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Southern Democrats
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Southern Democrats are members of the U.S. Democratic Party who reside in the Southern United States.[1]
Key Information
Before the American Civil War, Southern Democrats mostly believed in Jacksonian democracy. In the 19th century, they defended slavery in the United States and promoted its expansion into the Western United States against the Free Soil opposition in the Northern United States. The United States presidential election of 1860 formalized the split in the Democratic Party and brought about the American Civil War.[2] After the Reconstruction Era ended in the late 1870s, so-called redeemers were Southern Democrats who controlled all the southern states and disenfranchised African-Americans.
The monopoly that the Democratic Party held over most of the South showed signs of breaking apart in 1948, when many white Southern Democrats—upset by the policies of desegregation enacted during the administration of Democratic president Harry Truman—created the States' Rights Democratic Party. This new party, commonly referred to as the "Dixiecrats", nominated South Carolina governor Strom Thurmond for president. The new party collapsed after Truman unexpectedly won the 1948 United States presidential election.
Despite being a Southern Democrat himself, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965.[3] These actions led to heavy opposition from Southern Democrats.[4][5] Many scholars have stated that southern whites shifted to the Republican Party after a civil rights culture change and due to social conservatism.[6][7][8]
Republicans first dominated presidential elections in the South, then won a majority of Southern gubernatorial and congressional elections after the 1994 Republican Revolution.[9][10] By the 21st century, and especially after the 2010 midterm elections, the Republican Party had gained a solid advantage over the Democratic Party in most southern states.[11]
Southern Democrats of the 21st century, such as Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock, are considerably more progressive than their predecessors.[12][13] No Democrat has been elected president without winning at least 2 of the 11 former Confederate states, including winning at least one of Georgia or Florida.
History
[edit]1828–1861
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The title of "Democrat" has its beginnings in the South, going back to the founding of the Democratic-Republican Party in 1793 by Thomas Jefferson and James Madison. It held to small government principles and distrusted the national government. Foreign policy was a major issue. After being the dominant party in U.S. politics from 1801 to 1829, the Democratic-Republicans split into two factions by 1828: the federalist National Republicans (who became the Whigs), and the Democrats. The Democrats and Whigs were evenly balanced in the 1830s and 1840s. However, by the 1850s, the Whigs disintegrated. Other opposition parties emerged but the Democrats were dominant. Northern Democrats were in serious opposition to Southern Democrats on the issue of slavery; Northern Democrats, led by Stephen Douglas, believed in Popular Sovereignty—letting the people of the territories vote on slavery. The Southern Democrats, reflecting the views of the late John C. Calhoun, insisted slavery was national.
The Democrats controlled the national government from 1853 until 1861, and presidents Pierce and Buchanan were friendly to Southern interests. In the North, the newly formed anti-slavery Republican Party came to power and dominated the electoral college. In the 1860 presidential election, the Republicans nominated Abraham Lincoln, but the divide among Democrats led to the nomination of two candidates: John C. Breckinridge of Kentucky represented Southern Democrats, and Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois represented Northern Democrats. Nevertheless, the Republicans had a majority of the electoral vote regardless of how the opposition split or joined and Abraham Lincoln was elected.
1861–1933
[edit]
After the election of Abraham Lincoln, Southern Democrats led the charge to secede from the Union and establish the Confederate States. The United States Congress was dominated by Republicans; a notable exception was Democrat Andrew Johnson of Tennessee, the only senator from a state in rebellion to reject secession. The Border States or Border South of Kentucky, Maryland, and Missouri of the Upper South were torn by political turmoil. Kentucky and Missouri were both governed by pro-secessionist Southern Democratic governors who vehemently rejected Lincoln's call for 75,000 troops. Kentucky and Missouri both held secession conventions, but neither officially declared secession, leading to split Unionist and Confederate state governments in both states. Southern Democrats in Maryland faced a Unionist governor Thomas Holliday Hicks and the Union army. Armed with the suspension of habeas corpus and Union troops, Governor Hicks was able to stop Maryland's secession movement. Maryland was the only state south of the Mason–Dixon line whose governor affirmed Lincoln's call for 75,000 troops.
After secession, the Democratic vote in the North split between the War Democrats and the Peace Democrats or "Copperheads". The War Democrats voted for Lincoln in the 1864 election, and Lincoln had a War Democrat — Andrew Johnson — on his ticket. In the South, during Reconstruction the White Republican element, called "Scalawags" became smaller and smaller as more and more joined the Democrats. In the North, most War Democrats returned to the Democrats, and when the "Panic of 1873" hit, the Republican Party was blamed and the Democrats gained control of the House of Representatives in 1875. The Democrats emphasized that since Jefferson and Jackson they had been the party of states rights, which added to their appeal in the White South.
