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But it was "the old Democrats who had fought for segregation so hard," Barbour maintained, and "the people who really changed the South from Democrat to Republican was a different generation from those who fought integration." "What a lot of people don't realize is in the '60s in the South, that the Republican Party was the party of change, and the Democratic Party was the party of the status quo," Barbour told the AP. "And young people in the
'50s and '60s were attracted to the Republican Party." That assessment flies in the face of conventional thinking on the period, and Barbour's description raises deeper questions for some of his critics. "As far as I'm concerned, he has never done anything as a governor or a citizen to distinguish himself from the old Democrats who fought tooth and nail to preserve segregation," said Democratic state Rep. Willie Perkins, who is black and five years younger than Barbour. Barbour faced more criticism in December, when the conservative Weekly Standard magazine published a profile in which he recalled how his hometown of Yazoo City avoided violence when the public schools integrated in 1970, when his brother Jeppie was mayor. "The business community wouldn't stand for it," the governor said. "You heard of the Citizens Councils? Up north they think it was like the KKK. Where I come from it was an organization of town leaders. In Yazoo City they passed a resolution that said anybody who started a chapter of the Klan would get their ass run out of town." Historian John Dittmer, whose 1994 book "Local People" chronicles Mississippi's civil rights struggles, told the AP that the Citizens Council was "really a vicious organization" that helped enforce segregation by publishing lists of black people who sought to integrate schools and by pressuring whites to maintain the status quo. "Mississippi at that time was a police state, and the Citizens Council was the major cop," Dittmer said. Barbour eventually issued a statement saying community leaders did prevent violence and keep out the Klan when Yazoo City's schools were integrated, but condemning the Citizens Council and segregation. Last year, Barbour declared April to be Confederate Heritage Month, proclaiming it "important for all Americans to reflect upon our nation's past to gain insight from our mistakes and successes." The move angered some African-American leaders, as did his 2009 proposal to merge the state's three historically black universities into one, to save money. Legislators squelched the idea, but Barbour says he still wants to pursue it. Still, Barbour finds some friends among black lawmakers when it comes to his dealings with the defining issue in his state. State Rep. George Flaggs said he often disagrees with Barbour on politics and policy, but he believes critics are being too harsh. "I have been with the governor for almost eight years, and I know emphatically that the governor is very sensitive toward race," said Flaggs, a Democrat. Early in his first term, Barbour backed efforts to reopen the investigation of the three civil rights workers killed in 1964. The new prosecution led to a manslaughter conviction in the case. On the recent Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, Barbour used emphatic language to address Mississippi's place in the civil rights era: "Deplorable actions including the murder of innocent people, young men in service to a cause that was right, will always be a stain on our history." As part of the 50th anniversary of the Freedom Rides, Barbour plans to host a reception honoring the activists. And this month, Barbour used his final "State of the State" address to say this is the year for Mississippi to build a long-delayed museum dedicated to the civil rights movement. "The civil rights struggle is an important part of our history," he said, "and millions of people are interested in learning more about it."
[Associated
Press;
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