- Bruce S. Gordon
Bruce Scott Gordon (born
February 15 1946 ) is anAfrican American business executive who spent most of his career withVerizon and currently serves as a corporate director ofCBS andTyco International . He was selected in June 2005 to head theNAACP , a major Americancivil rights organization. Texeira, Erin (June 25, 2005). [http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2005-06-25-naacp-president-gordon_x.htm NAACP board names Bruce Gordon president.] ] Gordon served in that position until March 2007.Career
Born in
Camden, New Jersey , Gordon's parents were both active in the civil rights movement. A 1968 graduate ofGettysburg College , where he was a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon Fraternity, and a 1988 Master's degree in Management (M.B.A.) graduate of theSloan Fellows program of theMIT Sloan School of Management . Gordon's professional career began atBell of Pennsylvania , where he rose in corporate management to become the Head of the Retail Markets Division ofVerizon upon his retirement in December 2003. Other Verizon executives have credited him with helping to promote diversity and a corporate culture based on customer service at the telecom company.Gordon is a member of the boards of
CBS andTyco International, Ltd.; a trustee of theAlvin Ailey Dance Foundation, TheBarnes Foundation ,UNICEF ,National Underground Railroad Freedom Center , and Commission on African American Men and Boys; the chair of Chancellor's Advisory Board on Student Motivation in the New York Public School System; and a member of the Executive Leadership Council. Gordon previously served on the boards ofSouthern Company ,Office Depot ,Best Foods ,Infinity Broadcasting and The Bartech Group. He was also a trustee ofGettysburg College andLincoln Center . TheAmerican Advertising Federation inducted him into theAdvertising Hall of Fame , the industry’s most prestigious honor, in March 2007. "Ebony " magazine named him one of its “100 Most Influential Black Americans and Organization Leaders” in May 2006. He was ranked #6 on "Fortune" magazine’s list of the “50 Most Powerful Black Executives” in July 2002. "Black Enterprise " magazine named him executive of the year in 1998.NAACP
Gordon's selection as NAACP president on
25 June 2005 was widely regarded as unusual — most of the organization's past presidents have been prominent figures in politics, religion, or the civil rights movement before holding the office. The only candidate seriously considered by the organization's board, he was approved by a unanimous vote and was confirmed at the July 2005 NAACP convention. He succeededKweisi Mfume , who resigned his post as NAACP president in late 2004.President George W. Bush made his first appearance at the NAACP onJuly 20 2006 , half-way through his second term. [http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2006/07/20060720.html President Bush Addresses NAACP Annual Convention ] ] After having snubbed the organization for most of his presidency, it was Gordon's "moderate" political views that led Bush to acquiesce to the appearance, according toWhite House spokesmanTony Snow .Citing strain with the board, Gordon resigned in March 2007. He stated "I did not step into the role to be a caretaker, to be dictated to," Gordon said. "I stepped into the role to understand as best I could the needs of the African American community and then to propose strategies and policies and programs and practices that could improve conditions for African Americans…. The things I had in mind were not consistent with what some — unfortunately, too many — on the board had in mind." Associated Press (March 4, 2007). Bruce Gordon Resigns as N.A.A.C.P. President. "
New York Times "]References
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