At the beginning of the 20th century, the Democrats, led by the dominant Southern wing, had a strong representation in Congress. They won both houses in 1912 and elected Woodrow Wilson, a New Jersey academic with deep Southern roots and a strong base among the Southern middle class. The Republican Party regained Congress in 1919. Southern Democrats held powerful positions in Congress during the Wilson administration, with one study noting “Though comprising only about half of the Democratic senators and slightly over two-fifths of the Democratic representatives, the southerners made up a large majority of the party’s senior members in the two houses. They exerted great weight in the two Democratic caucuses and headed almost all of the important congressional committees.”[14]
From 1896 to 1912 and 1921 to 1931, the Democrats were relegated to second place status in national politics and didn't control a single branch of the federal government despite universal dominance in most of the "Solid South." In 1928 several Southern states dallied with voting Republican in supporting Herbert Hoover over the Roman Catholic Al Smith, but the behavior was short lived as the Stock Market Crash of 1929 returned Republicans to disfavor throughout the South. Nationally, Republicans lost Congress in January 1931 and the White House in March 1933 by huge margins. By this time, too, the Democratic Party leadership began to change its tone somewhat on racial politics. With the Great Depression gripping the nation, and with the lives of most Americans disrupted, the assisting of African-Americans in American society was seen as necessary by the new government.
1933–1981
[edit]During the 1930s, as the New Deal began to move Democrats as a whole to the left in economic policy, Southern Democrats were mostly supportive, although by the late 1930s there was a growing conservative faction. Both factions supported Roosevelt's foreign policies. By 1948 the protection of segregation led Democrats in the Deep South to reject Truman and run a third party ticket of Dixiecrats in the 1948 United States presidential election. After 1964, Southern Democrats lost major battles during the Civil Rights Movement. Federal laws ended segregation and restrictions on black voters.
During the Civil Rights Movement, Democrats in the South initially still voted loyally with their party. After the signing of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the old argument that all Whites had to stick together to prevent civil rights legislation lost its force because the legislation had now been passed. More and more Whites began to vote Republican, especially in the suburbs and growing cities. Newcomers from the North were mostly Republican; they were now joined by conservatives and wealthy Southern Whites, while liberal Whites and poor Whites, especially in rural areas, remained with the Democratic Party.[15]
The New Deal program of Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR) generally united the party factions for over three decades, since Southerners, like Northern urban populations, were hit particularly hard and generally benefited from the massive governmental relief program. FDR was adept at holding White Southerners in the coalition[16] while simultaneously beginning the erosion of Black voters away from their then-characteristic Republican preferences. The Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s catalyzed the end of this Democratic Party coalition of interests by magnetizing Black voters to the Democratic label and simultaneously ending White supremacist control of the Democratic Party apparatus.[17] A series of court decisions, rendering primary elections as public instead of private events administered by the parties, essentially freed the Southern region to change more toward the two-party behavior of most of the rest of the nation.
In the presidential elections of 1952 and 1956 Republican nominee Dwight D. Eisenhower, a popular World War II general, won several Southern states, thus breaking some White Southerners away from their Democratic Party pattern. The senior position of Southern congressmen and senators, and the discipline of many groups such as the Southern Caucus[18] meant that Civil Rights initiatives tended to be blunted despite popular support.
The passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was a significant event in converting the Deep South to the Republican Party; in that year most senatorial Republicans supported the act (most of the opposition came from Southern Democrats). Democratic preference. After the passage of this act, however, their willingness to support Republicans on a national level increased demonstrably. In 1964, Republican presidential nominee Goldwater, who had voted against the Civil Rights Act,[19] won many of the "Solid South" states over Democratic presidential nominee Lyndon B. Johnson, himself a Texan, and with many this Republican support continued and seeped down the ballot to congressional, state, and ultimately local levels. A further significant item of legislation was the Voting Rights Act of 1965, which targeted for preclearance by the U.S. Department of Justice any election-law change in areas where African-American voting participation was lower than the norm (most but not all of these areas were in the South); the effect of the Voting Rights Act on southern elections was profound, including the by-product that some White Southerners perceived it as meddling while Black voters universally appreciated it. Nixon aide Kevin Phillips told The New York Times in 1970 that "Negrophobe" Whites would quit the Democrats if Republicans enforced the Voting Rights Act and blacks registered as Democrats.[20] The trend toward acceptance of Republican identification among Southern White voters was bolstered in the next two elections by Richard Nixon.

Denouncing the forced busing policy that was used to enforce school desegregation,[21] Richard Nixon courted populist conservative Southern Whites with what is called the Southern Strategy, though his speechwriter Jeffrey Hart claimed that his campaign rhetoric was actually a "Border State Strategy" and accused the press of being "very lazy" when they called it a "Southern Strategy".[22] In the 1971 Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education ruling, the power of the federal government to enforce forced busing was strengthened when the Supreme Court ruled that the federal courts had the discretion to include busing as a desegregation tool to achieve racial balance. Some southern Democrats became Republicans at the national level, while remaining with their old party in state and local politics throughout the 1970s and 1980s. Several prominent conservative Democrats switched parties to become Republicans, including Strom Thurmond, John Connally and Mills E. Godwin Jr.[23] In the 1974 Milliken v. Bradley decision, however, the ability to use forced busing as a political tactic was greatly diminished when the U.S. Supreme Court placed an important limitation on Swann and ruled that students could only be bused across district lines if evidence of de jure segregation across multiple school districts existed.
In 1976, former Georgia governor Jimmy Carter won every Southern state except Oklahoma and Virginia in his successful presidential campaign as a Democrat, being the last Democratic presidential candidate to win a majority of the states in the South as of 2024. In 1980 Republican presidential nominee Ronald Reagan won every southern state except for Georgia, although Alabama, Mississippi, South Carolina, Arkansas, North Carolina and Tennessee were all decided by less than 3%.
