DNC Chair Ignores Democrats' Jim Crow History

June 8, 2011 RSS Feed Print
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There are some people out there who don’t like the recent GOP push to make the presentation of a photo ID a pre-condition of being able to cast a ballot. Count among them Debbie Wasserman Schultz, the chairman of the Democratic National Committee and a U.S. representative from Florida.

Speaking with Roland Martin of TV One, a network that, according to its website, provides “real-life and entertainment television for African-American adults,” Wasserman Schultz equated GOP support for the anti voter fraud measure with a desire to “literally drag us all the way back to Jim Crow laws.” [Read RNC Chairman Reince Priebus: Anti Voter Fraud Reforms Are Practical, Not Partisan.]

It’s an interesting analogy, one that Wasserman Schultz herself is walking away from now that her comments have leaked out into the broader media. But, as they say, the damage is done.

Dropping the “Jim Crow” bomb on a network with a largely African-American viewership is like waving a red cape at a bull; it’s a deliberate provocation—not an accidental misspeak—intended to get the viewers all riled up and thinking bad thoughts about the Republicans.

It’s also, in the larger context, a dangerous road for Wasserman Schultz to go down.

Leaving aside the idea that she perhaps does not understand what the word “literally” means, the “Jim Crow” laws were a whole series of measures indented to keep blacks and whites apart, living lives that were “separate but equal” in all kinds of ways. They were not, as Wasserman Schultz inferred, simply about keeping blacks from voting. [Check out a roundup of political cartoons on Democrats.]

On the books from the end of reconstruction until the U.S. Supreme Court began to chip away at them in its landmark 1954 decision in Brown vs. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas, the “Jim Crow” laws were a stain on our national character, one put there—and here is why the subject is dangerous for Wasserman Schultz to bring up—by the Democrats.

The fact that the Voting Rights Act was pushed through Congress by a Democrat—Lyndon Johnson—does not erase the party’s history of support for institutionalized de jure racism. LBJ was only able to get the bill through with the support of Republicans, led by Senate GOP leader Everett McKinley Dirksen of Illinois.

The Democratic Party’s longtime love affair with segregation is undeniable. Who stood up for “Jim Crow” when President Eisenhower tried to enforce desegregation at Little Rock, Arkansas’ Central High School? Democrats like Arkansas Gov. Orvall Faubus, who called out the state’s National Guard to prevent black students from entering the school. It was a Democrat, Alabama Gov. George Wallace, who famously proclaimed "segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever." And it was a Democratically-controlled Georgia legislature that picked nationally-known segregationist Lester Maddox to be their state’s 75th governor in 1966.

These are all facts that Wasserman Schultz conveniently seems to have forgotten.

Moreover, even though former Republican National Committee Chairman Ken Mehlman famously apologized for his party’s infamous “southern strategy” in a 2005 speech to the NAACP, neither Wasserman Schultz nor any Democratic National Committee chairman I can remember has ever apologized for their party’s support for “Jim Crow”—support that lasted nearly 75 years.

Democratic National Committee Chairman Debbie Wasserman Schultz is shameless, but, even more than that, she needs to go back to school.

 

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Debbie Wasserman Schultz,
Congress,
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Let me explain to you all why blacks are now staunch Democrats:

Before the 1970s, Democrats once held a strong-hold in the south. Every state below the Mason-Dixon Line was blue, but no longer, today it's red. Why do the Republicans now have a control of the south? Thanks to the Southern Strategy, Jim Crow whites, racists, stopped supporting the Democratic party due to the Civil Rights Movement (the Civil Rights Act of 64, and the Voting Rights Act of 65, were both singed into law by a Democrat) and began supporting the Republican Party. They began working their way up the ranks and now they control the party.

Look, my grandparents, and in the beginning, my parents were Republicans. The Republican Party during their time was truly the party of Lincoln. The Party once stood for something good back then But due to the rot that was once Democrat and is now Republican that is no longer true. The Democratic Party, regardless of its sordid past, is not perfect but it has EVOLVED when it comes to Civil Rights and I am not ashamed to be a member.

Iris of TN 10:12PM September 29, 2012

I highly recommend the book "Unfounded Loyalty-an in-depth look into the love affair between blacks and democrats," by Wayne Perryman. He is an African-American researcher and now a minister. It is a well-done book showing that the democrats and their party were the ones holding on to slavery and the Jim Crow laws. After the Civil War, Christians from the north were missionaries to the south to teach the newly freed slaves how to read, write, and run a business. The southern democrats even killed these missionaries for helping the blacks. What a legacy! Every democrat needs to read this book, especially African-Americans.

Raymond DeLaurier of ND 11:15AM September 03, 2012

It should also be pointed out that back in the 1950's, Lyndon Johnson voted AGAINST the civil rights bill when ot was presented

Sen. William Fulbright (DEM-Ar.) also voted againts passage of the civil rights bill.

Sen. Robert Byrd (DEM-Wv.) was a Ku Klux Klan member, whose job it was to recruit new members for that organization!

Rick Woodell of GA 5:17PM July 29, 2012

Peter Roff

Peter Roff

Peter Roff is a contributing editor at U.S. News & World Report. Formerly a senior political writer for United Press International, he’s now affiliated with several public policy organizations including Let Freedom Ring, and Frontiers of Freedom. His writing has appeared in National Review, Fox News’ opinion section, The Daily Caller, Politico and elsewhere. Follow him on Twitter @PeterRoff.

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