne County Clerk Cathy Garrett determined that Conyers had not submitted enough valid nominating petition signatures to appear on the August 2014 Primary Election ballot.[10] Two of his workers circulating petitions were not themselves registered voters at the time, which was required under Michigan law. But on May 23, Federal District Judge Matthew Leitman issued an injunction placing Conyers back on the ballot, ruling that the requirement that circulators be registered voters was similar to an Ohio law which had been found unconstitutional in 2008 by a Federal appeals court.[11] The Michigan Secretary of State's office subsequently announced they would not appeal the ruling.[12]

Tenure edit

Conyers was one of the 13 founding members of the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) and was considered the Dean of that group. Formed in 1969, the CBC was founded to strengthen African American lawmakers' ability to address the legislative concerns of Black and minority citizens. He served longer in Congress than any other African American. In 1971, he was one of the original members of Nixon's Enemies List.[13]

In 1965, Conyers won a seat as a freshman on the influential Judiciary Committee, which was then chaired by Democratic Congressman Emanuel Celler of New York. The assignment was considered an elite one, as Judiciary ranked behind only Ways and Means and Appropriations in terms of the number of Members who sought assignment there.[14]

 
Conyers at the All People's Congress in Detroit, 1981
 
Conyers shaking hands with President Bill Clinton in 1993

According to the National Journal, Conyers has been considered, with Pete Stark, John Lewis, Jim McDermott, and Barbara Lee, to be one of the most liberal members of Congress for many years. Rosa Parks, known for her prominent role in the Montgomery, Alabama bus boycott, moved to Detroit and served on Conyers's staff between 1965 and 1988.[15]

Conyers was known to have opposed regulation of online gambling. He opposed the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006.[16] After the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968, Conyers introduced the first bill in Congress to make King's birthday a federal holiday.[13] He continued to propose legislation to establish the federal holiday in every session of Congress from 1968 to 1983, when Martin Luther King Jr. Day was finally signed into law by President Ronald Reagan.[17]

In 1983 he joined with 7 other Congressional Representatives to sponsor a resolution to impeach Ronald Reagan over his sudden and unexpected invasion of Grenada.[18]

According to The New Republic, Conyers was a member of the Democratic Socialists of America in 1983.[19]

Conyers introduced the "Commission to Study Reparation Proposals for African Americans Act" (H.R. 3745) in January 1989. He re-introduced this bill each congressional term. It calls for establishing a commission to research the history of slavery in the United States and its effects on current society, which is to recommend ways to remedy this injustice against African Americans. The current version was introduced and referred to committee on January 3, 2013.[20][21] Conyers first introduced the proposed resolution in 1989, and has stated his intention to annually propose this act until it is approved and passed. Since 1997, the bill has been designated "H.R. 40", most recently, H.R. 40, alluding to the promise of "forty acres and a mule".[22] If passed, the commission would explore the longstanding effects of slavery on today's society, politics, and economy.

"My bill does four things: It acknowledges the fundamental injustice and inhumanity of slavery; It establishes a commission to study slavery, its subsequent racial and economic discrimination against freed slaves; It studies the impact of those forces on today's living African Americans; and the commission would then make recommendations to Congress on appropriate remedies to redress the harm inflicted on living African Americans."[23]

Conyers served as the ranking Democratic member on the House Committee on the Judiciary from 1995 to 2007 and again from 2011 to 2017. He served as chairman of that committee from 2007 to 2011 and as chairman of the House Oversight Committee from 1989 to 1995. As the longest-serving current member of Congress, Conyers was the dean of the House of Representatives from 2015 to 2017.[citation needed]

In March 2016, Rep. Conyers and Representative Hank Johnson introduced legislation to protect consumers' access to civil courts. The bill was entitled the "Restoring Statutory Rights Act".[24][better source needed]

Conyers served more than 50 years in Congress, becoming the sixth-longest serving member of Congress in U.S. history; he was the longest-serving African American member of Congress.[25] By November 2017, Conyers was the last remaining member of Congress who had served since the presidency of Lyndon B. Johnson.[26]

Nixon and Watergate edit

Conyers was critical of President Richard Nixon during his tenure. He was listed as number 13 on President Nixon's enemies list during the president's 1969–74 presidential tenure. The president's Chief Counsel described him as "coming on fast", and said he was "emerging" as a "black anti-Nixon spokesman".[27][28] Conyers, who voted to impeach Nixon in July 1974,[29] wrote at the time,

My analysis of the evidence clearly reveals an Administration so trapped by its own war policy and a desire to remain in office that it entered into an almost unending series of plans for spying, burglary and wiretapping, inside this country and against its own citizens, and without precedent in American history.[30]

National Health Care Act edit

Conyers submitted the United States National Health Care Act (Expanded and Improved Medicare for All Act) (H.R. 676); as of 2015, it had 49 cosponsors. He introduced it with 25 cosponsors, in 2003,[31] and reintroduced it each session since then. The act calls for the creation of a universal single-payer health care system in the United States, in which the government would provide every resident health care free of charge. To eliminate disparate treatment between richer and poorer Americans, the Act would prohibit private insurers from covering any treatment or procedure already covered by the Act.[32]

House impeachment manager in Hastings trial edit

Conyers was one of the House impeachment managers who prosecuted the in case the impeachment trial of Judge Alcee Hastings. Hastings was found guilty by the United States Senate and removed from his federal judgeship.[33]

Downing Street memo edit

On May 5, 2005, Conyers and 88 other members of Congress wrote an open letter to the White House inquiring about the Downing Street memo. This was a leaked memorandum that revealed an apparent secret agreement between the U.S. and British governments to invade Iraq in 2002. The Times, among the first to publish news of the leak, wrote that the discovered documented revealed the intentions of Bush and Blair to invade Iraq, along with revealing that the two had "discussed creating pretextual justifications for doing so."[34]

The memo story broke in the United Kingdom, but did not receive much coverage in the United States. Conyers said: "This should not be allowed to fall down the memory hole during wall-to-wall coverage of the Michael Jackson trial and a runaway bride."[35] Conyers and others reportedly considered sending a congressional investigation delegation to London.[34]

What Went Wrong in Ohio edit

In May 2005, Conyers released What Went Wrong in Ohio: The Conyers Report On The 2004 Presidential Election. This dealt with the voting irregularities in the state of Ohio during the 2004 U.S. Presidential Election. The evidence offered consists of statistical abnormalities in the differences between exit poll results and actual votes registered at those locations. The book also discusses reports of faulty electronic voting machines and the lack of credibility of those machines used to tally votes.[36]

Conyers was one of 31 members of the House who voted not to count the 20 electoral votes from Ohio in the 2004 presidential election.[37] The state was won by Republican President George Bush by 118,457 votes.[38]

Constitution in Crisis edit

 
Conyers at an anti-war march in Newark, New Jersey, in 2007

On August 4, 2006, Conyers released his report, The Constitution in Crisis: The Downing Street Minutes and Deception, Manipulation, Torture, Retributions and Cover-ups in the Iraq War, an edited collection of information intended to serve as evidence that the Bush Administration altered intelligence to justify the 2003 invasion of Iraq.[39]

The Constitution in Crisis examines much of the evidence presented by the Bush Administration prior to the invasion and questions the credibility of their sources of intelligence. In addition, the document investigates conditions that led to the torture scandal at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, as well as further evidence of torture having been committed but not made known to the public. Finally, the document reports on a series of "smear tactics" purportedly used by the administration in dealing with its political adversaries. The document calls for the censure of President George W. Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney. Conyers refused to back impeachment proceedings, however.[40]

On anti-Muslim intolerance edit

Conyers proposed House Resolution 288, which condemns "religious intolerance" and emphasizes Islam as needing special protection from acts of violence and intolerance. It states that "it should never be official policy of the United States Government to disparage the Quran, Islam, or any religion in any way, shape, or form," and "calls upon local, State, and Federal authorities to work to prevent bias-motivated crimes and acts against all individuals, including those of the Islamic faith." The bill was referred to the House subcommittee on the Constitution in June 2005.[41]

In 2005, Conyers introduced House Resolution 160, a house resolution that would have condemned the conduct of Narendra Modi, then the chief minister of the State of Gujarat in India. The resolution was cosponsored by Republican Representative Joseph R. Pitts (Republican of Pennsylvania). The resolution's title was: "Condemning the conduct of Chief Minister Narendra Modi for his actions to incite religious persecution and urging the United States to condemn all violations of religious freedom in India." The resolution cited a 2004 United States Commission on International Religious Freedom report on Modi stating that he was "widely accused of being reluctant to bring the perpetrators of the killings of Muslims and non-Hindus to justice". (See 2002 Gujarat riots.) The resolution was not adopted.[42]

