Everything about Dixiecrat totally explained
The
States' Rights Democratic Party (a.k.a.
Dixiecrat Party) was a
segregationist,
socially conservative splinter party of the
Democratic Party in the mid-20th century determined to protect what they saw as the
Southern way of life against an oppressive
federal government.
In the period following the
Civil War the
Radical Republicans used the Union Army to occupy and forcibly reengineer Southern society. When conservative white Southerners ended military occupation and restored the Southern politico-economic position, the region gave its political allegiance almost entirely to the Democratic Party, creating the
solidly Democratic South.
In the 1930s, when the Democratic Party began its drift toward more centralized socialized engineering, the Southern Democrats remained an anchor toward traditional Democratic policies of localized populism and progressivism. After the crisis of the Great Depression, World War Two, and the beginning of the Cold War, the National Democratic Leadership fully embraced a more centralized, socialized, secularized, and multicultural program. This was seen as a return to Reconstruction and many Southern Democrats began to drift from the National Party. As a result they became termed Dixiecrats.
The term
Dixiecrat is a
portmanteau of
Dixie, referring to the
Southern United States, and
Democrat, referring to the
United States Democratic Party. Initially, it referred to a splinter (or offshoot) from the party in the
1948 U.S. presidential election. For more than a century, white Southerners had overwhelmingly been Democrats, but in 1948 many bolted from the party and supported
Strom Thurmond's
third-party candidacy for
president of the United States.
Over the next several decades, as the white South slowly realigned from the Democrats to the Republicans, the term came to have a broader usage. For example, it was used to refer to those members of the
Electoral College who voted for
Harry F. Byrd rather than
John F. Kennedy in the
election of 1960, and to the white Southern voters and electors who supported
George C. Wallace in
1968.
1948 presidential election
» See also main article, U.S. presidential election, 1948
The
States' Rights Democratic Party was a short-lived splinter group that broke from the
Democratic Party in 1948. The States' Rights Democratic Party opposed
racial integration and wanted to retain
Jim Crow laws and
racial segregation. The party's slogan was "Segregation Forever!" Members of the States' Rights Democratic Party were often known as
Dixiecrats.
During the 1948
Democratic National Convention, Southern delegates were upset by
President Harry S. Truman's executive order to racially integrate the armed forces. The Mayor of
Minneapolis,
Minnesota Hubert Humphrey gave a speech urging the party to adopt an anti-segregationist
plank, causing thirty five delegates from
Mississippi and
Alabama to walk out. When President Truman endorsed the
civil rights plank, governor of
South Carolina Strom Thurmond helped organize the walkout delegates into a separate party, whose platform was ostensibly concerned with
states' rights.
The Dixiecrats held their convention in
Birmingham, Alabama, where they nominated Thurmond for president and
Fielding L. Wright, governor of Mississippi, for vice president. Dixiecrat leaders worked to have Thurmond-Wright declared the official Democratic Party ticket in Southern states. They succeeded only in Alabama,
Louisiana, Mississippi, and South Carolina. In other states, they were forced to run as a third-party ticket. These included Arkansas, whose governor-elect,
Sid McMath, a young prosecutor and decorated World War II Marine veteran, vigorously supported Truman in speeches across the region, much to the consternation of the sitting governor,
Benjamin Travis Laney, an ardent Thurmond supporter. Laney later used McMath's pro-Truman stance against him in the 1950 governatorial election, but McMath won the position handily.
Efforts by Dixiecrats to paint other Truman loyalists as turncoats generally failed, although the seeds of discontent were planted which in years to come took their toll on Southern moderates. Among these moderates was Rep.
Brooks Hays of the 2nd District of Arkansas, whose efforts at reconciliation during the 1957 Little Rock School Crisis made him vulnerable to defeat in 1958 by a segregationist surrogate fielded by forces loyal to then-Governor
Orval Faubus. Faubus had notoriously used the National Guard to bar entry to black pupils in defiance of a Federal court order.
On
election day 1948, the Thurmond-Wright ticket carried the previously
solid Democratic states of
Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and South Carolina, receiving 1,169,021 popular votes and 39
electoral votes.
Henry A. Wallace drew off a nearly equal number of popular votes (1,157,172) from the Democrats' left wing, although he didn't carry any states. The split in the Democratic party in the 1948 election was seen as virtually guaranteeing a victory by the
Republican nominee,
Thomas E. Dewey of
New York, yet Truman was able to narrowly win election.
Subsequent elections
The States' Rights Democratic Party dissolved after the 1948 election.
Regardless of the power struggle within the Democratic Party concerning segregation policy, the South remained a strongly Democratic voting bloc for local, state, and federal Congressional elections. This wasn't true of Presidential elections.
