Earl Frederick Hilliard (born April 9, 1942) is a politician from the U.S. state of Alabama.
Hilliard was born in Birmingham, Alabama, and graduated from Morehouse College. He was elected as a Democrat to the Alabama House of Representatives in 1974 and served from 1975 until 1981 and in the Alabama Senate from 1981 until 1992. Hilliard was elected to the United States House of Representatives in 1992.
He faced his first serious re-election challenge from Artur Davis in the 2000 Democratic primary election but prevailed. Davis challenged Hilliard again in 2002 in a district that had been changed significantly by redistricting, adding many white voters in Birmingham and losing its mostly black portion of Montgomery. The campaign that year was focused on race and the Middle East. Hilliard's surrogates claimed that all Davis, also an African American, had done for African Americans as a federal prosecutor was to "put them in jail". In 2001 Hilliard voted against a bill funding increases in military support to Israel and opposing criminalization of Palestinian politicians. Hilliard finished in first place in the election, but he had not won a majority of the vote, so he again faced Davis in a run-off election. Davis won the run-off with 54% of the vote.
Hilliard is a 1960 graduate of Western-Olin High School in Birmingham, Alabama. He received a B.A. in 1960 from Morehouse College, a J.D. in 1967 from Howard University, and an M.B.A. in 1970 from Atlanta University.
He is a member of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity. He is a member of the board of the Congressional Black Caucus Institute.
Hilliard's son, Earl Hilliard, Jr., is a former member of the Alabama House of Representatives who ran unsuccessfully for Congress in 2010, also in the 7th district.
Famous quotes containing the words earl f and/or earl:
“I dont know how you feel, professor, but I feel like a knife thats just stabbed a friend in the back.”
—Earl Felton, and Richard Fleischer. Ned Land (Kirk Douglas)
“Smooth your way to the head, through the heart. The way of reason is a good one; but it is commonly something longer, and perhaps not so sure.”
—Philip Dormer Stanhope, 4th Earl Chesterfield (16941773)