1981–2008
[edit]In 1980, Republican presidential nominee Ronald Reagan announced that he supported "states' rights."[24] Lee Atwater, who served as Reagan's chief strategist in the Southern states, claimed that by 1968, a vast majority of southern Whites had learned to accept that racial slurs like "nigger" were offensive and that mentioning "states rights" and reasons for its justification, along with fiscal conservatism and opposition to social programs understood by many White southerners to disproportionally benefit Black Americans, had now become the best way to appeal to southern White voters.[25] Following Reagan's success at the national level, the Republican Party moved sharply to the New Right, with the shrinkage of the "Eastern Establishment" Rockefeller Republican element that had emphasized their support for civil rights.[26]
Economic and cultural conservatism (especially regarding abortion and LGBT rights) became more important in the South, with its large religious right element, such as Southern Baptists in the Bible Belt.[27] The South gradually became fertile ground for the Republican Party. Following the Voting Rights Act of 1965, the large Black vote in the South held steady but overwhelmingly favored the Democratic Party. Even as the Democratic party came to increasingly depend on the support of African-American voters in the South, well-established White Democratic incumbents still held sway in most Southern states for decades. Starting in 1964, although the Southern states split their support between parties in most presidential elections, conservative Democrats controlled nearly every Southern state legislature until the mid-1990s. On the eve of the Republican Revolution in 1994, Democrats still held a 2:1 advantage over the Republicans in southern congressional seats. Only in 2011 did the Republicans capture a majority of Southern state legislatures, and have continued to hold power over Southern politics for the most part since.
Many of the representatives, senators, and voters who were referred to as Reagan Democrats in the 1980s were conservative Southern Democrats. They often had more conservative views than other Democrats.[28][29] But there were notable remnants of the Solid South into the early 21st century.
- One example was Arkansas, whose state legislature continued to be majority Democrat (having, however, given its electoral votes to the Republicans in the past three presidential elections, except in 1992 and 1996 when "favorite son" Bill Clinton was the candidate and won each time) until 2012, when Arkansas voters selected a 21–14 Republican majority in the Arkansas Senate.
- Another example was North Carolina. Although the state has voted for Republicans in every presidential election since 1980 except for 2008, the State legislature was in Democratic control until 2010. The North Carolina congressional delegation was heavily Democratic until January 2013 when the Republicans could, after the 2010 United States census, adopt a redistricting plan of their choosing.
In 1992, Arkansas governor Bill Clinton was elected president. Unlike Carter, however, Clinton was only able to win the southern states of Arkansas, Louisiana, Kentucky, Tennessee and Georgia. While running for president, Clinton promised to "end welfare as we have come to know it" while in office.[30] In 1996, Clinton would fulfill his campaign promise and the longtime Republican goal of major welfare reform came into fruition. After two welfare reform bills sponsored by the Republican-controlled Congress were successfully vetoed by the President,[31] a compromise was eventually reached and the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act was signed into law on August 22, 1996.[30]
During the Clinton administration, the southern strategy shifted towards the so-called "culture war," which saw major political battles between the Religious Right and the secular Left. Chapman notes a split vote among many conservative Southern Democrats in the 1970s and 1980s who supported local and statewide conservative Democrats while simultaneously voting for Republican presidential candidates.[32] This tendency of many Southern Whites to vote for the Republican presidential candidate but Democrats from other offices lasted until the 2010 midterm elections. In the November 2008 elections, Democrats won 3 out of 4 U.S. House seats from Mississippi, 3 out of 4 in Arkansas, 5 out of 9 in Tennessee, and achieved near parity in the Georgia and Alabama delegations.
Republicans first dominated presidential elections in the South, then won a majority of Southern gubernatorial and congressional elections after the 1994 Republican Revolution, and finally came to control a majority of Southern state legislatures by the 2010s.[11]
2009–present
[edit]In 2009, Southern Democrats controlled both branches of the Alabama General Assembly, the Arkansas General Assembly, the Delaware General Assembly, the Louisiana State Legislature, the Maryland General Assembly, the Mississippi Legislature, the North Carolina General Assembly, and the West Virginia Legislature, along with the Council of the District of Columbia, the Kentucky House of Representatives, and the Virginia Senate.[33] Democrats lost control of the North Carolina and Alabama legislatures in 2010, the Louisiana and Mississippi legislatures in 2011 and the Arkansas legislature in 2012. Additionally, in 2014, Democrats lost four U.S. Senate seats in the South (in West Virginia, North Carolina, Arkansas, and Louisiana) that they had previously held. By 2017, Southern Democrats only controlled both branches of the Delaware General Assembly and the Maryland General Assembly, along with the Council of the District of Columbia; they had lost control of both houses of the state legislatures in Alabama, Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, and West Virginia.[34]
Nearly all White Democratic representatives in the South lost reelection in the 2010 midterm elections. That year, Democrats won only one U.S. House seat each in Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, South Carolina, and Arkansas, and two out of nine House seats in Tennessee, and they lost their one Arkansas seat in 2012. Following the November 2010 elections, John Barrow of Georgia was left as the only White Democratic U.S. House member in the Deep South, and he lost reelection in 2014. There would no more White Democrats from the Deep South until Joe Cunningham was elected from a South Carolina U.S. House district in 2018, and he lost re-election in 2020.