In 1960, Democratic electors in Alabama and Mississippi appeared on the ballot as "unpledged electors" instead of as electors pledged to Democratic nominee
John F. Kennedy. All 8 of Mississippi's electors, 6 of Alabama's 11 electors, and one stray elector from Oklahoma (a state carried by
Richard Nixon) cast their votes for Senator
Harry F. Byrd of Virginia. Alabama's remaining 5 electors voted for Kennedy.
In 1968, Alabama's Democratic former governor
George C. Wallace ran for President on the
American Independent Party ticket, and swept the electoral votes of the Deep South. The American Independent Party failed to keep its foothold in the South. Its 1972 candidate was
John G. Schmitz, a
John Bircher from California, whose strongest showing in the 1972 election was 10% in Idaho, but who did poorly in the South. Subsequent southern Dixiecrats running on the American Independent Party ticket included
Lester Maddox and
John Rarick, but these campaigns didn't succeed either.
In the
1960s, the courting of white Southern Democratic voters was the basis of the "
southern strategy" of the Republican Party's Presidential Campaigns. Republican Presidential Candidate
Barry Goldwater carried the
Deep South in 1964, despite losing in a landslide in the rest of the nation to President
Lyndon B. Johnson of
Texas. Johnson surmised that his advocacy behind passing the
Civil Rights Act of 1964 would lose the South for the Democratic party and it did. The only Democratic presidential candidate after 1956 to solidly carry the Deep South was President
Jimmy Carter in the 1976 election.
Senator Strom Thurmond switched parties and became a Republican as a result of his support for the
Barry Goldwater campaign in 1964.
Jesse Helms also switched his party registration to Republican in 1970 and won a Senate seat in North Carolina in 1972.
Phil Gramm of Texas, at the time a member of the House of Representatives, switched his party registration from Democrat to Republican in
1983. Several other Southern senators, such as
Richard Russell, Jr. of Georgia and
James Eastland and
John Stennis of Mississippi remained in the Democratic Party. They went on to become prominent senators who served multiple terms in the service of their respective states. These long careers in the Senate elevated their seniority and put them in positions of power and prestige.
Into the late
20th century, the South changed from a Democratic monolith to a majority Republican sector of the country with GOP gains in state legislatures. This change, which became quite evident in 1972 with the electoral success of
Richard Nixon's "
Southern Strategy", peaked with the elections of
Ronald Reagan in 1980 and
George Bush in 1988. It was consolidated in
1994 when Republicans gained a majority in the House of Representatives under the leadership of
Newt Gingrich.
Notable members
- (D)VA Harry F. Byrd, 1933-1965
- (D)VA A. Willis Robertson, 1946-1966
- (D)MS John C. Stennis, 1947-1989
- (D)MS James O. Eastland, 1941-1941, 1943-1978
- (D)LA Allen J. Ellender, 1937-1972
- (D)LA Russell B. Long, 1948-1987
- (D)OK Thomas Pryor Gore, 1906-1921, 1931-1937
- (D)AL J. Lister Hill, 1938-1969
- (D)AL John J. Sparkman, 1946-1979
- (D)FL Spessard Holland, 1946-1971
- (D)FL George Smathers, 1951-1969
- (D)SC Olin D. Johnston, 1945-1965
- (D,R)SC Strom Thurmond, 1954-1956, 1956-2003
- (D)AR John McClellan, 1943-1977
(D)GA Richard B. Russell, Jr., 1933-1971
(D)GA Herman E. Talmadge, 1957-1981
(D)TN Herbert S. Walters, 1963-1964
State governors
Benjamin Travis Laney, Arkansas Governor
Fielding Wright, Mississippi Governor
Frank M. Dixon, Former Alabama Governor
William H. Murray, Former Oklahoma Governor
Mills E. Godwin Jr. Governor of Virginia
Orval Faubus, Governor of Arkansas (1955-1967) during the Little Rock Nine Crisis and presidential candidate.
Others
Floyd Spence state representative from South Carolina
Albert Watson while U.S. Representative from South Carolina
Walter Sillers JR, Mississippi Speaker of the House
Harvey T. Ross, Mississippi State Legislature
Thomas P. Brady, Associate Justice of the Mississippi Supreme Court
Gessner T. McCorvey, Alabama state Democratic Executive Committee Chairman
Leander Perez, Parish Judge in St. Bernard Parish and political boss of the parish.
Horace C. Wilkinson, Birmingham attorney defender of the Klan and political "leader"
Ross Lillard
Tommy Irvin, Georgia Commissioner of Agriculture since 1972
John Kasper
Mrs. Anna B. Korn
Mrs. Ruth Lackey
Clark Hurd
William E. Jenner
Francis Haskell
John Oliver Emmerich, Speech writer
Hugh Roy Cullen
- NOTE: check state legislature history for name and/or association.
T. Coleman Andrews
John Steel Baston
Dr. Frazier
O. L. Penny
Clifton Ratlift
M. F. Ray
Howell Tankerbell
Thomas Jefferson Tubb
J.K. Wells
Barney Wolverton
Governor White
Thomas H. Werdel
Further Information
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