Conyers v. Bush edit

In April 2006 Conyers, together with ten other senior congressmen, filed an action in the U.S. District Court in the Eastern District of Michigan, Southern Division, challenging the constitutionality of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005. The complaint alleged the bill was not afforded due consideration by the United States Congress before being signed by the President.[43] The action was subsequently dismissed on grounds of lack of standing.[44]

Ethics controversy edit

In April 2006, the FBI and the U.S. Attorney's office sent independent letters to the House Ethics Committee, saying two former aides of Conyers had alleged that Conyers used his staff to work on several local and state campaigns of other politicians – including his wife – for the Detroit City Council. (She won a seat in 2005.) He also forced them to baby-sit and chauffeur his children.[45][46]

In late December 2006, Conyers "accepted responsibility" for violating House rules. A statement issued December 29, 2006, by the House Ethics Committee chairman Doc Hastings and Ranking Minority Member Howard Berman, said Conyers acknowledged what he characterized as a "lack of clarity" in his communications with staff members regarding their official duties and responsibilities, and accepted responsibility for his actions.[47]

In deciding to drop the matter, Hastings and Berman said:

After reviewing the information gathered during the inquiry, and in light of Representative Conyers's cooperation with the inquiry, we have concluded that this matter should be resolved through the issuance of this public statement and the agreement by Representative Conyers to take a number of additional, significant steps to ensure that his office complies with all rules and standards regarding campaign and personal work by congressional staff.[47]

Copyright bill edit

Conyers repeatedly introduced the Fair Copyright in Research Works Act, a bill that would overturn the NIH Public Access Policy, an open-access mandate of the National Institutes of Health. Conyers's bill would forbid the government from mandating that federally funded research be made freely available to the public.[48] The legislation was supported by the publishing industry,[49] and opposed by groups such as the Electronic Frontier Foundation.[50] Writers Lawrence Lessig and Michael Eisen accused Conyers of being influenced by publishing houses, who have contributed significant money to his campaigns.[51]

House Report on George W. Bush presidency and proposed inquiry edit

On January 13, 2009, the House Committee on the Judiciary, led by Conyers, released Reining in the Imperial Presidency: Lessons and Recommendations Relating to the Presidency of George W. Bush, a 486-page report detailing alleged abuses of power that occurred during the Bush administration, and a comprehensive set of recommendations to prevent recurrence. Conyers introduced a bill to set up a "truth commission" panel to investigate alleged policy abuses of the Bush administration.[52][53]

Bill reading controversy edit

In late July 2009, Conyers, commenting on the healthcare debate in the House, stated: "I love these members, they get up and say, 'Read the bill' ... What good is reading the bill if it's a thousand pages and you don't have two days and two lawyers to find out what it means after you read the bill?" His remark brought criticism from government transparency advocates such as the Sunlight Foundation, which referred to readthebill.org[54] in response.[55]

Response to accusations regarding American Muslim spies edit

In October, Conyers responded to allegations from four Republican Congress Members, in the wake of the launch of the book Muslim Mafia, that the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) sought to plant Muslim "spies" in Capitol Hill. He strongly opposed the accusations, saying:

It shouldn't need to be said in 2009, and after the historic election of our first African-American president, but let me remind all my colleagues that patriotic Americans of all races, religions, and beliefs have the right – and the responsibility – to participate in our political process, including by volunteering to work in Congressional offices. Numerous Muslim-American interns have served the House ably and they deserve our appreciation and respect, not attacks on their character or patriotism.[56]

WikiLeaks edit

At a December 16, 2010, hearing of the House Judiciary Committee on the subject of "the Espionage Act and the Legal and Constitutional Issues Raised by WikiLeaks",[57] Conyers "argue[d] strongly against prosecuting WikiLeaks in haste – or at all."[58] He strongly defended the whistleblowing organization, saying:

As an initial matter, there is no doubt that WikiLeaks is very unpopular right now. Many feel that the WikiLeaks publication was offensive. But being unpopular is not a crime, and publishing offensive information is not either. And the repeated calls from politicians, journalists, and other so-called experts crying out for criminal prosecutions or other extreme measures make me very uncomfortable. Indeed, when everyone in this town is joined together calling for someone's head, that is it a pretty strong sign we need to slow down and take a closer look. ... [L]et us not be hasty, and let us not legislate in a climate of fear or prejudice. For, in such an atmosphere, it is our constitutional freedoms and our cherished civil rights that are the first to be sacrificed in the false service of our national security.[58]

Conyers's statement was "in marked contrast to the repeated calls from other members of Congress and Obama administration officials to prosecute WikiLeaks head Julian Assange immediately."[58]

Foreign policy edit

In 2014, Conyers, along with Ted Yoho, introduced a bipartisan amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act which would prohibit the United States Armed Forces from providing any form of assistance to the Azov Battalion, a National Guard of Ukraine unit accused by Conyers of being a "far-right white supremacist militia". The amendment was subsequently passed by the House of Representatives in 2015. Conyers' decision to introduce the amendment was the subject of both praise and criticism, with detractors noting that claiming that large numbers of Neo-Nazis are members of the Azov Battalion is a common theme of propaganda in Russia.[59][60]

Conyers stated, "If there's one simple lesson we can take away from U.S. involvement in conflicts overseas, it's this: Beware of unintended consequences. As was made vividly clear with U.S. involvement in Afghanistan during the Soviet invasion decades ago, overzealous military assistance or the hyper-weaponization of conflicts can have destabilizing consequences and ultimately undercut our own national interests."[61] He also voiced concerns about sending anti-aircraft missiles to Syrian rebels.[62]

Sexual harassment allegations and resignation edit

In 2015, a former employee of Conyers alleged that he had sexually harassed her and dismissed her. She filed an affidavit with the Congressional Office of Compliance.[63] Conyers had entered into a confidentiality agreement with the former employee and had paid her a $27,000 (~$33,936 in 2023) settlement from his publicly funded office budget in 2015.[64] BuzzFeed reported on the allegations and settlement on November 20, 2017; Buzzfeed also reported allegations that Conyers "repeatedly made sexual advances to female staff," caressed female staffers' hands in a sexual manner, and rubbed their backs and legs in public.[65][66][67]

On November 21, 2017, Conyers issued a statement in which he said, "In our country, we strive to honor this fundamental principle that all are entitled to due process. In this case, I expressly and vehemently denied the allegations made against me, and continue to do so. My office resolved the allegations – with an express denial of liability – in order to save all involved from the rigors of protracted litigation."[68]

Also on November 21, 2017, the House Ethics Committee launched an investigation into multiple sexual harassment allegations against Conyers.[69]

On November 22, 2017, The Washington Post reported that Melanie Sloan, founder of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), publicly accused Conyers of having harassed and verbally abused her during her tenure working for the House Judiciary Committee. On one occasion, Sloan alleged that Conyers had summoned to his office, where she found him sitting in his underwear; she quickly departed.[70]

Later in November 2017, there were reports that another woman accused Conyers of sexual harassment.[71] House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, who had initially stated that Conyers was an "icon" and had done a great deal to protect women,[72] called upon Conyers to resign. She said the allegations against him were "very credible".[73]

On December 5, 2017, Conyers resigned his House seat because of his mounting sexual scandals.[74] The announcement came the day after another former staffer released an affidavit accusing Conyers of sexual harassment.[75] The same day, an article by The Washington Post published allegations by Courtney Morse that Conyers had threatened her with a similar fate to that of Chandra Levy, a staffer found murdered in a park in Washington, DC. She said that after she rejected his advances, he "said he had insider information on the case. I don't know if he meant it to be threatening, but I took it that way."[76]

At a time when the MeToo movement was pushing for action against men who harassed women, some media and supporters in Detroit believed Conyers had been unfairly treated.[77] He was reported as the "first sitting politician to be ousted from office in the wake of the #MeToo movement."[78]

Caucus memberships edit

 
Conyers, (standing, second from right) with fellow founding members of the Congressional Black Caucus in 1971

Detroit mayoral campaigns edit

While serving in the U.S. House, Conyers made two unsuccessful runs for mayor of Detroit: one in 1989 against incumbent Coleman Young and again in 1993.[88]

1989 edit

Incumbent Democratic Mayor Coleman Young decided to run for a fifth term, despite growing unpopularity and the declining economy of Detroit. In the September primary, Young won with 51% of the vote. Accountant Tom Barrow qualified for the November run-off by having 24%, and Conyers received 18% of the vote.[89] Despite the difficulties of the city, Young defeated Barrow in the run-off with 56% of the vote.[90]

1993 edit

In June 1993, incumbent Democratic Mayor Coleman Young decided to retire instead of seeking a sixth term, citing his age and health. Many observers believed he had decided not to test his growing unpopularity. In a Detroit News poll in February, 81% said Young should retire.[91] Conyers was one of the 23 candidates who qualified for ballot access.[92]

Dennis Archer was the front runner in the mayoral campaign from the beginning. The 51-year-old former State Supreme Court Justice raised over $1.6 million to finance his campaign. He won the September primary with 54% of the vote. Conyers came in fourth place.[93] Archer won the November election.

