The Long Battle for Fair Housing in California: Part Two

Kimberly Creighton, Librarian, Social Science, Philosophy & Religion Department,
Tom Bradley (left) shakes hands with William Byron Rumford
Tom Bradley (left), Los Angeles' first African American councilmember, shakes hands with State Assembly member William Byron Rumford, author of the Rumford Fair Housing Bill, in 1964 at his City Hall office

As soon as the Rumford Fair Housing Act went into effect on September 20, 1963, both the law and the State Fair Employment Practices Commission, SFEPC, the agency tasked with enforcing it, came under scrutiny from the California Real Estate Association (CREA) and its local member boards. These opponents of the Rumford Act formed the Committee for Home Protection to initiate a petition drive to kill the fair housing law through the sponsorship of a new initiative, believing the Rumford Act directly threatened the financial interests of the real estate industry.

At the local level, Los Angeles realty member organizations, such as Valley Real Estate Association and Southwest Realty Board, followed CREA’s direction and declared their opposition to the Rumford Act. Civil rights leaders and members of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) responded to the realty industry’s stance by protesting outside member offices and in planned communities across the Southland.

picketers in front of a bookstore
January 13, 1964: "About 40 members of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) Saturday picketed the office of the Newport Realty, Sherman Oaks, to protest efforts of the Valley Real Estate Association to repeal the Rumford Fair Housing Act."
CORE picketers being pushed
May 26, 1964 "A Moving Human Wall at Realty Lie Down. Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) picketers blocking a parking lot exit at the Southwest Realty Board meeting are being slowly pushed along by an unidentified woman driver. The four, apparently unhurt, were among 14 arrested."

From Initiative to Proposition

With CREA having secured the necessary volume of petitions, the initiative, which became Proposition 14, was placed on the ballot for the November 1964 statewide election. Careful to avoid the use of discriminatory language in its arguments against the Rumford Act and in the proposition itself, CREA, under the banner of the Committee for Home Protection, defended property rights, spoke out against what they considered “forced housing” laws, and mobilized white voters across California.

newspaper ad
The initiative, numbered Proposition 14 when it was certified for the ballot, was to add an amendment (Cal. Const. art. I, § 26) to the constitution of California. Social Science, Philosophy & Religion Department

The Fight Around Proposition 14

Proponents of Proposition 14 argued that the constitutional amendment would "guarantee the right of all home and apartment owners to choose buyers and renters of their property as they wish, without interference by State or local government." The argument further stated that "most owners of such property in California lost this right through the Rumford Act of 1963." Those in favor of the proposition wanted to restore California property owners’ right to sell or rent to persons of their choice.

Opponents of Proposition 14 argued that the law "would write hate and bigotry into the Constitution." They further expressed that the proposition "would legalize and incite bigotry. At a time when our nation is moving ahead on civil rights, it proposes to convert California into another Mississippi or Alabama and to create an atmosphere for violence and hate." Additionally, it was understood by civil rights leaders and allies that the Proposition would not only repeal the Rumford Act but would codify discrimination in the California Constitution.

While white Democratic politicians and labor and legal organizations, the AFL-CIO Los Angeles County Labor Federation and the California Bar Association, were deeply opposed to Proposition 14, opinions within religious institutions across California did not reflect the same values. Churches in the San Fernando Valley, such as Granada Hills Methodist Church, were actively engaged in the debate of whether Proposition 14 should pass, revealing the deep conflict surrounding the amendment in predominantly white neighborhoods.

Rev. Jack Harrison
February 25, 1964 "Initiative opponent." Rev. Jack Harrison opposes California Proposition 14, a 1964 ballot proposition that amends the California state constitution, nullifying the Rumford Fair Housing Act
Mrs. Waisgerber
February 25, 1964 "Commission chairman." Mrs. Waisgerber is the chairman of the Commission on Social Concerns at the Granada Hills Methodist Church. She is a supporter of Proposition 14, a ballot proposition that amends the California state constitution, nullifying the Rumford Fair Housing Act.

Voter Mobilization

For most of 1964, fair housing and civil rights advocates rallied to challenge the validity of Proposition 14 and sway public opinion in favor of defeating it. California Democrats and Governor Edmund “Pat” Brown organized Californians Against Proposition 14, which led to a massive effort to convince California voters to oppose the initiative.

