Jump to content

Solid South

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Rhelmerichs (talk | contribs) at 21:48, 12 December 2006 (Democrats today). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The phrase "Solid South" describes the electoral support of the Southern United States for Democratic Party candidates for almost a century after the Reconstruction era, 1876-1964. Except for 1928, when candidate Al Smith ran on the Democratic ticket, Democrats won heavily in the South in every presidential election from 1876 until 1948 (and even in 1928, the divided South provided most of Smith's electoral votes). Today, however, the South is the stronghold for the Republican Party in Presidential elections, and the term, while seldom used, refers to a solidly Republican-voting South.

The Democratic dominance originated in many Southerners' animosity towards the Republican Party's pro-Union political stance in the Civil War and, even more so, Reconstruction. It was maintained by the Democratic Party's willingness to fight for Jim Crow laws and racial segregation. Conversely, black voters, today 90-percent Democratic, usually preferred the Republicans into the 1950s.

Democratic factionalization over the Civil Rights Movement

The "Solid South" began to erode when Democratic President Harry S. Truman took steps toward supporting the civil rights movement. His policies, combined with the adoption of a civil rights plank in the 1948 Democratic platform, prompted many Southerners to walk out of the Democratic National Convention and form the Dixiecrat Party. This splinter party was significant only in the 1948 election; the Dixiecrat candidate, Strom Thurmond, carried Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, and South Carolina. In the elections of 1952 and 1956, the popular Republican Dwight D. Eisenhower carried several border southern states, with especially strong showings in the new suburbs. The Deep South was still the bastion for his Democratic opponent, Adlai Stevenson.

In the 1960 election, the Democratic nominee, John F. Kennedy, continued his party's tradition of selecting a Southerner as the Vice Presidential candidate (in this case, Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas). Kennedy, however, supported civil rights. In October 1960, when civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr. was arrested at a peaceful sit-in in Atlanta, Georgia, Kennedy placed a sympathetic phone call to King's wife, Coretta Scott King, and Robert Kennedy telephoned the judge and helped secure King's release. King expressed his appreciation for these calls. Although King himself made no endorsement, his father, who had previously endorsed Republican Richard Nixon, switched his support to Kennedy.

The Democrats, however, lost ground with whites. The 1960 election was the first one in which a Republican presidential candidate received electoral votes in the South while losing nationally. Nixon carried Virginia, Tennessee and Florida. In addition, there were unpledged electors in Mississippi and Alabama.

The parties' roles on the civil rights issue continued their evolution in the 1964 election. The Democratic candidate, Johnson, having become president after Kennedy's assassination, fought strenuously to pass a strong Civil Rights Act of 1964. His Republican opponent, Senator Barry Goldwater, voted against it, although large majorities of Republicans in both houses of Congress supported the bill. Johnson won a landslide victory and the Republicans also suffered significant losses of Congressional seats. Goldwater carried his home state of Arizona, but the rest of his electoral votes all came from the deep South, which had suddenly switched parties for the first time. In just eight years, from 1956 to 1964, the region that had seen almost the only victories by a Democratic challenger against a popular Republican incumbent had switched to providing almost the only victories for a Republican challenger against a popular Democratic incumbent.

The "Southern Strategy" and the end of the Solid South

In the 1968 election, the Republican candidate, Nixon, saw and capitalized on this trend with his "Southern strategy"—an appeal to white Southerners who were more conservative and more segregationist than the national Democratic Party. As a result, the Democratic candidate, Hubert H. Humphrey, was almost shut out in the South, carrying only Texas. The rest of the region was divided between Nixon and the American Independent Party candidate, former Governor George C. Wallace of Alabama, who had gained fame for opposing integration. Nationwide, Nixon won a decisive Electoral College victory although he received only a plurality of the popular vote.

After Nixon's landslide re-election win in 1972, the Democrats made a comeback in the South in 1976, when their candidate, southerner Jimmy Carter of Georgia, won. The success was short-lived, however. In Carter's unsuccessful re-election bid in 1980, he lost the South except for his native Georgia. 1980 was the last time the Democratic nominee did better in the South than in the nation as a whole. The Republicans took all the region's electoral votes in 1984 and 1988. In 1992 and 1996, when the Democratic ticket consisted of two Southerners (Bill Clinton and Al Gore), they split the region. In 2000, Gore, as the Presidential candidate, received no electoral votes from the southeast, even from his home state of Tennessee, though the popular vote in Florida was extraordinarily close in awarding the state's electoral votes to George W. Bush. This pattern continued in the 2004 election; the Democratic ticket of John Kerry and John Edwards received no electoral votes from the South, although Edwards was from North Carolina.

On the night he signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Johnson said to his aide, Bill Moyers, "I think we just delivered the South to the Republican Party for a long time to come." [1]

The "Solid South" today

Today, the South has a mix of Republican and Democratic officeholders (Senators, Representatives and state governors). In Presidential elections, however, the region is a Republican stronghold. The term "Solid South" has thus acquired a meaning opposite to its historical one. Florida, home to many retirees from elsewhere in the country, is considered to be "in play" between the major parties. Arkansas, Tennessee and Louisiana as well tend to vote more Democratic although it has become rare for a presidential Democratic candidate to win.

Many major corporations are franchising or relocating to "progressive south" states such as North Carolina, Georgia, and Texas because of favorable banking laws and "right to work" attitudes, thus altering the traditional southern demographic.

Democrats today

Today, the Democratic Party's stronghold has shifted to the Northeastern United States, which, well into the 1900s, had been the bastion of the Republican Party, and to the states of the far west, namely California, Oregon, and Washington. In 2000, the Democrats easily carried every state in the Northeast except New Hampshire. In 2004, all eleven Northeastern states, From Maryland to Maine and including the District of Columbia, voted en masse for John Kerry. Kerry won handily in California, Oregon, and Washington as well. Minnesota, too, is a Democratic stronghold. It voted for a Democrat in every presidential election since 1932, except in 1952, 1956, and 1972, and continuously since 1976, more than any other state.

References

  • Kari Frederickson, The Dixiecrat Revolt and the End of the Solid South, 1932-1968 (2001)
  • Dewey W, Grantham, The Life and Death of the Solid South (1992)

See also