Electoral history edit

Personal life edit

Conyers married Monica Esters, a teacher in Detroit, in 1990. She was 25 and he was 61; they had two sons together, John James III and Carl Edward Conyers.[94] Monica Conyers served as vice administrator of Detroit's public schools, and in 2005 was elected to the Detroit City Council.[citation needed] Monica Conyers pleaded guilty to bribery charges on June 26, 2009[95] and served slightly more than 27 months in prison;[96] her sentence was completed on May 16, 2013.[97] In September 2015, Monica Conyers filed for divorce, citing a "breakdown of the marriage".[98] However, the Conyerses reconciled in late 2016.[99]

Conyers's grandnephew, Ian Conyers, was elected to the Michigan Senate in 2016.[100] He generated controversy by telling of Conyers's planned retirement in interviews before the Congressman announced it himself, and claiming his great-uncle's endorsement.[101] Following the Congressman's resignation, Ian Conyers announced that he would run in the special election for the Congressman's seat. The Congressman instead endorsed his son, John Conyers III, as his successor.[102] John Conyers III chose not to run. Ian Conyers was defeated in the Democratic primary by Rashida Tlaib.[103]

Death edit

Conyers died at his home in Detroit on October 27, 2019, at the age of 90.[104] His funeral was held on November 4 at Detroit's Greater Grace Temple.[105]

Honors and awards edit

In 2007, Conyers was awarded the Spingarn Medal from the NAACP.[106][better source needed]

See also edit

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ Possessive (Conyers's), plural (Conyerses), and plural possessive (Conyerses') all have three syllables.
  1. ^ "Conyers, John, Jr. 1929–2019". history.house.gov. Retrieved July 29, 2022.
  2. ^ . African American Registry. Archived from the original on June 14, 2015. Retrieved May 17, 2017.
  3. ^ "John Conyers' Life at a Glance". The New York Times. Associated Press. May 16, 1929. Retrieved October 27, 2019.
  4. ^ Zinn, Howard (1994). You Can't Be Neutral on a Moving Train. Beacon Press. pp. 63–64. ISBN 978-0807070581.
  5. ^ "Former Congressman John Conyers passes away". FOX 2 Detroit. October 1, 2006. Retrieved October 27, 2019.
  6. ^ "24 Mar 1992, Page 11". Detroit Free Press. March 24, 1992. Retrieved October 27, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  7. ^ "5 Nov 1992, Page 20". Detroit Free Press. November 5, 1992. Retrieved October 27, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  8. ^ "3 Nov 2010, Page 7". Battle Creek Enquirer. November 3, 2010. Retrieved October 27, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  9. ^ "John Conyers, longest-serving black member of Congress in history, dies". Detroitnews.com. n.d. Retrieved October 27, 2019.
  10. ^ "Invalid petitions could keep U.S. Rep. John Conyers Jr. of Detroit off Aug. 5 primary ballot". Mlive.com. May 2, 2014. Retrieved May 9, 2014.
  11. ^ "Judge Allows US Rep. Conyers to Be on Ballot". ABC News. May 23, 2014. Retrieved May 23, 2014.
  12. ^ . Detroit Free Press. May 30, 2014. Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved May 30, 2014.
  13. ^ a b ET (December 5, 2017). "Timeline: Career of U.S. Rep. John Conyers Jr". Detroitnews.com. Retrieved October 27, 2019.
  14. ^ (PDF). Black Americans in Congress. US House of Representatives. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 18, 2012. Retrieved November 4, 2011.
  15. ^ John Nichols (November 2, 2005). . The Nation. Archived from the original on November 13, 2019. Retrieved October 27, 2019.
  16. ^ "U.S. lawmaker raps Internet-gambling enforcement". Reuters. November 14, 2007.
  17. ^ Crawford-Tichawonna, Nicole (January 12, 2018). "Years of persistence led to holiday honoring King". USA Today. No. January 12, 2018. Retrieved March 29, 2020.
  18. ^ John Nichols (2016). "The Genius of Impeachment: The Founders' Cure for Royalism". The New Press. ISBN 978-1595587350. Retrieved January 23, 2021.
  19. ^ Margolis, Jon (March 14, 1983). "Bernie of Burlington". The New Republic. Retrieved September 21, 2018.
  20. ^ . Archived from the original on August 29, 2015. Retrieved August 15, 2015.
  21. ^ "Commission to Study Reparation Proposals for African-Americans Act (2013; 113th Congress H.R. 40)". GovTrack.us. n.d. Retrieved May 17, 2017.
  22. ^ Miller, Melinda C. (June 26, 2019). ""The Righteous and Reasonable Ambition to Become a Landholder": Land and Racial Inequality in the Postbellum South". The Review of Economics and Statistics. 102 (2): 381–394. doi:10.1162/rest_a_00842. ISSN 0034-6535. S2CID 195656011.
  23. ^ Conyers, John. . Conyers.house.gov. Archived from the original on August 29, 2015. Retrieved October 24, 2014.
  24. ^ (Press release). April 12, 2016. Archived from the original on December 6, 2017. Retrieved December 5, 2017.
  25. ^ Kathleen Gray, "U.S. Rep. John Conyers leaves behind legacy of civil rights, racial justice", Detroit Free Press (December 5, 2017).
  26. ^ "John Conyers: Veteran congressman gives up post amid harassment inquiry". BBC News. November 26, 2017.
  27. ^ "Nixon's Enemies List Search Results". enemieslist.info.
  28. ^ Ratnesar, Romesh (September 28, 1998). "Is The Top Democratic Gun Ready For War?". Time. Retrieved October 28, 2019.
  29. ^ James M. Naughton (July 30, 1974). "New Accusation". The New York Times. Retrieved October 27, 2019.
  30. ^ Conyers, John (October 1974). "Why Nixon Should Have Been Impeached". The Black Scholar. 6 (2). Taylor & Francis: 2–8. JSTOR 41065758.
  31. ^ H.R. 676
  32. ^ "What Rep. John Conyers's sweeping single-payer health care bill would actually do". Vox. August 28, 2017. Retrieved October 27, 2019.
  33. ^ "List of Individuals Impeached by the House of Representatives". United States House of Representatives. from the original on December 18, 2019. Retrieved January 15, 2020.
  34. ^ a b Tony Allen-Mills and Tom Pattinson, "Blair faces U.S. probe over secret Iraq invasion plan", The Times, May 22, 2005.
  35. ^ Brown, Sylvester Jr. (May 15, 2005). "Conyers looks for news in the wrong place". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. p. D2.
  36. ^ Vidal, Gore (June 9, 2005). . The Nation. Archived from the original on October 28, 2019. Retrieved October 28, 2019.
  37. ^ "Final Vote Results for Roll Call 7". clerk.house.gov. January 6, 2005. Retrieved February 22, 2008.
  38. ^ Salvato, Albert (December 29, 2004). "Ohio Recount Gives a Smaller Margin to Bush". The New York Times.
  39. ^ Rep. John Conyers (n.d.). "The Constitution in Crisis: Censure and Investigate Possible Impeachment". HuffPost. Retrieved October 27, 2019.
  40. ^ "Conyers seeks to censure Bush in Congress". United Press International. December 20, 2005. Retrieved October 27, 2019.
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  42. ^ "Congressional Record, Text of H. Res. 160". March 16, 2005. Retrieved July 12, 2016.
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External links edit

Articles
  • Congressman John Conyers Jr., Salon.com (October 15, 2003)
  • (prepared at the request of Congressman John Conyers, January 5, 2005)
  • (originally signed by 89 U.S. Congress members), John Conyers, et al. (May 5, 2005)
  • Bush asked to explain UK war memo CNN (May 12, 2005)
  • John Conyers (May 27, 2005)
  • (John Conyers interview), BuzzFlash (June 9, 2005)
  • (Investigative Status Report of the House Judiciary Committee Democratic Staff, December 2005)
  • A Motion for Censure Congressman John Conyers Jr., The Nation (December 22, 2005)
  • Guernica Magazine, May 22, 2006
  • , November 5, 2007
U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Michigan's 1st congressional district

