Calvin Butts
Duelling M.L.K.'s: Obama Soars, as Clinton Endorsed
In a speech today at Atlanta's Ebenezer Baptist Church, where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.served as pastor, Barack Obama talked about the existence of institutional racism, the sensationalizing of race "by the media" and the creeping of race as an issue into the presidential campaign.
But Obama's speech will likely be remembered for his calling on the black community to do its part to fight homophobia, anti-Semitism and xenophobia. read more »
Butts, With Clinton, Plays Down the Role of Race
Reverend Dr. Calvin Butts announced his long-assumed endorsement of Hillary Clinton in front of Harlem’s Abyssinian Baptist Church, where Clinton had honored Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. earlier this afternoon.
In endorsing Clinton, Butts read a long statement emphasizing his strong relationship with Clinton and his high regard for her experience. ("I, too, join countless Americans in a collective desire for change, and I do so with a vital recognition that change and experience are not mutually exclusive," Butts said.)
Clinton stood nodding beside Butts as he read his remarks. Across the hanging rope in front of them, the assembled reporters hopped up and down, shivering after an hour-long wait in the aching cold. They sipped from paper cups filled with hot coffee, brought out on trays from the church by Clinton aides, and struggled to hear Butts' remarks over the din of competing Clinton and Barack Obama supporters gathered in the street. read more »
Butts on Columbia Expansion: Politicians 'Polluted' Negotiations on Community Benefits
At a panel discussion last night on development in the city, multiple community organizers and the Reverend Calvin Butts, pastor of Harlem’s Abyssinian Baptist Church, criticized the process of forming community benefits agreements (CBAs) in order to bolster public and governmental support for large development projects.
The tool seems to be a technique increasingly favored by developers of controversial projects, who negotiate with members of the community, agreeing to include in the CBAs provisions for things such as affordable housing and local jobs. read more »
Hillary's Harlem Speaks
"She is no stranger here," said Calvin Butts, the Pastor of the Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem, where a "homecoming" rally was held for Hillary Clinton on Saturday.
In a very specific way, at least, the origins of Clinton's Senate career can be traced back to the 125th Street offices of Charlie Rangel, who, Clinton lore has it, was the first person to suggest she run for office. Rangel is also credited with finding Bill Clinton his uptown headquarters.
On the rainy Saturday afternoon, Rangel sat on one side of the church's marble altar and Bill and Hillary sat on the other.
"He loves being home," Clinton said of Rangel when it was her turn to talk.
"It's great getting off that plane and being able to come back to Harlem. Isn't it, Charlie?"
The audience was thrilled to have Rangel and Hillary on the same stage. read more »
Silent March
Tomorrow, on the day Sean Bell's daughter turns four years old, Rev. Al Sharpton and others will silently march down Fifth Avenue to protest police misconduct in minority communities and press City Hall to implement changes they say were supposed to be in place after the killing of Amadou Diallo.
Sharpton said everything from the 50 shots fired at Sean Bell to a double parking ticket given to Rev. Calvin Butts weeks earlier are "indicative of a problem that is a pattern in this city" with the police department.
Butts referred to some officers as "ignorant savages" who are "culturally ignorant" and "racially insensitive."
Noting that the officers involved in the Sean Bell killing were black, Hispanic and white, Sharpton said, "If they were all black, we would be marching tomorrow."
-- Azi PaybarahUPDATE: In response to the Butts comments, mayoral spokesman Stu Loeser said, "We don't dignifiy remarks like that with a response."
Leonard Lopate and Max Bond (and More) Talk Harlem: 'Art, Culture, Place'

Big L keeps it real
Panel discussions aren't always our kind of thing, but tomorrow night the estimable Leonard Lopate (WNYC, y'all!) hosts a very promising symposium on "The Role of the Arts in the Future of Harlem."
Why so promising? The choreographer Bill T. Jones will be there, hangout out with the powerful Reverend Dr. Calvin O. Butts, III (from Harlem's powerful Abyssinian Baptist Church).
Then there's Mr. Max Bond, an architect who spends his time these days worrying about the the World Trade Center Site Memorial. And for some bureaucratic zest he'll be joined by Kate Levin, the Commissioner of the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs. read more »
The free shebang is at the new Gatehouse--one's got to call 212.650.7100 for reservations. The release is after the jump.
- Max AbelsonThe Morning Read: May 8, 2006
The Post reports that Republicans have abandoned hope that Tom Suozzi will help them in defeating Eliot Spitzer.
And the Times writes about Cory Booker's coronation.
—Nicole BrydsonThought-Based?
Which thought-based group, exactly, was the target of a widely mailed flyer, colored in the green, yellow, and red associated with Africa, that was headed by the words "Join African-Americans for Bloomberg Today"?
The cover of the 8.5 by 11 inch piece shows Mike amid a group of black people, including public-workers' chief Lillian Roberts; inside are two pages of an African-American slanted take on Mike's record, stressing, for example, "improving the relationship between the police and our community," improving minority test scores, and "aid[ing] minority-owned businesses in bidding on City contracts."
The back features testimonials from Calvin Butts, Floyd Flake, and A.R. Bernard. read more »
With the tag line "More Opportunity for Our Community," the piece was mailed to an, er, black-thinking family in my Brooklyn building.











