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kwassa

(23,340 posts)
37. No. FDR benefited from racist Southern Democrats.
Wed Jan 22, 2014, 12:01 AM
Jan 2014

Kennedy, and most of all Johnson, alienated them completely. Johnson, a Texan, brought about the great civil rights legislation of the 60s.

Which is why they all became Republicans when cultivated by Nixon and Reagan. The Southern Strategy.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_strategy

In American politics, the Southern strategy refers to a Republican Party strategy of gaining political support for certain candidates in the Southern United States by appealing to racism against African Americans.[1][2][3][4][5]

Though the "Solid South" had been a longtime Democratic Party stronghold due to the Democratic Party's defense of slavery before the American Civil War and segregation for a century thereafter, many white Southern Democrats stopped supporting the party following the civil rights plank of the Democratic campaign in 1948 (triggering the Dixiecrats), the African-American Civil Rights Movement, the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Voting Rights Act of 1965, and desegregation.

The strategy was first adopted under future Republican President Richard Nixon and Republican Senator Barry Goldwater[6][7] in the late 1960s.[8] The strategy was successful in winning 5 formerly Confederate states in both the 1964 and 1968 presidential elections. It contributed to the electoral realignment of some Southern states to the Republican Party, but at the expense of losing more than 90 percent of black voters to the Democratic Party. As the twentieth century came to a close, the Republican Party began trying to appeal again to black voters, though with little success.[8]

In 2005, Republican National Committee chairman Ken Mehlman formally apologized to the NAACP for ignoring the black vote and exploiting racial conflicts.[9][10]

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no, that black eye will remain as a memory to the racist policies that existed then, and still do lostincalifornia Nov 2013 #1
I was thinking the same thing. n/t deafskeptic Nov 2013 #2
K&R, because it still matters. nt Mnemosyne Nov 2013 #3
You gotta be kidding me but... good! JackRiddler Nov 2013 #4
Well, that's timely. At this rate, Alabama will join the 21st Century soon. Comrade Grumpy Nov 2013 #5
They have to join the 20th Century first. n/t. Ken Burch Jan 2014 #17
We recently got the ability to have microbreweries, so we have made it past prohibition! bamacrat Jan 2014 #26
It's a sad fact that Alabama was run by Democrats back then. Pterodactyl Jan 2014 #6
Who promptly jumped ship (those still alive that is,) to the GOP in 1964. Archae Jan 2014 #7
No. The Gov was a Dem from 1874 to 1987. And no Rep senator until 1981. Pterodactyl Jan 2014 #8
do you know the history of the south, the dixiecrats ? JI7 Jan 2014 #9
Yes, I know the history. Do you? Pterodactyl Jan 2014 #10
and he was a dixiecrat , who do you think the "reagan democrats" were in 1980 ? JI7 Jan 2014 #11
Funny that Wallace was a Dem gove from 63 to 67 and then from 71 to 79 & 83 to 87. Pterodactyl Jan 2014 #12
the dem party is today is mostly made JI7 Jan 2014 #13
the southern democrats of yesterday are the southern Republicans of today. olddad56 Jan 2014 #15
black people in the south vote Democratic, it's the racist whites who mostly vote republican JI7 Jan 2014 #16
So it was black people who kept voting for George Wallace? Well I'll be! Pterodactyl Jan 2014 #19
black people did support george wallace during earlier times before he became a national JI7 Jan 2014 #20
So the racists Ds turned R after Wallace left office in 87? Just want make sure I get your timeline. Pterodactyl Jan 2014 #22
they turned at different times, you probably think black people became fully equal JI7 Jan 2014 #23
I believe black people were fully equal from the moment of their creation. Pterodactyl Jan 2014 #24
of course i disagree, i don't deal in bs, black people are not fully equal now JI7 Jan 2014 #25
Wow. So, are you one of those folks who thinks they are only worth 3/5 of a person? Pterodactyl Jan 2014 #27
I'm a minority myself JI7 Jan 2014 #28
You need to get to a history class. A good one. kwassa Jan 2014 #30
So you agree that the Dems were racists during that period? Pterodactyl Jan 2014 #31
No, I don't. Some Democrats were racist during that period. kwassa Jan 2014 #32
Yeah, but the others were OK with benefitting from racist votes. Pterodactyl Jan 2014 #33
How did they benefit from racist votes? kwassa Jan 2014 #34
The governors and senators and reps to to Congress. Like Wallace, the multiple-elected governor. Pterodactyl Jan 2014 #35
No. FDR benefited from racist Southern Democrats. kwassa Jan 2014 #37
So why did they keep electing Wallace as a Dem governor after 1968? Pterodactyl Jan 2014 #38
This is before they became Republicans, and this is local to Alabama, as well. kwassa Jan 2014 #39
What about presidential, senatorial and congressional elections? Pterodactyl Feb 2014 #40
Support him how? El_Johns Feb 2014 #41
We all know what his party registration was. Ken Burch Jan 2014 #18
By his 1983-87 stint, Wallace had changed his stance Art_from_Ark Jan 2014 #21
Dixiecrats of 1931 have little to do with the party of today... Blue_Tires Jan 2014 #14
Much time has passed. The philosophy and make-up of both parties has changed. /nt Ash_F Jan 2014 #29
Except for Robert Byrd. He was always a racist. Pterodactyl Jan 2014 #36
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