1965–1993
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Michigan's 14th congressional district

1993–2013
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Michigan's 13th congressional district

2013–2017
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chair of the House Oversight Committee
1989–1995
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chair of the House Judiciary Committee
2007–2011
Succeeded by
Honorary titles
Preceded by Dean of the United States House of Representatives
2015–2017
Succeeded by
Most senior Democrat in the U.S. House of Representatives
2015–2017
Succeeded by
Preceded by Oldest member of the U.S. House of Representatives
2015–2017
Succeeded by

john, conyers, this, article, about, american, politician, other, people, with, same, name, disambiguation, john, james, conyers, 1929, october, 2019, american, politician, democratic, party, served, representative, from, michigan, from, 1965, 2017, conyers, s. This article is about the American politician For other people with the same name see John Conyers disambiguation John James Conyers Jr a May 16 1929 October 27 2019 was an American politician of the Democratic Party who served as a U S representative from Michigan from 1965 to 2017 Conyers was the sixth longest serving member of Congress and the longest serving African American member of Congress in history John Conyers44th Dean of the United States House of RepresentativesIn office January 3 2015 December 5 2017Preceded byJohn DingellSucceeded byDon YoungMember of theU S House of Representativesfrom MichiganIn office January 3 1965 December 5 2017Preceded byLucien NedziSucceeded byBrenda JonesConstituency1st district 1965 1993 14th district 1993 2013 13th district 2013 2017 Ranking Member of the House Judiciary CommitteeIn office January 3 2011 December 5 2017Preceded byLamar SmithSucceeded byJerry NadlerIn office January 3 1995 January 3 2007Preceded byHamilton Fish IVSucceeded byLamar SmithChair of the House Judiciary CommitteeIn office January 3 2007 January 3 2011Preceded byJim SensenbrennerSucceeded byLamar SmithChair of the House Oversight CommitteeIn office January 3 1989 January 3 1995Preceded byJack BrooksSucceeded byWilliam F Clinger Jr Personal detailsBornJohn James Conyers Jr 1929 05 16 May 16 1929Detroit Michigan U S DiedOctober 27 2019 2019 10 27 aged 90 Detroit Michigan U S Resting placeDetroit Memorial Park CemeteryWarren Michigan U S Political partyDemocraticOther politicalaffiliationsDemocratic Socialists of AmericaSpouseMonica Esters m 1990 wbr Children2RelativesIan Conyers grand nephew EducationWayne State University BA LLB SignatureMilitary serviceAllegiance United StatesBranch service United States ArmyYears of service1948 19501950 1957UnitArmy National GuardBattles warsKorean WarJohn Conyers s voice source source John Conyers introduces an amendment to the Y2K ActRecorded May 12 1999 After serving in the Korean War Conyers became active in the civil rights movement He also served as an aide to Congressman John Dingell before winning election to the House in 1964 He co founded the Congressional Black Caucus in 1969 and established a reputation as one of the most left wing members of Congress Conyers joined the Congressional Progressive Caucus after it was founded in 1991 Conyers supported creation of a single payer healthcare system and sponsored the United States National Health Care Act He also sponsored a bill to establish Martin Luther King Jr Day as a federal holiday and was the first congressperson to introduce legislation in support of reparations for the descendants of African American slavery Conyers ran for Mayor of Detroit in 1989 and 1993 but he was defeated in the primary both times Conyers served as the ranking Democratic member on the House Committee on the Judiciary from 1995 to 2007 and again from 2011 to 2017 He served as chairman of that committee from 2007 to 2011 and as chairman of the House Oversight Committee from 1989 to 1995 As the longest serving current member of Congress Conyers was the dean of the House of Representatives from 2015 to 2017 By November 2017 he was the last remaining member of Congress who had served since the presidency of Lyndon B Johnson In the wake of allegations that he had sexually harassed female staff members and secretly used taxpayer money to settle a harassment claim Conyers resigned from Congress on December 5 2017 Contents 1 Early life education and early career 2 U S House of Representatives 2 1 Elections 2 2 Tenure 2 3 Nixon and Watergate 2 4 National Health Care Act 2 5 House impeachment manager in Hastings trial 2 6 Downing Street memo 2 7 What Went Wrong in Ohio 2 8 Constitution in Crisis 2 9 On anti Muslim intolerance 2 10 Conyers v Bush 2 11 Ethics controversy 2 12 Copyright bill 2 13 House Report on George W Bush presidency and proposed inquiry 2 14 Bill reading controversy 2 15 Response to accusations regarding American Muslim spies 2 16 WikiLeaks 2 17 Foreign policy 2 18 Sexual harassment allegations and resignation 2 19 Caucus memberships 3 Detroit mayoral campaigns 3 1 1989 3 2 1993 4 Electoral history 5 Personal life 5 1 Death 6 Honors and awards 7 See also 8 Notes and references 9 External linksEarly life education and early career editConyers was born and raised in Detroit the son of Lucille Janice Simpson and John James Conyers a labor leader 1 Among his siblings was younger brother William Conyers After graduating from Northwestern High School Conyers served in the Michigan National Guard from 1948 to 1950 the U S Army from 1950 to 1954 and the U S Army Reserves from 1954 to 1957 Conyers served for a year in Korea during the Korean War as an officer in the U S Army Corps of Engineers and was awarded combat and merit citations 2 After his active military service Conyers pursued a college education He earned both his BA 1957 and LL B 1958 degrees from Wayne State University After he was admitted to the bar he worked on the staff of Congressman John Dingell He also served as counsel to several Detroit area labor union locals From 1961 to 1963 he was a referee for Michigan s workmen s compensation department 3 Conyers became one of the leaders of the civil rights movement He was present in Selma Alabama on October 7 1963 for the voter registration drive known as Freedom Day 4 U S House of Representatives editElections edit In 1964 Conyers ran for an open seat in what was then the 1st District and defeated Republican Robert Blackwell with 84 of the vote 5 He was reelected 13 times with even larger margins After the 1990 United States Census Michigan lost a congressional district and there was redistricting Conyers s district was renumbered as the 14th district 6 nbsp Conyers s official portrait In 1992 Conyers won re election to his 15th term in his new district which included western suburbs of Detroit with 82 of the vote against Republican nominee John Gordon 7 He won re election another nine times after that His worst re election performance was in 2010 when he got 77 of the vote against Republican nominee Don Ukrainec 8 In 2013 his district was renamed as the 13th district In total Conyers won re election twenty five times and was serving in his twenty sixth term He was the dean of the House as longest serving current member the third longest serving member of the House in history and the sixth longest serving member of Congress in history He was the second longest serving member of either house of Congress in Michigan s history trailing only his former boss Dingell He was also the last member of the large Democratic freshman class of 1964 who was still serving in the House 9 In May 2014 Wayne County Clerk Cathy Garrett determined that Conyers had not submitted enough valid nominating petition signatures to appear on the August 2014 Primary Election ballot 10 Two of his workers circulating petitions were not themselves registered voters at the time which was required under Michigan law But on May 23 Federal District Judge Matthew Leitman issued an injunction placing Conyers back on the ballot ruling that the requirement that circulators be registered voters was similar to an Ohio law which had been found unconstitutional in 2008 by a Federal appeals court 11 The Michigan Secretary of State s office subsequently announced they would not appeal the ruling 12 Tenure edit Conyers was one of the 13 founding members of the Congressional Black Caucus CBC and was considered the Dean of that group Formed in 1969 the CBC was founded to strengthen African American lawmakers ability to address the legislative concerns of Black and minority citizens He served longer in Congress than any other African American In 1971 he was one of the original members of Nixon s Enemies List 13 In 1965 Conyers won a seat as a freshman on the influential Judiciary Committee which was then chaired by Democratic Congressman Emanuel Celler of New York The assignment was considered an elite one as Judiciary ranked behind only Ways and Means and Appropriations in terms of the number of Members who sought assignment there 14 nbsp Conyers at the All People s Congress in Detroit 1981 nbsp Conyers shaking hands with President Bill Clinton in 1993 According to the National Journal Conyers has been considered with Pete Stark John Lewis Jim McDermott and Barbara Lee to be one of the most liberal members of Congress for many years Rosa Parks known for her prominent role in the Montgomery Alabama bus boycott moved to Detroit and served on Conyers s staff between 1965 and 1988 15 Conyers was known to have opposed regulation of online gambling He opposed the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006 16 After the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr