A Black man who won an Alabama mayoral race but was blocked from taking office by his white predecessors can finally lead the town after settling a lawsuit with the previous mayor and his town council.
The settlement, which awaits approval from a federal judge, comes years after Patrick Braxton was elected to lead the small majority-Black town of Newbern. Upon his victory in 2020, outgoing mayor Haywood Stokes and his town council locked him out of the town hall and did not allow him to perform his mayoral duties, Braxton alleged in his 2022 complaint.
“[Patrick] Braxton is the lawful mayor of Newbern,” the settlement declares, “and he shall hold all the powers, privileges, duties, responsibilities, privileges, authority, benefits and all other rights enjoyed by prior mayors and entrusted to the mayor of Newbern under Alabama state law.”
Braxton and the town also agreed that all town council positions and town clerk positions are vacant, according to the settlement. “All individuals holding themselves out as town officials or otherwise acting on behalf of the Defendant Town of Newbern, excluding Plaintiff Braxton, will effectively resign.”
The agreement could spell the end of an ordeal that for Braxton began almost four years ago. “I knew I was gonna be able to serve again, you know,” he told Capital B last week. “It’s just how long it was gonna take for us to get some kind of resolution first for this.” Read more background on the case, and watch us break down the recent developments.
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