Sen. Pierre Salinger and Gov. Edmund G. Brown
September 8, 1964 "Labor Day - Sen. Pierre Salinger and Gov. Edmund G. Brown addressed the 18th annual Labor Day Breakfast of the Catholic Labor Institute at the Biltmore Hotel and called for group action to defeat Proposition 14 which they labeled as a ‘misguided attempt to write bigotry into the constitution of California."

The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), the Urban League, the United Civil Rights Committee (UCRC), and CORE considered Proposition 14 an attack on the opportunity for African Americans to live in decent housing and mobilized their own efforts to fight the passage of Proposition 14. UCRC initiated voter registration drives with the aim of signing up one hundred thousand to two hundred thousand new voters.

Tom Bradley poses with seven women
October 5, 1964 - Councilmember Tom Bradley poses with seven women, all of whom are holding small "No on 14" placards. A larger poster reading, "No on 14 Don't Legalize Hate," can be seen hanging on the wall behind them, above their heads. The group was attending a "No on 14" fundraising event and appreciation party for long-time community leaders Elois Davis and Mary Zuniga.

When voter registration ended on September 10, 1964, UCRC had registered over forty thousand new African American voters in just under three months. Although the UCRC did not meet its ultimate goal, the committee recognized the incredible response and efforts within the African American community. UCRC’s Chairman H. H. Brookins stated that "The United Civil Rights Committee, as headquarters of the largest registration mobilization in the United States exceeding in manpower the Mississippi Summer Project, concluded the most successful registration drive ever attempted in Los Angeles and the State of California this week."

Election Results

During the final weeks before the election, the UCRC and other civil rights organizations encouraged all registered African Americans to vote against Proposition 14. While the African American community did not disappoint, the effort to defeat the initiative failed miserably. Polls indicated that there was wide support for the proposition.

On November 3, 1964, Proposition 14 passed by nearly two to one, reintroducing discriminatory laws into the California Constitution.

protesters on the steps of the capital building
November 4, 1964 "It was supposed to have been a candle-light parade to City Hall last night, but they paraded without candles to protest the passage of Proposition 14. Some 350 civil rights demonstrators vowed to fight to regain civil rights legislation by taking the issue to the courts."

More Work Ahead

After Proposition 14 was adopted, it nullified the Rumford Fair Housing Act by adding a provision to the California Constitution permitting property owners to exercise racial discrimination. Over the next three years, a series of legal battles ensued to challenge Proposition 14’s constitutional validity. On May 10, 1966, the California Supreme Court, in Mulkey vs. Reitman, overturned Proposition 14, ruling that the state law violated the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the US Constitution, which "protects the rights of citizens and prohibits states from denying equal protection under the law." A year later, the Supreme Court of the United States also ruled that the state constitutional provision violated the Fourteenth Amendment and, therefore, was unconstitutional.

It would take another seven years before Proposition 14 would be repealed and fair housing legally reinstated in California. During the General Election on November 5, 1974, Proposition 7, known as the Rights of Citizens Amendment, passed. This new law repealed Proposition 14 and introduced protections against housing discrimination by reorganizing and substantively amending numerous provisions of Article I and removing provisions regarding the right to sell or rent real property according to one’s choice.

As we reflect on the protracted fight to end racial discrimination in housing, we pay tribute to the African American community members, civil rights leaders, advocates, heroes, and their allies who have fought and continue to fight discriminatory policies and practices.

Authors note: I would like to thank colleague Bob Timmermann of the History & Genealogy Department for authoring Part One of this post.


Further Reading


Book cover of As long as they don't move next door : segregation and racial conflict in American neighborhoods
As Long as They Don't Move Next Door: Segregation and Racial Conflict in American Neighborhoods
Meyer, Stephen Grant

Book cover of Black and brown in Los Angeles : beyond conflict and coalition
Black and Brown in Los Angeles: Beyond Conflict and Coalition

Book cover for City of Segregation: One Hundred Years of Struggle for Housing in Los Angeles
City of Segregation: One Hundred Years of Struggle for Housing in Los Angeles
Gibbons, Andrea

Book cover of Moving toward integration : the past and future of fair housing
Moving Toward Integration: The Past and Future of Fair Housing
Sander, Richard Henry

Book cover of Wherever there's a fight : how runaway slaves, suffragists, immigrants, strikers, and poets shaped c
Wherever There's a Fight
Elinson, Elaine


 

 

 

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