Julius Hobson

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Julius W. Hobson (May 29, 1919 — March 23, 1977) was the People's Party Vice Presidential candidate in 1972. Benjamin Spock was the People's Party Presidential candidate. They polled 0.1014% of the popular vote and no electoral votes.[1]

Hobson was also a "key early founder" of the D.C. Statehood Party. In 1971, he ran as a member of the party to be the District's delegate to the House of Representatives but lost to Democrat Walter E. Fauntroy.[2] Hobson was elected in 1974 as one of the at-large members of the Council of the District of Columbia at its creation, and he served in that position until his death in 1977.[3]

Quotes

Hobson quotations from Sam Smith's "Captive Capital"[4]

On democracy: "In this country, you don't have any democracy really. You have the right to elect but not to select. For example, here's two people: you get to vote for one of them. But you didn't choose in the first place either of them. That's not democracy from what I understand."[citation needed]
On being a politician: "I am not a politician. A politician is someone who does things to get elected. He's a guy who says things to please the public, that he thinks the public wants to hear, and his story changes with every passing day. I want to be elected, but I am not going to say a damn thing for your benefit, or that person's benefit out there on the street, or anybody's."[citation needed]
On a local black minister: "I was asked to speak at his church one Sunday. I went over there and when I went there I looked over the congregation. I would say the average person in there had on a pair of Thom McAn shoes, that their suits cost an average $35 a piece, that their shirts were from Hechts basements and that they were very poor and very illiterate - almost illiterate - people who were emotionally shocked just came to the church to let out this scream. [The minister] took up a love offering, he took up a minister's travel offering and then he took up a regular - he took up five or six offerings. So when he got to me to speak, I got up and said, 'God d*** it, if this is christianity, I want no part of it.' And 'this s** of a b**** is stealing from you and the thing is, he's not just stealing your money, he's stealing your minds. And I refuse to be a part of this.' And I walked off."[citation needed]

References

  1. "American Presidential Elections 1932-2000". Encyclopædia Britannica. Archived from the original on 2005-12-17. Retrieved 2008-05-15. 
  2. "Fauntroy Election Certified". The Washington Post. 1971-04-06. p. C6. Retrieved 2008-07-28. 
  3. "Historical Elected Officials: At-Large Member of the Council of the District of Columbia". District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics. Archived from the original on July 9, 2008. Retrieved 2008-07-15. 
  4. Smith, Sam (1974). Captive Capital: colonial life in modern Washington (First edition ed.). Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. p. 303 pages. ISBN 0-253-11070-X. 

External links

Council of the District of Columbia
First
group of four
At-Large Member,
Council of the District of Columbia

1975 1977
Succeeded by
Hilda Mason
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.