The death of Representative Elijah Cummings on October 17 took from Congress one of its most principled and honorable members. This writer had the privilege of meeting Mr. Cummings during the 2018 congressional campaign, when he visited a small AME Church in Queen Anne’s County to endorse Democrat Jesse Colvin’s doomed campaign to replace Andy Harris in the House. In that intimate setting of fewer than 100, Cummings spoke with his usual eloquence and humility. For this writer, he personified the democratic ideals of justice and equality.
Born in 1951, Cummings grew up in Baltimore. His father worked in a chemical factory and his mother in a pickle factory and later as a maid. He had six siblings. While still a child, he fought for justice, helping to integrate a public swimming pool at age 11. He attended Howard University, where he served as student government president, and graduated in 1973 with a degree in political science. In 1976, he received a law degree from the University of Maryland and practiced law for nearly two decades. From 1983 to 1996, he served in the Maryland House of Delegates, where he championed a ban on billboards advertising alcohol and tobacco in inner-city Baltimore.
In 1996, Cummings was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives from Maryland’s Seventh Congressional District, which includes over half of Baltimore City, most of the majority-black precincts of Baltimore County, and most of Howard County.
In 2002, he joined the minority of House members and senators who voted against authorizing a military invasion of Iraq. Later investigations confirmed his view that there had been insufficient evidence of weapons of mass destruction. Also in 2002, he was elected as chair of the Congressional Black Caucus, where he pushed for increased funding for the Head Start program. He later became chair of the House Oversight and Reform Committee, that gained visibility under his leadership during early Trump impeachment investigations.
Cummings spoke at the funeral of Freddie Gray, who died in 2015 while under arrest by Baltimore police. When rioting broke out after Gray’s funeral, Cummings went out into the West Baltimore neighborhood with a bullhorn, working to restore order. His bullhorn — a gift from his Democratic Party colleagues — bore the words, “The Gentleman Will Not Yield.” He marched arm-in-arm with a dozen other neighborhood residents, singing “This Little Light of Mine.”
The years of the Trump administration were hard on Cummings, who was already in ill health after heart surgery. He described as fruitless his efforts to work with the president and the GOP majority in the House. On several occasions, he urged Trump to follow policies that would unite the country, to no avail. His was a leading voice against the administration’s efforts to include a citizenship question on the 2020 Census.
Mr. Cummings was a member of the New Psalmist Baptist Church in Baltimore. He is survived by his second wife, Maya Rockeymoore Cummings, a policy consultant and chairwoman of the Maryland Democratic Party, and by his daughter, Jennifer Cummings. His first marriage to Joyce Matthews ended in divorce.
Source: Jenna Portnoy, Washington Post , Oct. 17 2019
https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2019/10/17/elijah-cummings-dies-baltimore/
Title image: Pond at Pickering Creek Audubon Center, Talbot Co. Photo: Jan Plotczyk