After his comments about Yazoo City’s White Citizens Council,
Haley Barbour is probably done as a serious presidential contender.
(Jennifer Rubin
wonders if being on the cover of the
Weekly Standard is to Republican presidential candidates
as the
Madden Curse is to professional football players.) While it’s
far from the whole story, there’s
more where that came from on the racial front and the baggage
of being a lobbyist was going to be difficult enough to overcome
all by itself.
But it’s worth noting that there is an element of truth to
Barbour’s comments. There were many people in the South who weren’t
sympathetic to integration — and were in fact sympathetic to white
racism — who nevertheless made the success of the civil-rights
movement possible by abjuring violence and extremism, marginalizing
the Klan, and ultimately accepting the changes in the law and
culture after they came to pass. Walter Russell Mead
wrote about this in the Wall Street Journal shortly
after the retirement of Jesse Helms:
Even as the passions of the civil-rights movement were at their
height, Messrs. Helms and Thurmond (whose father was Ben Tillman’s
lawyer) shunned violence. Without ever losing their credentials as
hard-core defenders of Southern values, they hired African-American
staffers and gave African-Americans the same level of constituency
service they gave whites. Even their opposition to affirmative
action is based on their claim that these principles violate what
ought to be a color-blind stance on the part of the government.
That is something no white Southern politician, and especially
one representing Mr. Helms’ core supporters of farmers and
small-town whites, would have ever said before Jesse Helms came
along. It is something they all say now.
Mr. Helms could have followed the Tillman path and led the white
South into violent resistance; he also could have failed to carry
his supporters with him into grudging acceptance of the new racial
order. He disciplined and tamed the segregationist South even as he
represented it to a hostile nation. We are all better off because
he managed this difficult high-wire act.
John O’Sullivan made a similar argument in a column for the
Chicago Sun-Times, unfortunately no longer online, when
Trent Lott got himself in trouble at Strom Thurmond’s 100th
birthday party. This isn’t to argue, as Barbour seemed (perhaps
inadvertently) to suggest, that those who grudgingly accepted
racial equality are somehow the real heroes of the civil-rights
movement. But perhaps the country would be better off if we
recognized their role in the New South instead of trying to
recreate the divisions of the Old one.