However, even since January 2015, Democrats have not been completely shut out of power in the South. Democrat John Bel Edwards was elected governor of Louisiana in 2015 and won re-election in 2019, running as an anti-abortion, pro-gun conservative Democrat. In a 2017 special election, moderate Democrat Doug Jones was elected a U.S. Senator from Alabama, though he lost re-election in 2020. Democrat Roy Cooper was elected governor of North Carolina in 2016, won re-election in 2020, and Democrat Josh Stein won in 2024. Andy Beshear was elected governor of Kentucky in 2019 and won re-election in 2023. As of February 2025, Democrats control the governorships of Kentucky, North Carolina, Maryland, and Delaware and the state legislatures of Maryland, Delaware, and Virginia. Joe Manchin would be the last Democrat to win statewide in West Virginia in 2018, later switching to Independent status, before declining to run for re-election in 2024.
Since 2017, most U.S. House or state legislative seats held by Democrats in the South are majority-minority or urban districts. Due to growing urbanization and changing demographics in many Southern states, more liberal Democrats have found success in the South. In the 2018 elections, Democrats nearly succeeded in taking governor's seats in Georgia and Florida and gained 12 national House seats in the South;[35] the trend continued in the 2019 elections, where Democrats took both houses of the Virginia General Assembly, and in 2020 where Joe Biden narrowly won Georgia with Republicans winning down ballot, along with Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff narrowly winning both U.S. Senate seats in that state just two months later. However, Democrats would lose the governor races in Florida and Georgia in 2022 by wider margins than in 2018, though Senator Warnock won re-election in Georgia.
Virginia is a notable exception to Republican dominance in the former 11 Confederate states, due to Northern Virginia being part of the Washington metropolitan area, with both major parties continuing to be competitive in the State in the 21st century. Ralph Northam, a Democrat and the governor of Virginia (2018–22), admitted that he voted for George W. Bush in the 2000 and 2004 presidential elections.[36] Despite this admission, Northam, a former state senator who has served as Lieutenant Governor of Virginia from 2014 to 2018, easily defeated the more progressive and cosmopolitan candidate, former representative Tom Perriello, by 55.9 percent to 44.1 percent to win the Democratic gubernatorial nomination in 2017.[37] Both of Virginia's U.S. Ssnators are Democrats, while the incumbent governor Glenn Youngkin is a Republican.
As of the 2020s, Southern Democrats who consistently vote for the Democratic ticket are mostly urban liberals or African Americans, while most White Southerners of both genders tend to vote for the Republican ticket, although there are sizable numbers of swing voters who sometimes split their tickets or cross party lines.[9]
Election results
[edit]| Won by Biden/Harris |
| States / Commonwealth / Federal district |
United States presidential election | Electoral college |
Democratic | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| # | % | Change | |||
| Alabama | United States presidential election in Alabama | 9 | 849,624 | 36.57% | |
| Arkansas | United States presidential election in Arkansas | 6 | 423,932 | 34.78% | |
| Delaware | United States presidential election in Delaware | 3 | 296,268 | 58.74% | |
| District of Columbia | United States presidential election in the District of Columbia | 3 | 317,323 | 92.15% | |
| Florida | United States presidential election in Florida | 29 | 5,297,045 | 47.86% | |
| Georgia | United States presidential election in Georgia | 16 | 2,473,633 | 49.47% | |
| Kentucky | United States presidential election in Kentucky | 8 | 772,474 | 36.15% | |
| Louisiana | United States presidential election in Louisiana | 8 | 856,034 | 39.85% | |
| Maryland | United States presidential election in Maryland | 10 | 1,985,023 | 65.36% | |
| Mississippi | United States presidential election in Mississippi | 6 | 539,398 | 41.06% | |
| North Carolina | United States presidential election in North Carolina | 15 | 2,684,292 | 48.59% | |
| Oklahoma | United States presidential election in Oklahoma | 7 | 503,890 | 32.29% | |
| South Carolina | United States presidential election in South Carolina | 9 | 1,091,541 | 43.43% | |
| Tennessee | United States presidential election in Tennessee | 11 | 1,143,711 | 37.45% | |
| Texas | United States presidential election in Texas | 38 | 5,259,126 | 46.48% | |
| Virginia | United States presidential election in Virginia | 13 | 2,413,568 | 54.11% | |
| West Virginia | United States presidential election in West Virginia | 5 | 235,984 | 29.69% | |
| States / Commonwealth / Federal district |
United States Congress | Total seats |
Democratic | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Seats | Change | |||
| Alabama | United States House of Representatives in Alabama | 7 | 1 | |
| United States Senate in Alabama | 1 | 0 | ||
| Arkansas | United States House of Representatives in Arkansas | 4 | 0 | |
| United States Senate in Arkansas | 1 | 0 | ||