in 1968 Conyers introduced the first bill in Congress to make King s birthday a federal holiday 13 He continued to propose legislation to establish the federal holiday in every session of Congress from 1968 to 1983 when Martin Luther King Jr Day was finally signed into law by President Ronald Reagan 17 In 1983 he joined with 7 other Congressional Representatives to sponsor a resolution to impeach Ronald Reagan over his sudden and unexpected invasion of Grenada 18 According to The New Republic Conyers was a member of the Democratic Socialists of America in 1983 19 Conyers introduced the Commission to Study Reparation Proposals for African Americans Act H R 3745 in January 1989 He re introduced this bill each congressional term It calls for establishing a commission to research the history of slavery in the United States and its effects on current society which is to recommend ways to remedy this injustice against African Americans The current version was introduced and referred to committee on January 3 2013 20 21 Conyers first introduced the proposed resolution in 1989 and has stated his intention to annually propose this act until it is approved and passed Since 1997 the bill has been designated H R 40 most recently H R 40 alluding to the promise of forty acres and a mule 22 If passed the commission would explore the longstanding effects of slavery on today s society politics and economy My bill does four things It acknowledges the fundamental injustice and inhumanity of slavery It establishes a commission to study slavery its subsequent racial and economic discrimination against freed slaves It studies the impact of those forces on today s living African Americans and the commission would then make recommendations to Congress on appropriate remedies to redress the harm inflicted on living African Americans 23 Conyers served as the ranking Democratic member on the House Committee on the Judiciary from 1995 to 2007 and again from 2011 to 2017 He served as chairman of that committee from 2007 to 2011 and as chairman of the House Oversight Committee from 1989 to 1995 As the longest serving current member of Congress Conyers was the dean of the House of Representatives from 2015 to 2017 citation needed In March 2016 Rep Conyers and Representative Hank Johnson introduced legislation to protect consumers access to civil courts The bill was entitled the Restoring Statutory Rights Act 24 better source needed Conyers served more than 50 years in Congress becoming the sixth longest serving member of Congress in U S history he was the longest serving African American member of Congress 25 By November 2017 Conyers was the last remaining member of Congress who had served since the presidency of Lyndon B Johnson 26 Nixon and Watergate edit Conyers was critical of President Richard Nixon during his tenure He was listed as number 13 on President Nixon s enemies list during the president s 1969 74 presidential tenure The president s Chief Counsel described him as coming on fast and said he was emerging as a black anti Nixon spokesman 27 28 Conyers who voted to impeach Nixon in July 1974 29 wrote at the time My analysis of the evidence clearly reveals an Administration so trapped by its own war policy and a desire to remain in office that it entered into an almost unending series of plans for spying burglary and wiretapping inside this country and against its own citizens and without precedent in American history 30 National Health Care Act edit Conyers submitted the United States National Health Care Act Expanded and Improved Medicare for All Act H R 676 as of 2015 it had 49 cosponsors He introduced it with 25 cosponsors in 2003 31 and reintroduced it each session since then The act calls for the creation of a universal single payer health care system in the United States in which the government would provide every resident health care free of charge To eliminate disparate treatment between richer and poorer Americans the Act would prohibit private insurers from covering any treatment or procedure already covered by the Act 32 House impeachment manager in Hastings trial edit Conyers was one of the House impeachment managers who prosecuted the in case the impeachment trial of Judge Alcee Hastings Hastings was found guilty by the United States Senate and removed from his federal judgeship 33 Downing Street memo edit On May 5 2005 Conyers and 88 other members of Congress wrote an open letter to the White House inquiring about the Downing Street memo This was a leaked memorandum that revealed an apparent secret agreement between the U S and British governments to invade Iraq in 2002 The Times among the first to publish news of the leak wrote that the discovered documented revealed the intentions of Bush and Blair to invade Iraq along with revealing that the two had discussed creating pretextual justifications for doing so 34 The memo story broke in the United Kingdom but did not receive much coverage in the United States Conyers said This should not be allowed to fall down the memory hole during wall to wall coverage of the Michael Jackson trial and a runaway bride 35 Conyers and others reportedly considered sending a congressional investigation delegation to London 34 What Went Wrong in Ohio edit In May 2005 Conyers released What Went Wrong in Ohio The Conyers Report On The 2004 Presidential Election This dealt with the voting irregularities in the state of Ohio during the 2004 U S Presidential Election The evidence offered consists of statistical abnormalities in the differences between exit poll results and actual votes registered at those locations The book also discusses reports of faulty electronic voting machines and the lack of credibility of those machines used to tally votes 36 Conyers was one of 31 members of the House who voted not to count the 20 electoral votes from Ohio in the 2004 presidential election 37 The state was won by Republican President George Bush by 118 457 votes 38 Constitution in Crisis edit See also Lead up to the Iraq War and Legitimacy of the 2003 invasion of Iraq nbsp Conyers at an anti war march in Newark New Jersey in 2007 On August 4 2006 Conyers released his report The Constitution in Crisis The Downing Street Minutes and Deception Manipulation Torture Retributions and Cover ups in the Iraq War an edited collection of information intended to serve as evidence that the Bush Administration altered intelligence to justify the 2003 invasion of Iraq 39 The Constitution in Crisis examines much of the evidence presented by the Bush Administration prior to the invasion and questions the credibility of their sources of intelligence In addition the document investigates conditions that led to the torture scandal at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq as well as further evidence of torture having been committed but not made known to the public Finally the document reports on a series of smear tactics purportedly used by the administration in dealing with its political adversaries The document calls for the censure of President George W Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney Conyers refused to back impeachment proceedings however 40 On anti Muslim intolerance edit Conyers proposed House Resolution 288 which condemns religious intolerance and emphasizes Islam as needing special protection from acts of violence and intolerance It states that it should never be official policy of the United States Government to disparage the Quran Islam or any religion in any way shape or form and calls upon local State and Federal authorities to work to prevent bias motivated crimes and acts against all individuals including those of the Islamic faith The bill was referred to the House subcommittee on the Constitution in June 2005 41 In 2005 Conyers introduced House Resolution 160 a house resolution that would have condemned the conduct of Narendra Modi then the chief minister of the State of Gujarat in India The resolution was cosponsored by Republican Representative Joseph R Pitts Republican of Pennsylvania The resolution s title was Condemning the conduct of Chief Minister Narendra Modi for his actions to incite religious persecution and urging the United States to condemn all violations of religious freedom in India The resolution cited a 2004 United States Commission on International Religious Freedom report on Modi stating that he was widely accused of being reluctant to bring the perpetrators of the killings of Muslims and non Hindus to justice See 2002 Gujarat riots The resolution was not adopted 42 Conyers v Bush edit Main article Conyers v Bush In April 2006 Conyers together with ten other senior congressmen filed an action in the U S District Court in the Eastern District of Michigan Southern Division challenging the constitutionality of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 The complaint alleged the bill was not afforded due consideration by the United States Congress before being signed by the President 43 The action was subsequently dismissed on grounds of lack of standing 44 Ethics controversy edit In April 2006 the FBI and the U S Attorney s office sent independent letters to the House Ethics Committee saying two former aides of Conyers had alleged that Conyers used his staff to work on several local and state campaigns of other politicians including his wife for the Detroit City Council She won a seat in 2005 He also forced them to baby sit and chauffeur his children 45 46 In late December 2006 Conyers accepted responsibility for violating House rules A statement issued December 29 2006 by the House Ethics Committee chairman Doc Hastings and Ranking Minority Member Howard Berman said Conyers