Posted on 01/05/2003 3:51:23 PM PST by TheRedSoxWinThePennant
Loyalty Needn't Trouble Black Republican
JOSEPH H. BROWN
Published: Jan 5, 2003
A couple of weeks ago in this section, Al McCray, a local black businessman, wrote a column asking, ``Should I Remain A Republican?'' McCray questioned his party affiliation after Sen. Trent Lott, R- Miss., waxed nostalgic at Sen. Strom Thurmond's 100th birthday party about how much better off the nation would be had the centenarian - then a segregationist Dixiecrat - won the presidency in 1948. Lott has since resigned as Republican Senate leader.
I would suggest McCray study the history of the two major parties. It would give him a better perspective on why he doesn't need to justify his party affiliation because, as someone once put it, too many blacks are convinced that Abraham Lincoln was a Democrat and George Wallace a Republican.
`All Else Is The Sea'
While today's GOP is accused of being opposed to the advancement of black Americans, the Democratic Party of the late 19th and early 20th century made no secret of its antiblack agenda. It held ``white only'' primaries and supported Jim Crow legislation in the South, where 90 percent of blacks lived until the 1920s.
Which is why Frederick Douglass, the most prominent black spokesman following the Civil War, was a staunch Republican. ``The Republican Party is the ship and all else is the sea,'' Douglass told black Americans. Thus blacks remained loyal to the party of Abraham Lincoln for decades.
That began to change with the election of Franklin Roosevelt in 1932, even though the Democratic Party remained the home of segregationists. As late as 1960, 35 percent of black voters supported the Republican candidate, Richard Nixon. It wasn't until the 1964 election and Barry Goldwater's blatant appeal to racist voters that the divorce of the GOP and black America was finalized.
It's also important to remember that a higher percentage of Democrats than Republicans voted against the landmark Civil Rights Act of 1964. According to the June 27, 1964, Congressional Quarterly, 61 percent of House Democrats voted for the bill, compared with 80 percent of Republicans. In the Senate, 69 percent of Democrats voted for the bill (46 for, 21 against) vs. 80 percent of Republicans (27 for, six against).
Which may help explain why Senate Minority Leader Everett Dirksen, a Republican, received a special award for his remarkable civil rights leadership from Roy Wilkins, secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
It's also important to note that even though the Democratic Party was for decades the home of segregationists, the handful of blacks in Congress from the 1930s to the 1960s, including Adam Clayton Powell of New York and William Dawson of Illinois, were all Democrats. If they didn't have to rationalize their party affiliation, neither should Al McCray.
Lott Episode Shows Progress
Trent Lott has been catching a lot of flak for his remarks, but he sounded like a choirboy compared with a Mississippi senator from a few generations ago.
A virulent white supremacist who joined the Senate in 1935, Theodore Bilbo went so far as to introduce an amendment to a relief bill that would provide funds for the deportation of all blacks to Liberia. He once called Congresswoman Claire Booth Luce a ``nigger lover'' and in 1938 praised Adolf Hitler on the Senate floor.
(And, yes, he was a Democrat.)
Yet there was never the avalanche of criticism against Bilbo as there was against Trent Lott. Bilbo eventually lost his Senate seat because of corruption, not racism.
Which is why the denunciation of Lott by GOP officials and conservative commentators shows how much progress we've made. Joseph H. Brown is a Tribune editorial writer.
My favorite part.
I'm holding out for surround sound.
This I disagree with, I don't see how supporting the constitution with the way it was written, can be construed as racism. This country would have been far better off today if Goldwater had won.
What was the constitutional rub here exactly?
(The Goldwater years were long before me.. )
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