| Delaware | United States House of Representatives in Delaware | 1 | 1 | |
| United States Senate in Delaware | 1 | 1 | ||
| District of Columbia | United States House Delegate for the District of Columbia | 1 | 1 | |
| Florida | United States House of Representatives in Florida | 27 | 11 | |
| Georgia | United States House of Representatives in Georgia | 14 | 6 | |
| United States Senate in Georgia | 2 | 2 | ||
| Kentucky | United States House of Representatives in Kentucky | 6 | 1 | |
| United States Senate in Kentucky | 1 | 0 | ||
| Louisiana | United States House of Representatives in Louisiana | 6 | 1 | |
| United States Senate in Louisiana | 1 | 0 | ||
| Maryland | United States House of Representatives in Maryland | 8 | 7 | |
| Mississippi | United States House of Representatives in Mississippi | 4 | 1 | |
| United States Senate in Mississippi | 1 | 0 | ||
| North Carolina | United States House of Representatives in North Carolina | 13 | 5 | |
| United States Senate in North Carolina | 1 | 0 | ||
| Oklahoma | United States House of Representatives in Oklahoma | 5 | 0 | |
| United States Senate in Oklahoma | 1 | 0 | ||
| South Carolina | United States House of Representatives in South Carolina | 7 | 1 | |
| United States Senate in South Carolina | 1 | 0 | ||
| Tennessee | United States House of Representatives in Tennessee | 9 | 2 | |
| United States Senate in Tennessee | 1 | 0 | ||
| Texas | United States House of Representatives in Texas | 36 | 13 | |
| United States Senate in Texas | 1 | 0 | ||
| Virginia | United States House of Representatives in Virginia | 11 | 7 | |
| United States Senate in Virginia | 1 | 1 | ||
| West Virginia | United States House of Representatives in West Virginia | 3 | 0 | |
| United States Senate in West Virginia | 1 | 0 | ||
| States / Commonwealth / Federal district |
Governors | Seat | Democratic |
|---|---|---|---|
| Change | |||
| Alabama | Governor of Alabama | 0 | |
| Arkansas | Governor of Arkansas | 0 | |
| Florida | Governor of Florida | 0 | |
| Georgia | Governor of Georgia | 0 | |
| Maryland | Governor of Maryland | 1 | |
| Oklahoma | Governor of Oklahoma | 0 | |
| South Carolina | Governor of South Carolina | 0 | |
| Tennessee | Governor of Tennessee | 0 | |
| Texas | Governor of Texas | 0 |
| Cities | Mayors | Seat | Democratic |
|---|---|---|---|
| Change | |||
| Austin, Texas | Mayor of Austin | 1 | |
| Chesapeake, Virginia | Mayor of Chesapeake | 0 | |
| Corpus Christi, Texas | Mayor of Corpus Christi | 0 | |
| District of Columbia | Mayor of the District of Columbia | 1 | |
| Lexington, Kentucky | Mayor of Lexington | 0 | |
| Louisville, Kentucky | Mayor of Louisville | 1 | |
| Lubbock, Texas | Mayor of Lubbock | 0 | |
| Nashville, Tennessee | Mayor of Nashville | 1 | |
| Oklahoma City, Oklahoma | Mayor of Oklahoma City | 0 | |
| Virginia Beach, Virginia | Mayor of Virginia Beach | 0 |
Noted Southern Democrats
[edit]Individuals are organized in sections by chronological (century they died or are still alive) order and then alphabetical order (last name then first name) within sections. Current or former U.S. presidents or Vvce presidents have their own section that begins first, but not former Confederate States presidents or vice presidents. Also, incumbent federal or statewide officeholders begin second.
Southern Democratic U.S. presidents and vice Presidents
[edit]- Andrew Jackson, 7th president of the United States, U.S. senator from Tennessee
- Alben Barkley, representative, U.S. senator from Kentucky and U.S. vice president[38]
- John C. Breckinridge, 14th vice president of the United States, 5th Confederate States secretary of war, U.S. senator from Kentucky
- Joseph R. Biden Jr., 46th president of the United States (2021–2025), 47th vice president of the United States, U.S. senator from Delaware
- John C. Calhoun, 7th vice president of the United States, U.S. senator from South Carolina
- John Tyler, 10th president of the United States, 10th vice president of the United States, U.S. senator from Virginia
- James K. Polk, 11th president of the United States, 9th governor of Tennessee
- Jimmy Carter, 39th president of the United States, 76th governor of Georgia[39]
- Bill Clinton, 42nd president of the United States, 40th and 42nd governor of Arkansas[40][41]
- John Nance Garner, 32nd vice president of the United States (1933–1941) and U.S. representative from Texas
- Al Gore, representative and U.S. senator from Tennessee, vice president of the United States (1993–2001) and 2000 Democratic nominee for president[42][43]
- Lyndon B. Johnson, 36th president of the United States (1963–1969), 37th vice president of the United States (1961–1963) and U.S. representative and senator from Texas[44]
- Andrew Johnson, 17th president of the United States, 16th vice president of the United States, U.S. senator from Tennessee
Incumbent Southern Democratic elected officeholders
[edit]- Andy Beshear, incumbent governor of Kentucky[45]
- Jim Clyburn, current member of the U.S. House of Representatives from South Carolina's 6th district and former House majority whip[46]
- Josh Stein, Governor of North Carolina (2025–present)
- Tim Kaine, Governor of Virginia, Chairman of the DNC, incumbent U.S. senator from Virginia, also the 2016 Democratic vice presidential nominee[47][48][49]