acknowledged what he characterized as a lack of clarity in his communications with staff members regarding their official duties and responsibilities and accepted responsibility for his actions 47 In deciding to drop the matter Hastings and Berman said After reviewing the information gathered during the inquiry and in light of Representative Conyers s cooperation with the inquiry we have concluded that this matter should be resolved through the issuance of this public statement and the agreement by Representative Conyers to take a number of additional significant steps to ensure that his office complies with all rules and standards regarding campaign and personal work by congressional staff 47 Copyright bill edit Conyers repeatedly introduced the Fair Copyright in Research Works Act a bill that would overturn the NIH Public Access Policy an open access mandate of the National Institutes of Health Conyers s bill would forbid the government from mandating that federally funded research be made freely available to the public 48 The legislation was supported by the publishing industry 49 and opposed by groups such as the Electronic Frontier Foundation 50 Writers Lawrence Lessig and Michael Eisen accused Conyers of being influenced by publishing houses who have contributed significant money to his campaigns 51 House Report on George W Bush presidency and proposed inquiry edit On January 13 2009 the House Committee on the Judiciary led by Conyers released Reining in the Imperial Presidency Lessons and Recommendations Relating to the Presidency of George W Bush a 486 page report detailing alleged abuses of power that occurred during the Bush administration and a comprehensive set of recommendations to prevent recurrence Conyers introduced a bill to set up a truth commission panel to investigate alleged policy abuses of the Bush administration 52 53 Bill reading controversy edit In late July 2009 Conyers commenting on the healthcare debate in the House stated I love these members they get up and say Read the bill What good is reading the bill if it s a thousand pages and you don t have two days and two lawyers to find out what it means after you read the bill His remark brought criticism from government transparency advocates such as the Sunlight Foundation which referred to readthebill org 54 in response 55 Response to accusations regarding American Muslim spies edit In October Conyers responded to allegations from four Republican Congress Members in the wake of the launch of the book Muslim Mafia that the Council on American Islamic Relations CAIR sought to plant Muslim spies in Capitol Hill He strongly opposed the accusations saying It shouldn t need to be said in 2009 and after the historic election of our first African American president but let me remind all my colleagues that patriotic Americans of all races religions and beliefs have the right and the responsibility to participate in our political process including by volunteering to work in Congressional offices Numerous Muslim American interns have served the House ably and they deserve our appreciation and respect not attacks on their character or patriotism 56 WikiLeaks edit At a December 16 2010 hearing of the House Judiciary Committee on the subject of the Espionage Act and the Legal and Constitutional Issues Raised by WikiLeaks 57 Conyers argue d strongly against prosecuting WikiLeaks in haste or at all 58 He strongly defended the whistleblowing organization saying As an initial matter there is no doubt that WikiLeaks is very unpopular right now Many feel that the WikiLeaks publication was offensive But being unpopular is not a crime and publishing offensive information is not either And the repeated calls from politicians journalists and other so called experts crying out for criminal prosecutions or other extreme measures make me very uncomfortable Indeed when everyone in this town is joined together calling for someone s head that is it a pretty strong sign we need to slow down and take a closer look L et us not be hasty and let us not legislate in a climate of fear or prejudice For in such an atmosphere it is our constitutional freedoms and our cherished civil rights that are the first to be sacrificed in the false service of our national security 58 Conyers s statement was in marked contrast to the repeated calls from other members of Congress and Obama administration officials to prosecute WikiLeaks head Julian Assange immediately 58 Foreign policy edit In 2014 Conyers along with Ted Yoho introduced a bipartisan amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act which would prohibit the United States Armed Forces from providing any form of assistance to the Azov Battalion a National Guard of Ukraine unit accused by Conyers of being a far right white supremacist militia The amendment was subsequently passed by the House of Representatives in 2015 Conyers decision to introduce the amendment was the subject of both praise and criticism with detractors noting that claiming that large numbers of Neo Nazis are members of the Azov Battalion is a common theme of propaganda in Russia 59 60 Conyers stated If there s one simple lesson we can take away from U S involvement in conflicts overseas it s this Beware of unintended consequences As was made vividly clear with U S involvement in Afghanistan during the Soviet invasion decades ago overzealous military assistance or the hyper weaponization of conflicts can have destabilizing consequences and ultimately undercut our own national interests 61 He also voiced concerns about sending anti aircraft missiles to Syrian rebels 62 Sexual harassment allegations and resignation edit See also 2017 United States political sexual scandals In 2015 a former employee of Conyers alleged that he had sexually harassed her and dismissed her She filed an affidavit with the Congressional Office of Compliance 63 Conyers had entered into a confidentiality agreement with the former employee and had paid her a 27 000 33 936 in 2023 settlement from his publicly funded office budget in 2015 64 BuzzFeed reported on the allegations and settlement on November 20 2017 Buzzfeed also reported allegations that Conyers repeatedly made sexual advances to female staff caressed female staffers hands in a sexual manner and rubbed their backs and legs in public 65 66 67 On November 21 2017 Conyers issued a statement in which he said In our country we strive to honor this fundamental principle that all are entitled to due process In this case I expressly and vehemently denied the allegations made against me and continue to do so My office resolved the allegations with an express denial of liability in order to save all involved from the rigors of protracted litigation 68 Also on November 21 2017 the House Ethics Committee launched an investigation into multiple sexual harassment allegations against Conyers 69 On November 22 2017 The Washington Post reported that Melanie Sloan founder of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington CREW publicly accused Conyers of having harassed and verbally abused her during her tenure working for the House Judiciary Committee On one occasion Sloan alleged that Conyers had summoned to his office where she found him sitting in his underwear she quickly departed 70 Later in November 2017 there were reports that another woman accused Conyers of sexual harassment 71 House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi who had initially stated that Conyers was an icon and had done a great deal to protect women 72 called upon Conyers to resign She said the allegations against him were very credible 73 On December 5 2017 Conyers resigned his House seat because of his mounting sexual scandals 74 The announcement came the day after another former staffer released an affidavit accusing Conyers of sexual harassment 75 The same day an article by The Washington Post published allegations by Courtney Morse that Conyers had threatened her with a similar fate to that of Chandra Levy a staffer found murdered in a park in Washington DC She said that after she rejected his advances he said he had insider information on the case I don t know if he meant it to be threatening but I took it that way 76 At a time when the MeToo movement was pushing for action against men who harassed women some media and supporters in Detroit believed Conyers had been unfairly treated 77 He was reported as the first sitting politician to be ousted from office in the wake of the MeToo movement 78 Caucus memberships edit nbsp Conyers standing second from right with fellow founding members of the Congressional Black Caucus in 1971 Founding Member and Dean of the Congressional Black Caucus 79 American Sikh Congressional Caucus 80 Congressional Progressive Caucus 81 United States Congressional International Conservation Caucus 82 Out of Afghanistan Caucus Co chair 83 Congressional Full Employment Caucus 84 Congressional Arts Caucus 85 Afterschool Caucuses 86 Congressional NextGen 9 1 1 Caucus 87 Detroit mayoral campaigns editWhile serving in the U S House Conyers made two unsuccessful runs for mayor of Detroit one in 1989 against incumbent Coleman Young and again in 1993 88 1989 edit Incumbent Democratic Mayor Coleman Young decided to run for a fifth term despite growing unpopularity and the declining economy of Detroit In the September primary Young won with 51 of the vote Accountant Tom Barrow qualified for the November run off by having 24 and Conyers received 18 of the vote 89 Despite the difficulties of the city Young defeated Barrow in the run off with 56 of the vote 90 1993 edit In June 1993 incumbent Democratic Mayor Coleman Young decided to retire instead of seeking a sixth term