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Jimmy Carter's slurs

By CRAIG SHIRLEY  Thursday, September 24, 2009

2 comment(s) | Default | Large

There he goes again.

Jimmy Carter, former Jim Crow man, has accused millions of his fellow Americans of engaging in the type of race baiting that marked his political career for years, even up to the eve of the 1980 presidential election, for which he has never apologized or acknowledged.

Branding his opponents as racists is nothing new for the old, self-described “redneck.” In the fall of 1980, he and his minions unleashed one of the most vicious campaigns in recent American history against his opponent, Ronald Reagan.

The attacks were so unprecedented, Nancy Reagan did something which was unprecedented; she appeared in a television commercial taking it to Carter over the slurs against “Ronnie.” Carter had meanly accused his GOP opponent of wanting to divide America, “black from white, Christian from Jew ...”

It was a curious and more importantly nasty and unfounded attack, as Reagan had a long history of fighting racism and anti-Semitism. When Reagan was a young man playing football for Eureka College, several African-American members were barred from staying at a “whites only” hotel. While their coach tried to make some other accommodations, Reagan took his teammates to his home, where his parents kindly took them in.

In the 1940s, Reagan quit a country club in Los Angeles in protest when he discovered it had a policy of barring Jewish members. As governor of California, Reagan appointed more blacks to positions in his administration, hundreds more than his so-called progressive predecessors, including Earl Warren and Pat Brown.

Meanwhile Carter, in the early ‘60s, supported legislation in the Georgia State Senate that would have effectively eviscerated The Civil Rights Act, and would have prevented the desegregation of public schools there.

In 1966, during the contested gubernatorial election in Georgia, Carter had a choice as a state senator. He could support the Republican, Bo Calloway. He could support the moderate Democrat, Ellis Arnall, or he could stand with Lester Maddox, one of the repugnant leaders of segregation in the South. Carter chose to stand with Maddox in order to protect his political future.

During the nasty 1970 Democratic primary for governor of Georgia, Jimmy Carter’s campaign mass produced photos of his opponent, Carl Sanders, with the black members of the Atlanta Hawks.

Even as late as 1976, Carter, while campaigning in the South, praised Sens. John Stennis and Jim Eastland, two longtime Southern Democrats who were supporters of “massive resistance,” the attempt by some whites in the South to oppose racial integration. For the record, Lyndon Johnson also supported Massive Resistance.

When reporters caught up with Stennis to ask him his position on racial desegregation, he replied, “I’m against it. Always have been and always will be.”

Also that fall, Carter’s home church, the Plains Baptist Church, voted to ban blacks from joining. Carter did not quit in protest, knowing it would undermine his “Southern Strategy” in the election. Weakly, he said he would attempt to change the policy from the inside.

In 1976, Carter took all of the South, excepting Virginia, and it constituted 40 percent of his electoral total. He knew in 1976 and again in 1980 that to win, he needed to hold onto the states below the Mason-Dixon line.

If possible, it got worse in 1980. His campaign produced newspaper ads charging Reagan with wanting to win so he could stop Carter from appointing blacks to government. Fearful of losing urban black votes to the independent candidacy of John Anderson, his campaign ran false ads on African-American radio stations claiming Anderson had voted against the Civil Rights Act.

Even liberal editorialists eviscerated Carter for his vindictive campaign and two Democratic opponents, Hubert Humphrey and Ted Kennedy, had often complained over the years about Carter’s nasty brand of politics. The great Hugh Sidey of Time Magazine wrote at the time, “The wrath that escapes Carter’s lips about racism and hatred when he prays and poses as the epitome of Christian charity leads even his supporters to protest his meanness.”

In Carter’s defense, his peanut business was once boycotted by the citizens of Plains in the 1960s because he’d supported a local desegregation issue.

Carter is not a bigot. Sometimes he rose above his culture. Other times, he embraced it, especially when there was an election at stake.

Carter’s attack on the Tea Party protesters is ironic in that his 1976 campaign was based in part on attacking the elites of Washington, the lobbyists, the bankers, the inside traders. Precisely what has the Tea Party protesters up in arms today.

In his dotage, Carter should give his fellow citizens the benefit of the doubt and stop “lusting in his heart” for the attention of the media and the elites he used to despise.

Craig Shirley is the author of the forthcoming book “Rendezvous with Destiny” about the 1980 presidential campaign between Carter and Reagan.

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2 comment(s)
The following comments are reader submitted. They do not represent the views of The T&D or Lee Enterprises.

wbwjr wrote on Sep 26, 2009 10:04 AM:

" Carter one of the worst president in modern times should learn that a man who lives in a glass house should not throw rocks.His nobel
peace prize was a JOKE. "

tim132000 wrote on Sep 24, 2009 9:44 PM:

" HE IS JUST A REDNECK "PEANUT FARMER" AND HIS TIME IS GONE BUT HE STILL PLAYS WHICH EVER WAY GETS THE HEADLINES THE SAME BS AS WHEN HE WAS PRESIDENT "



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