- Jon Ossoff, current U.S. senator from Georgia[50]
- Bennie Thompson, current member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Mississippi's 2nd district
- Raphael Warnock, current U.S. senator from Georgia[51]
19th-century Southern Democrats
[edit]- Andrew Jackson, 7th president of the United States, U.S. senator from Tennessee
- Andrew Johnson, 17th president of the United States, 16th vice president of the United States, U.S. senator from Tennessee
- Alexander H. Stephens, Vice President of the Confederate States, 50th governor of Georgia
- James K. Polk, 11th president of the United States, 9th governor of Tennessee
- Jefferson Davis, President of the Confederate States,[52] U.S. senator from Mississippi
- John C. Breckinridge, 14th vice president of the United States, 5th Confederate States secretary of war, U.S. senator from Kentucky
- John C. Calhoun, 7th vice president of the United States, U.S. senator from South Carolina
- John Tyler, 10th president of the United States, 10th vice president of the United States, U.S. senator from Virginia
- Judah P. Benjamin, 3rd Confederate States secretary of state, 2nd Confederate States secretary of war, 1st Confederate States attorney general, U.S. senator from Louisiana
20th-century Southern Democrats
[edit]- Ross Barnett, governor of Mississippi[53]
- James F. Byrnes, U.S. secretary of state, Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, Representative, U.S. senator, Governor of South Carolina[54][55]
- A.B. "Happy" Chandler, governor and senator from Kentucky[56][57]
- Lawton Chiles, U.S. senator from Florida and Governor of Florida[58][59]
- James O. Eastland, U.S. senator from Mississippi[60]
- Sam Ervin, U.S. senator from North Carolina from 1954 to 1974[61]
- J. William Fulbright, Representative from Arkansas, U.S. senator from Arkansas and longest-served chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee[62][63]
- Howell Heflin, senator from Alabama[64]
- Spessard Holland, U.S. senator from Florida and Governor of Florida[65][66]
- Olin D. Johnston, U.S. senator from South Carolina and Governor of South Carolina[67][68]
- Estes Kefauver, Representative, U.S. senator from Tennessee and 1956 Democratic vice presidential nominee[69]
- Earl Long, three-term Louisiana governor[70]
- Huey P. Long, Louisiana governor and U.S. senator[71][72]
- John McClellan, Representative and U.S. senator from Arkansas[73]
- Lawrence Patton McDonald, Former representative from Georgia[74]
- Sam Rayburn, Congressman from Texas and longest-serving speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives-longest serving in the House's history[75][76]
- Ann Richards, second female governor of Texas [77]
- Terry Sanford, U.S. senator and governor from North Carolina[78][79]
- John Stennis, U.S. senator from Mississippi[80]
- Benjamin Tillman, governor and senator of South Carolina[81]
- George C. Wallace, governor of Alabama, American Independent Party candidate for president in 1968, ran for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1972 and 1976[82]
- Ralph Yarborough, U.S. senator from Texas[83]
21st-century Southern Democrats (deceased)
[edit]- Reubin Askew, Governor of Florida and 1984 U.S. presidential candidate[84]
- Lloyd Bentsen, Representative and U.S. senator from Texas, Secretary of the Treasury, and Democratic candidate for vice president in 1988[85]
- Kathleen Blanco, Governor of Louisiana[86]
- Dale Bumpers, U.S. senator from Arkansas and Governor of Arkansas[87][88]
- Robert Byrd, Representative, U.S. senator from West Virginia,[89] presidential candidate, 1976[90][91]
- Max Cleland, U.S. senator from Georgia[92]
- Edwin Edwards, Representative and Governor of Louisiana[93][94]
- Wendell Ford, governor and senator from Kentucky[95][96]
- D. Robert Graham, U.S. senator from Florida and Governor of Florida[97][98]
- Kay Hagan, U.S. senator from North Carolina[99]
- Fritz Hollings, U.S. senator from South Carolina, Governor of South Carolina, 1984 U.S. presidential candidate[100][101]
- J. Bennett Johnston, U.S. senator from Louisiana[102]
- John Lewis, U.S. Rrpresentative from Georgia and civil rights leader[103]
- Lester Maddox, governor of Georgia[104]
- Zell B. Miller, U.S. senator from Georgia and Georgia governor[105][106]
- J. Strom Thurmond, U.S. senator from South Carolina and Governor of South Carolina (Democrat until 1964, then Republican until death), States' Right candidate (Dixiecrat) for president in 1948[107][108][109]
- David Pryor, Representative, U.S. senator from Arkansas and Governor of Arkansas[110][111]
21st-century Southern Democrats (living)
[edit]- Roy Barnes, Governor of Georgia[112]
- John Barrow, U.S. representative from Georgia[113]
- Mike Beebe, Governor of Arkansas[114]
- Steve Beshear, Governor of Kentucky[115]
- John Breaux, Representative and U.S. senator from Louisiana[116]
- Phil Bredesen, Governor of Tennessee[117]
- Ben Chandler, Attorney General of Kentucky and Congressman from Kentucky[118]
- Travis Childers, U.S. representative from Mississippi[119]
- Martha Layne Collins, Governor of Kentucky and chair of the 1984 Democratic National Convention[120]
- Roy Cooper, Governor of North Carolina (2017-2025)[121]
- John Bel Edwards, Governor of Louisiana[122]