citing his age and health Many observers believed he had decided not to test his growing unpopularity In a Detroit News poll in February 81 said Young should retire 91 Conyers was one of the 23 candidates who qualified for ballot access 92 Dennis Archer was the front runner in the mayoral campaign from the beginning The 51 year old former State Supreme Court Justice raised over 1 6 million to finance his campaign He won the September primary with 54 of the vote Conyers came in fourth place 93 Archer won the November election Electoral history editMain article Electoral history of John ConyersPersonal life editConyers married Monica Esters a teacher in Detroit in 1990 She was 25 and he was 61 they had two sons together John James III and Carl Edward Conyers 94 Monica Conyers served as vice administrator of Detroit s public schools and in 2005 was elected to the Detroit City Council citation needed Monica Conyers pleaded guilty to bribery charges on June 26 2009 95 and served slightly more than 27 months in prison 96 her sentence was completed on May 16 2013 97 In September 2015 Monica Conyers filed for divorce citing a breakdown of the marriage 98 However the Conyerses reconciled in late 2016 99 Conyers s grandnephew Ian Conyers was elected to the Michigan Senate in 2016 100 He generated controversy by telling of Conyers s planned retirement in interviews before the Congressman announced it himself and claiming his great uncle s endorsement 101 Following the Congressman s resignation Ian Conyers announced that he would run in the special election for the Congressman s seat The Congressman instead endorsed his son John Conyers III as his successor 102 John Conyers III chose not to run Ian Conyers was defeated in the Democratic primary by Rashida Tlaib 103 Death edit Conyers died at his home in Detroit on October 27 2019 at the age of 90 104 His funeral was held on November 4 at Detroit s Greater Grace Temple 105 Honors and awards editIn 2007 Conyers was awarded the Spingarn Medal from the NAACP 106 better source needed See also editHistory of African Americans in Detroit List of African American United States representatives List of Democratic Socialists of America who have held office in the United States PRO IP Act United States National Health Care Act Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Michigan nbsp United StatesNotes and references edit Possessive Conyers s plural Conyerses and plural possessive Conyerses all have three syllables Conyers John Jr 1929 2019 history house gov Retrieved July 29 2022 One of Michigan s finest John Conyers African American Registry Archived from the original on June 14 2015 Retrieved May 17 2017 John Conyers Life at a Glance The New York Times Associated Press May 16 1929 Retrieved October 27 2019 Zinn Howard 1994 You Can t Be Neutral on a Moving Train Beacon Press pp 63 64 ISBN 978 0807070581 Former Congressman John Conyers passes away FOX 2 Detroit October 1 2006 Retrieved October 27 2019 24 Mar 1992 Page 11 Detroit Free Press March 24 1992 Retrieved October 27 2019 via Newspapers com 5 Nov 1992 Page 20 Detroit Free Press November 5 1992 Retrieved October 27 2019 via Newspapers com 3 Nov 2010 Page 7 Battle Creek Enquirer November 3 2010 Retrieved October 27 2019 via Newspapers com John Conyers longest serving black member of Congress in history dies Detroitnews com n d Retrieved October 27 2019 Invalid petitions could keep U S Rep John Conyers Jr of Detroit off Aug 5 primary ballot Mlive com May 2 2014 Retrieved May 9 2014 Judge Allows US Rep Conyers to Be on Ballot ABC News May 23 2014 Retrieved May 23 2014 Michigan Secretary of State won t appeal ruling putting John Conyers back on the ballot Detroit Free Press May 30 2014 Archived from the original on September 24 2015 Retrieved May 30 2014 a b ET December 5 2017 Timeline Career of U S Rep John Conyers Jr Detroitnews com Retrieved October 27 2019 Keeping the Faith African Americans Return to Congress 1929 1970 PDF Black Americans in Congress US House of Representatives Archived from the original PDF on January 18 2012 Retrieved November 4 2011 John Nichols November 2 2005 John Conyers and Rosa Parks The Nation Archived from the original on November 13 2019 Retrieved October 27 2019 U S lawmaker raps Internet gambling enforcement Reuters November 14 2007 Crawford Tichawonna Nicole January 12 2018 Years of persistence led to holiday honoring King USA Today No January 12 2018 Retrieved March 29 2020 John Nichols 2016 The Genius of Impeachment The Founders Cure for Royalism The New Press ISBN 978 1595587350 Retrieved January 23 2021 Margolis Jon March 14 1983 Bernie of Burlington The New Republic Retrieved September 21 2018 Office of the Clerk of the U S House of Representatives Current Vacancies Archived from the original on August 29 2015 Retrieved August 15 2015 Commission to Study Reparation Proposals for African Americans Act 2013 113th Congress H R 40 GovTrack us n d Retrieved May 17 2017 Miller Melinda C June 26 2019 The Righteous and Reasonable Ambition to Become a Landholder Land and Racial Inequality in the Postbellum South The Review of Economics and Statistics 102 2 381 394 doi 10 1162 rest a 00842 ISSN 0034 6535 S2CID 195656011 Conyers John Reparations Conyers house gov Archived from the original on August 29 2015 Retrieved October 24 2014 Conyers and Johnson Introduce Legislation to Equalize Women s Pay End Forced Arbitration Press release April 12 2016 Archived from the original on December 6 2017 Retrieved December 5 2017 Kathleen Gray U S Rep John Conyers leaves behind legacy of civil rights racial justice Detroit Free Press December 5 2017 John Conyers Veteran congressman gives up post amid harassment inquiry BBC News November 26 2017 Nixon s Enemies List Search Results enemieslist info Ratnesar Romesh September 28 1998 Is The Top Democratic Gun Ready For War Time Retrieved October 28 2019 James M Naughton July 30 1974 New Accusation The New York Times Retrieved October 27 2019 Conyers John October 1974 Why Nixon Should Have Been Impeached The Black Scholar 6 2 Taylor amp Francis 2 8 JSTOR 41065758 H R 676 What Rep John Conyers s sweeping single payer health care bill would actually do Vox August 28 2017 Retrieved October 27 2019 List of Individuals Impeached by the House of Representatives United States House of Representatives Archived from the original on December 18 2019 Retrieved January 15 2020 a b Tony Allen Mills and Tom Pattinson Blair faces U S probe over secret Iraq invasion plan The Times May 22 2005 Brown Sylvester Jr May 15 2005 Conyers looks for news in the wrong place St Louis Post Dispatch p D2 Vidal Gore June 9 2005 Something Rotten in Ohio The Nation Archived from the original on October 28 2019 Retrieved October 28 2019 Final Vote Results for Roll Call 7 clerk house gov January 6 2005 Retrieved February 22 2008 Salvato Albert December 29 2004 Ohio Recount Gives a Smaller Margin to Bush The New York Times Rep John Conyers n d The Constitution in Crisis Censure and Investigate Possible Impeachment HuffPost Retrieved October 27 2019 Conyers seeks to censure Bush in Congress United Press International December 20 2005 Retrieved October 27 2019 H Res 288 109th Congress 2005 2006 Expressing the sense of the House of Representatives condemning bigotry and religious intolerance and recognizing that holy books of every religion should be treated with dignity and respect Congress gov Library of Congress Thomas loc gov May 19 2005 Archived from the original on February 9 2016 Retrieved October 27 2019 Congressional Record Text of H Res 160 March 16 2005 Retrieved July 12 2016 The DRA One Year Later Dems Waiting for Outcome of Legal Challenges to Law That Stiffens Medicaid Transfer Penalties Archived September 27 2007 at the Wayback Machine from ElderLawAnswers com February 10 2007 Judge Dismisses Budget Bill Lawsuit ABC News Associated Press November 6 2006 Archived from the original on February 3 2009 Retrieved November 28 2006 Congressman accused of using staff to baby sit CNN April 12 2006 Retrieved May 6 2010 Civilian Employee Held Hostage at Baltimore Police Station Moussaoui Testifies 9 11 Delayed Death Congressional Baby Sitter CNN April 13 2006 Retrieved January 14 2019 When it came to Conyers staff members said doing errands and babysitting were only the half of it Conyers they told CNN regularly used his congressional staff to work on other politicians campaigns Chief among them the campaign of his very own wife Detroit City Councilwoman Monica Conyers a b Conyers accepts responsibility for possible ethics violations Archived January 2 2007 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved May 10 2017 Conyers Reintroduces Fair Copyright in Research Works Act Tech Law Journal February 3 2009 Willinsky J 2009 The Publishers Pushback against NIH s Public Access and Scholarly Publishing Sustainability PLOS Biology 7 1 e30 doi 10 1371 journal pbio 1000030 PMC 2631074 PMID 19175295 Richard Esguerra Open Access Policies Threatened by Copyright Bill Electronic Frontier Foundation February 25 2009 Lawrence Lessig and Michael Eisen March 2 2009 Is John Conyers Shilling for Special Interests HuffPost Retrieved August 23 2010 A Truth Commission for the Bush Era The New York Times March 2 2009 Retrieved March 23 2011 H R 104 To establish a national commission on presidential war powers and civil liberties Thomas loc gov June 12 2009 Archived from the original on October 19 2015 Retrieved March 23 2011 ReadTheBill Archived from the original on June 10 2009 Paul Blumenthal July 27 2009 Rep Conyers Don t Read the Bill Sunlight Foundation Archived from the original on July 30 2009 Retrieved July 29 2009 O Brien Michael October 15 2009 