Posted on 12/10/2002 6:29:39 AM PST by arj
When results from the polls in Missouri and Minnesota in last months elections gave Republicans control of the Senate once again, a Republican consultant I know threw up his hands in disgust and said Christ, this means well have Trent Lott as the leader again.
Privately, a lot of other Republicans said the same thing but the party of the elephant got so wrapped up in celebrating their victories on election night they forgot what a problem Lott was for the party the last time they ran things in the Senate.
That failure to remember slapped them right in the face at a 100th birthday party for retiring Senator Strom Thurmond, one of the last of the old guard whose ideas should have left the Senate decades ago.
I want to say this about my state, Lott said in praising Thurmond. When Strom Thurmond ran for president we voted for him. We're proud of it. And if the rest of the country had of followed our lead we wouldn't have had all these problems over all these years, either.
Thurmond ran for President in 1948 as a Dixiecrat, campaigning against civil rights.
I want to tell you, ladies and gentleman, he said during that campaign, that there's not enough troops in the army to force the southern people to break down segregation and admit the Nigra race into our theaters, into our swimming pools, into our homes, and into our churches.
Lotts comments set off the expected firestorm of criticism from black leaders, Democrats and even some Republicans. Harold Doley, a black Republican who has served in the White House for five GOP presidents, said Lott should resign as Senate Majority Leader.
I am meeting with other African American Republicans who are trying to build the party ... we are going to ask Republican senators to vote for an alternative to [Lott], Doley said in an interview with CNS News.
At first, Lott tried to stonewall the issue, then relented to pressure and issued a lame apology late Monday:
A poor choice of words conveyed to some the impression that I embraced the discarded policies of the past, Lott said. Nothing could be further from the truth, and I apologize to anyone who was offended by my statement.
The few who supported Lott in this debacle said Thurmond was simply reflecting the views of his state at the time and pointed to another Senator with a big racist skeleton in the woodpile West Virginias Robert Byrd, a former member of the Ku Klux Klan.
This was a lighthearted celebration of the 100th birthday of legendary Senator Strom Thurmond, Lott said in his written apology. My comments were not an endorsement of his positions of over 50 years ago, but of the man and his life.
Yeah, right. Lotts comments were not in praise of Thurmonds long years in the Senate but of his presidential run in 1948, a run where the then South Carolina governor campaigned primarily on anti-integration issues and captured 39 electoral votes, including Lotts home state of Mississippi.
Thurmond did not suddenly become a supporter of civil rights after he lost his run for President. When he entered the Senate in 1954, he quickly became the chambers leading opponent of civil rights, opposing the Supreme Courts landmark ruling on integration and leading filibusters against equal rights for all Americans.
Later, Thurmond would moderate his racist stance publicly, hiring black staff members and voting for black judges, but those who knew Thurmond best say he has never accepted blacks as an equal.
Strom came into the Senate a racist and he is leaving as one, says South Carolina Republican Andy Chamberlin. Ive worked in his campaigns. He still believes blacks are an inferior race and will always believe that.
During Thurmonds last campaign for the Senate, Chamberlin says he often heard the Senator tell racist jokes when he was alone with his cronies.
It was nigger this and nigger that. But that wasnt the Strom the public saw. He was, and still is, a damn good politician.
And some who know Trent Lott say his praise of Thurmond may not have been a slip of the tongue. The Mississippi Republican, they say, may still share some of Thurmonds racist bias.
Shirley Wharburton, a former Senate staffer, says Lott is well known among Republican insiders as a man who enjoys racial slurs.
Ive heard him make disparaging remarks about black athletes and talk about how they are taking over professional sports, she said. Strom Thurmond is not the only Senator who uses the n-word when hes talking to other white Senators.
Carl Ashton, another former Senate staffer, agrees.
We may have women and blacks in Congress, but the power structure is still a white-boy network.," says Ashton, who is white. "Deep down, those white boys still dont like the colored folk.
Very true. I think Lott's remark was meant to gush over ol'Strom (simply for longevity, if nothing else), and he probably wasn't actually thinking about Strom Thurmond's policies of some 50 years ago.
Still, this reveals exactly how careless and out of it he is, and I think it would be a perfect time for him to get his ineffective self out of a position that needs somebody who is stronger, cannier and not attached to a dubious past.
Lott is a dullard, and it looks to me as if Bush has decided that he must go over the side.
Notice the chorus of leaks from news sources all over Capitol Hill? I sense a hidden hand, here. Bush is cleaning house, and methinks he wants new blood to steer the Senate. However, he'll need Lott for critical votes, so he doesn't want to humiliate him.
So, guys, will it be Don Nickles or Rick Santorum?
Be Seeing You,
Chris
http://www.c-span.org/politics/
The link to the Javascript is at about the center of the C-SPAN page. I'll transcribe the remarks by Lott, preceding his "all these problems" statement. There is no printed transcript on the Internet that I can find, at least not yet.
Feel free to click on the link above, download the 1-hour recording and follow along with me. If you're following along with me, fast-forward to exactly halfway through the recording. That is where Lott's speech starts.
Dole introduced Lott by mentioning that when Strom Thurmond was landing by glider in Normandy on June 6, 1944 Trent Lott was only three years old. http://www.c-span.org/politics/
Verbatim transcript of the beginning of Trent Lott's speech:
Well thank you, ladies and gentlemen, and thank you my good friend and my predecessor, my hero, Bob Dole, for that introduction, that very brief introduction I might add [Laughter] But for Senator Strom Thurmond's family and friends and admirers all, it's a great pleasure for me to be here with you today, and I know that you're enjoying every minute of this. And I knew that the previous remarks would be just as they were. I mean, after all, Bob Dole received the Republican nomination and dang near was elected President of the United States telling Strom Thurmond jokes. [Laughter] If he'd just gotten himself some new material there toward the end he would have done it. [Laughter] I want to say this about my state. When Strom Thurmond ran for President we voted for him. [Laughter] We're proud of it. [More laughter] And if the rest of the country had followed our lead, we wouldn't have had all these problems over all these years, either.
HE WAS JOKING, PEOPLE.
The quotation that has been bandied about as so-called "proof" of Lott's "racism" was clearly told for laughs. It was at the beginning of the speech, after Dole told a few Strom Thurmond jokes. Then Lott stood up and said that in 1996, Dole was nominated for President "and dang near was elected President of the United States telling Strom Thurmond jokes."
Then came the quotation that everyone is bleating about, and it got a few laughs, exactly as Lott had clearly intended. Then came more jokes, including one about how "the Capitol froze over" inserted in place of "hell freezes over," and a reference to Dole's Pepsi commercial with Britney Spears.
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