- John R. Edwards, U.S. senator from North Carolina, 2004 Democratic vice presidential nominee, Democratic presidential candidate in 2004 and 2008.[123][124]
- Gwen Graham, U.S. representative for Florida's 2nd congressional district from 2015 to 2017 and candidate for Governor of Florida[125]
- James Hovis Hodges, Governor of South Carolina[126]
- Doug Jones, former U.S. senator from Alabama[127]
- Mary Landrieu, former U.S. senator from Louisiana[128]
- Al Lawson, U.S. representative for Florida's 5th congressional district from 2017 to 2023[129]
- Blanche Lincoln, Representative and U.S. senator from Arkansas[130]
- Martin O'Malley, Governor of Maryland[131]
- Joseph Manchin III, governor of West Virginia, U.S. senator from West Virginia (2010-2025), became an Independent in 2024[132][133][134]
- Bill Nelson, Representative, U.S. senator from Florida[135]
- Ralph Northam, Governor of Virginia[136]
- Sam Nunn, U.S. senator from Georgia[137]
- Paul Patton, Governor of Kentucky[138]
- Bev Perdue, 73rd governor of North Carolina
- Sonny Perdue, Governor of Georgia (was once a Democrat, now Republican)[139][140]
- Mark Pryor, U.S. senator from Arkansas[141]
- Jim Webb, U.S. Ssnator from Virginia and Secretary of the Navy, 2016 Democratic presidential candidate (once a Republican)
- Douglas Wilder, Virginia governor, first African-American ever elected governor in the U.S., tried to go for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1991, but eventually withdrew in 1992[142]
Southern Democratic presidential tickets
[edit]At various times, registered Democrats from the South broke with the national party to nominate their own presidential and vice presidential candidates, generally in opposition to civil rights measures supported by the national nominees. There was at least one Southern Democratic effort in every presidential election from 1944 until 1968, besides 1952. On some occasions, such as in 1948 with Strom Thurmond, these candidates have been listed on the ballot in some states as the nominee of the Democratic Party. George Wallace of Alabama was in presidential politics as a conservative Democrat except 1968, when he left the party and ran as an independent. Running as the nominees of the American Independent Party, the Wallace ticket won 5 states. Its best result was in Alabama, where it received 65.9% of the vote. Wallace was the official Democratic nominee in Alabama and Hubert Humphrey was listed as the "National Democratic" candidate.[143]
| Year | Presidential nominee | Home state | Previous positions | Vice presidential nominee | Home state | Previous positions | Votes | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1860 | John C. Breckinridge |
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Kentucky's 8th congressional district (1851–1855) Vice President of the United States (1857–1861) |
Joseph Lane |
Governor of Oregon (1849–1850; 1853) Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Oregon Territory's at-large congressional district (1851–1859) United States Senator from Oregon (1859–1861) |
848,019 (18.1%) 72 EV |
[144] | ||
| 1944 | Unpledged electors | 143,238 (0.3%) 0 EV |
[145] | |||||
| 1948 | Strom Thurmond |
Member of the South Carolina Senate (1933–1938) Governor of South Carolina (1947–1951) |
Fielding L. Wright |
Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi (1944–1946) Governor of Mississippi (1946–1952) |
1,175,930 (2.4%) 39 EV |
[146] | ||
| 1956 | Unpledged electors | 196,145 (0.3%) 0 EV |
[147] | |||||
T. Coleman Andrews |
Commissioner of Internal Revenue (1953–1955) |
Thomas H. Werdel |
Member of the California State Assembly from the 39th district (1943–1947) Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from California's 10th congressional district (1949–1953) |
107,929 (0.2%) 0 EV |
[148] | |||
| Walter Burgwyn Jones | Judge Member of the Alabama House of Representatives (1919–1921) |
Herman Talmadge |
Governor of Georgia (1947; 1948–1955) |
0 (0.0%) 1 EV |
[149] | |||
| 1960 | Unpledged electors | 610,409 (0.4%) 15 EV |
[150] | |||||
Orval Faubus |
Governor of Arkansas (1955–1967) |
John G. Crommelin |
United States Navy Rear Admiral Candidate for United States Senator from Alabama (1950, 1954, 1956) |
44,984 (0.1%) 0 EV |
[151] | |||
| 1964 | Unpledged electors | 210,732 (0.3%) 0 EV |
[152] | |||||
See also
[edit]- Blue Dog Democrats
- Boll weevil (politics)
- Bourbon Democrat
- Conservative Democrat
- Democrat in Name Only
- Democratic Party history
- Jeffersonian democracy
- Democratic Leadership Council
- Democratic Party
- Ku Klux Klan
- National Democratic Party
- New Democrats
- Rockefeller Republican
- Yellow dog Democrats
- Solid South
- Straight-Out Democratic Party
Notes
[edit]- ^ Alabama and Maryland held midterms in every 4 years
- ^ Louisiana, Mississippi and Virginia only
- ^ Virginia House of Delegates only held off-year every 2 years
b South of the Mason–Dixon line Carter won just 34 electoral votes – his own Georgia, plus Delaware, Maryland, and District of Columbia.
References
[edit]- ^ "Texas Politics – Yellow Dogs and Blue Dogs". texaspolitics.utexas.edu.
- ^ "Southern Democratic Party – Ohio History Central". Archived from the original on September 3, 2022. Retrieved June 21, 2020.