Conyers blasts GOP lawmakers accusations of Muslim spies The Hill s Blog Briefing Room Thehill com Retrieved August 23 2010 Website of the House Judiciary Committee Judiciary house gov December 16 2010 Archived from the original on March 17 2011 Retrieved March 23 2011 a b c Elliott Justin December 16 2010 Top Dem sticks up for WikiLeaks Archived December 18 2010 at the Wayback Machine Salon com The reality of neo Nazis in Ukraine is far from Kremlin propaganda November 9 2017 Archived from the original on November 10 2017 Ukraine s Neo Nazis Won t Get U S Money Archived November 20 2015 at the Wayback Machine Bloomberg June 12 2015 U S House Passes three Amendments By Rep Conyers To Defense Spending Bill To Protect Civilians From Dangers Of Arming and Training Foreign Forces Archived June 13 2015 at the Wayback Machine Press Releases June 11 2015 Congress just gave Trump the authority to send surface to air missiles to Syrian fighters The Washington Post December 6 2016 Conyers scandal rocks House Democrats Politico Retrieved November 21 2017 Davis Susan November 21 2017 Democratic Congressman Acknowledges Settlement But Denies Sexual Harassment Claim NPR McLeod Paul November 20 2017 She complained that a powerful congressman harassed her Here s why you didn t hear her story BuzzFeed Retrieved November 20 2017 Beavers Olivia November 20 2017 Report Conyers Settled Wrongful Dismissal Complaint over Sexual Advances The Hill Conyers reportedly settled a wrongful dismissal complaint in 2015 after a former employee accused him of firing her for resisting his sexual advances Conyers s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment from The Hill Viebeck Elise Rep John Conyers denies reaching harassment settlement after BuzzFeed report The Washington Post November 21 2017 Michigan Rep Conyers responds after sexual harassment complaints WXYZ Detroit Associated Press November 21 2017 Retrieved November 21 2017 Singman Brooke November 21 2017 Ethics panel probes Conyers allegations as Dem leaders call claims disturbing Fox News Channel Retrieved November 21 2017 Kindy Kimberly Hendrix Steve Lee Michelle Ye Hee November 22 2017 Ethics lawyer says Conyers mistreated her during her years on Capitol Hill Retrieved May 16 2020 Brooke Singman November 28 2017 John Conyers long history of controversy surfaces amid misconduct allegations Fox News Channel Retrieved January 15 2019 Maher claimed that there were three instances of inappropriate conduct The first was allegedly in 1997 when she reportedly rejected his offer to share a hotel room and have sex Joseph Weber November 27 2017 Pelosi calls Conyers icon who has worked to protect women yet backs House probe into sexual allegations Fox News Channel Alcindor Yamiche November 30 2017 House Leaders Call on Conyers to Resign After an Accuser Details Her Charges The New York Times Gideon Resnick December 5 2017 Conyers Retires Family Feud Ensues The Daily Beast Rachel Elbaum December 5 2017 Conyers allegations Ex staffer says congressman inappropriately touched her NBC News Kindy Kimberly December 5 2017 Conyers faced mounting sexual misconduct allegations as he weighed his future The Washington Post McKinley Noble November 26 2017 Civil rights hero and Democrat John Conyers has been felled by MeToo Quartz Retrieved January 15 2019 This makes Conyers just the latest politician to fall to the MeToo movement Davis Richardson December 5 2017 Battered by Sexual Harassment Allegations John Conyers Resigns From Congress The New York Observer Retrieved January 15 2019 Conyers is the first sitting politician ousted from office in the wake of the MeToo movement Otis John n d John Conyers Jr long serving congressman who co founded Congressional Black Caucus dies at 90 The Washington Post Retrieved October 28 2019 First Ever American Sikh Congressional Caucus Launched Sikh Coalition April 25 2013 Retrieved October 28 2019 John Nichols November 10 2006 The Crowded Progressive Caucus The Nation Archived from the original on October 28 2019 Retrieved October 28 2019 Our Members U S House of Representatives International Conservation Caucus n d Archived from the original on August 1 2018 Retrieved August 1 2018 Hayden Tom May 19 2010 Conyers Forms Congressional Out of Afghanistan Caucus The Nation Archived from the original on October 28 2019 Retrieved October 28 2019 Congressional Full Employment Caucus Statement on May Jobs Report Congresswoman Frederica Wilson Wilson house gov June 3 2016 Archived from the original on October 28 2019 Retrieved October 28 2019 Membership Congressional Arts Caucus n d Archived from the original on January 20 2019 Retrieved March 21 2018 Members Afterschool Alliance n d Retrieved March 23 2018 Members Congressional NextGen 9 1 1 Caucus n d Archived from the original on June 12 2018 Retrieved June 11 2018 In Mayor s Races Capitol Hill Often Doesn t Lead to City Hall Politico May 2 2007 Detroit Mayor Easily Wins Primary but Faces Runoff The New York Times September 14 1989 Detroit s Young wins again The Dallas Morning News November 8 1989 Walsh Edward June 23 1993 Detroit Mayor Bars New Race Scramble to Succeed Young Is Assured Archived from the original on March 15 2013 Retrieved July 6 2017 Holewa Lisa September 14 1993 23 candidates hope to replace Detroit mayor The Item As Mayor of 20 Years Retires Detroit Faces a New Kind of Election The New York Times September 13 1993 Rep John Conyers announces retirement endorses son to run for seat CBS News December 5 2017 Swickard Joe Ben Schmitt David Ashenfelter June 26 2009 Monica Conyers pleads guilty to conspiracy Detroit Free Press Archived from the original on June 29 2009 Retrieved June 26 2009 Prosecutors Monica Conyers must stay at Camp Cupcake MLive com April 18 2011 Retrieved May 17 2017 Tresa Baldas February 5 2013 Monica Conyers Sam Riddle out of prison in time for Kilpatrick corruption verdict Detroit Free Press Monica Conyers files for divorce from U S Rep John Conyers Clickondetroit com October 2 2015 Retrieved May 17 2017 John Monica Conyers reconciled no longer divorcing Detroitnews com November 22 2016 Retrieved October 27 2019 Banks earns victory GOP splits key races in Wayne Co Detroitnews com Retrieved May 17 2017 John Conyers to Leave Congress Amid Harassment Claims The New York Times December 5 2017 Retrieved April 24 2018 Conyers vs Conyers Congressman backs son for seat Detroit News December 5 2017 Retrieved April 24 2018 Rashida Tlaib wins race to replace John Conyers Detroit Free Press November 6 2018 Retrieved October 28 2019 Williams Corey October 27 2019 John Conyers longest serving black congressman dies at 90 Associated Press Retrieved January 16 2023 John Conyers funeral set for Monday in Detroit Bill Clinton to attend The Detroit News Detroitnews com n d Retrieved October 30 2019 NAACP Spingarn Medal Archived from the original on August 2 2014 External links editJohn Conyers at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote United States Congress John Conyers id C000714 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress John Conyers at Find a Grave CD14 at Michigan Liberal John Conyers s oral history video excerpts at The National Visionary Leadership Project John Conyers Jr for Congress Global Family Day movement co founded by John Conyers and Linda Grover Appearances on C SPAN John Conyers at Curlie Articles It s time for Karl Rove to go The president needs to ask for a special prosecutor in the Valerie Plame case Congressman John Conyers Jr Salon com October 15 2003 Preserving Democracy What Went Wrong in Ohio Status Report of the House Judiciary Committee Democratic Staff prepared at the request of Congressman John Conyers January 5 2005 Open letter to George W Bush re Downing Street Memo originally signed by 89 U S Congress members John Conyers et al May 5 2005 Bush asked to explain UK war memo CNN May 12 2005 The Downing Street Memo John Conyers May 27 2005 Congressman John Conyers Talks About Bush Lying America Into War and His Campaign to Hold Bush Accountable The Downing Street Memo and More John Conyers interview BuzzFlash June 9 2005 The Constitution in Crisis The Downing Street Minutes and Deception Manipulation Torture Retribution and Coverups in the Iraq War Investigative Status Report of the House Judiciary Committee Democratic Staff December 2005 A Motion for Censure Congressman John Conyers Jr The Nation December 22 2005 Q amp A with Conyers Guernica Magazine May 22 2006 House chair warns White House to comply with subpoenas November 5 2007 U S House of Representatives Preceded byLucien Nedzi Member of the U S House of Representatives from Michigan s 1st congressional district1965 1993 Succeeded byBart Stupak Preceded byDennis Hertel Member of the U S House of Representatives from Michigan s 14th congressional district1993 2013 Succeeded byGary Peters Preceded byHansen Clarke Member of the U S House of Representatives from Michigan s 13th congressional district2013 2017 Succeeded byBrenda Jones Preceded byJack Brooks Chair of the House Oversight Committee1989 1995 Succeeded byWilliam F Clinger Jr Preceded byJim Sensenbrenner Chair of the House Judiciary Committee2007 2011 Succeeded byLamar S Smith Honorary titles Preceded byJohn Dingell Dean of the United States House of Representatives2015 2017 Succeeded byDon Young Most senior Democrat in the U S House of Representatives2015 2017 Succeeded bySteny Hoyer Preceded byRalph Hall Oldest member of the U S House of Representatives2015 2017 Succeeded byLouise Slaughter Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Conyers amp oldid 1220386633, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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