This month, DPIC cel­e­brates Black History Month with week­ly pro­files of notable Black Americans whose work affect­ed the mod­ern death penal­ty era. The first in the series is retired Nebraska state sen­a­tor Ernie Chambers. 

As a trail­blaz­ing fig­ure in Nebraska pol­i­tics, Ernest Ernie” Chambers is best known for his unwa­ver­ing com­mit­ment to jus­tice and equal­i­ty. Elected in 1970, Chambers served in the Nebraska state leg­is­la­ture for 46 years. Throughout his career, Chambers cham­pi­oned a vari­ety of caus­es, includ­ing equal pen­sions for women, the ces­sa­tion of cor­po­ral pun­ish­ment in schools, and the elim­i­na­tion of sales tax on gro­ceries. Across 36 leg­isla­tive ses­sions, he spon­sored bills to abol­ish the death penal­ty, includ­ing the 2015 bill that tem­porar­i­ly repealed cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in Nebraska. Sen. Chambers said his mis­sion was to serve the least, the last, and the lost,” a tes­ta­ment to his ded­i­ca­tion to the mar­gin­al­ized and underserved. 

When the leg­is­la­ture debat­ed whether to over­ride Governor Pete Ricketts’ veto of the 2015 death penal­ty abo­li­tion bill, Sen. Chambers said, This will be the shin­ing moment of the Nebraska Legislature. The world, by anybody’s reck­on­ing, is a place filled with dark­ness, con­tention, vio­lence. We today can move to lift part of that cloud of dark­ness that has been hov­er­ing over this state for all these years.” The bipar­ti­san 30 – 19 vote made Nebraska the 19th state to abol­ish the death penal­ty. Gov. Ricketts lat­er per­son­al­ly fund­ed and led an effort to rein­state the death penal­ty via vot­er ref­er­en­dum, and in 2016, Nebraska vot­ers over­turned the state legislature’s decision.

Sen. Chamber’s effort to end the death penal­ty began in 1971 when he vis­it­ed a pen­i­ten­tiary: I don’t see how any­body comes out of prison with­out being filled with an unrea­son­ing, bit­ter hatred.” In his own words, Since I was first con­scious of the dif­fer­ence between right and wrong, I have been opposed to the death penal­ty. My argu­ment is sim­ple: Nobody should kill any­body. And killing some­one as pun­ish­ment is the most bar­bar­ic act of all.” 

Sen. Chambers’ jour­ney into the world of activism and pol­i­tics began with a moment that shaped his under­stand­ing of the pow­er of words. As a young Black man work­ing in a local post office, he spoke out against work­place dis­crim­i­na­tion, only to be fired in retaliation. 

Sen. Chambers retired from the leg­is­la­ture in 2021 when he reached the state’s term lim­it. His god­daugh­ter and fel­low leg­is­la­tor, Senator Patty Pansing Brooks, gave a speech hon­or­ing him at his retire­ment. She described Sen. Chambers as a man who stands as a bea­con of resilience: Senator Chambers is also a Nebraska leg­end, whose voice rose and pierced our hearts at times when we failed to live up to our best ideals.” Brooks empha­sized that to hon­or Sen. Chamber’s lega­cy, “[we must] do every­thing we can to change things so that they do not remain the same…We must vote and believe we can help to change the world for good.” 

Citation Guide
Sources

Ernie Chambers, Freedom From Religion Foundation, 2015; Julie Bosman, Nebraska Bans Death Penalty, Defying a Veto, The New York Times, May 27, 2015; Ted Genoways, Inside the Unlikely Coalition That Just Got the Death Penalty Banned in Nebraska, Mother Jones, May 28, 2015; Voices: Ernie Chambers — Death Penalty Focus, Death Penalty Focus, July 10, 2015; Melody Vaccaro, Ernie Chambers – Black, Seeing Red, August 14, 2020; Ernie Chambers Sr., Great Plains Black History Museum; Photo by Nebraska Unicameral Information Office