- ^ Kaiser, Charles (January 23, 2023). "'We may have lost the south': what LBJ really said about Democrats in 1964". The Guardian. Retrieved February 20, 2023.
- ^ "PolitiFact – Group of Southern Democrats, not all Democrats, held up 1964 Civil Rights Act".
- ^ "Democrat/GOP Vote Tally on 1964 Civil Rights Act". Wall Street Journal. December 31, 2002.
- ^ Carmines, Edward; Stimson, James (1990). Issue Evolution: Race and the Transformation of American Politics. Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691023311. Archived from the original on May 16, 2018. Retrieved June 9, 2018.
- ^ Valentino, Nicholas A.; Sears, David O. (2005). "Old Times There Are Not Forgotten: Race and Partisan Realignment in the Contemporary South". American Journal of Political Science. 49 (3): 672–88. doi:10.1111/j.1540-5907.2005.00136.x. ISSN 0092-5853.
- ^ Ilyana, Kuziemko; Ebonya, Washington (2018). "Why Did the Democrats Lose the South? Bringing New Data to an Old Debate". American Economic Review. 108 (10): 2830–2867. doi:10.1257/aer.20161413. ISSN 0002-8282.
- ^ a b Junn, Jane; Masuoka, Natalie (2020). "The Gender Gap Is a Race Gap: Women Voters in US Presidential Elections". Perspectives on Politics. 18 (4): 1135–1145. doi:10.1017/S1537592719003876. ISSN 1537-5927.
- ^ "Can the Republican Party Keep Trump Democrats?". National Review. November 21, 2016.
- ^ a b "The long goodbye". The Economist. November 11, 2010. Retrieved February 20, 2023.
In 1981 Republicans took control of the Senate for the first time since 1953, but most Southern elected officials remained white Democrats. When Republicans took control of the House in 1995, white Democrats still comprised one-third of the South's tally. ... white Southern Democrats have met their Appomattox: they will account for just 24 of the South's 155 senators and congressmen in the 112th United States Congress.
- ^ "The Return of the Southern Democrat". U.S. News & World Report. October 5, 2018.
- ^ Yglesias, Matthew (June 13, 2017). "That Jon Ossoff's message seems moderate is a sign of how far Democrats have shifted". Vox. Retrieved July 12, 2025.
- ^ The South in Modern America A Region at Odds By Dewey W. Grantham, 2001, P.66
- ^ Byron E. Shafer and Richard Johnston, The End of Southern Exceptionalism: Class, Race, and Partisan Change in the Postwar South (2009) pp. 173–74
- ^ As in declining to invite African-American Jesse Owens, hero of the 1936 Olympics, to the White House.
- ^ Until the 1960s the Democratic Party primaries were tantamount to election in most of the South and, being restricted largely to caucasians, were openly called White primaries.
- ^ "National Affairs: Go West, Lyndon". February 23, 1959.
- ^ "Goldwater, Barry M". April 26, 2017.
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- ^ Hart, Jeffrey (February 9, 2006). The Making of the American Conservative Mind (television). Hanover, New Hampshire: C-SPAN.
- ^ Joseph A. Aistrup (2015). The Southern Strategy Revisited: Republican Top-Down Advancement in the South. University Press of Kentucky. p. 135. ISBN 9780813147925.
- ^ Greenberg, David (November 20, 2007). "Dog-Whistling Dixie: When Reagan said "states rights," he was talking about race". Slate. Archived from the original on January 12, 2012.
- ^ Branch, Taylor (1999). Pillar of Fire: America in the King Years 1963–65. New York: Simon & Schuster. p. 242. ISBN 978-0-684-80819-2. OCLC 37909869.
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- ^ Nicole Mellow (2008). The State of Disunion: Regional Sources of Modern American Partisanship. Johns Hopkins UP. p. 110. ISBN 9780801896460.
- ^ See Matthew Yglesias, "Why did the South turn Republican?", The Atlantic August 24, 2007.
- ^ Sach, Maddie (December 16, 2019). "Why The Democrats Have Shifted Left Over The Last 30 Years". FiveThirtyEight.
- ^ a b Vobejda, Barbara (August 22, 1996). "Clinton Signs Welfare Bill Amid Division". Washington Post. Retrieved November 21, 2013.
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- ^ Kilgore, Ed (November 9, 2018). "A Different Kind of Democratic Party Is Rising in the South". New York Magazine. Retrieved November 9, 2018.
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- ^ Times-Dispatch, GRAHAM MOOMAW AND PATRICK WILSON Richmond (June 14, 2017). "Northam defeats Perriello for Democratic nomination for governor; Gillespie edges Stewart in GOP contest".
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- ^ "Arkansas Governor William Jefferson Clinton". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "William J. Clinton". White House. The White House. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "GORE, Albert Arnold, Jr., (1948 – )". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 9, 2011.
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- ^ "Andy Beshear", Wikipedia, August 17, 2023, retrieved August 17, 2023
- ^ Marilyn Thompson (May 5, 2023). "How Rep. James Clyburn Protected His District at a Cost to Black Democrats". ProPublica.
- ^ EVERETT, BURGESS (July 27, 2016). "Is Tim Kaine liberal enough?". Politico.
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- ^ Errin Haines (December 6, 2012). "Va. Sen.-elect Tim Kaine reaches out, across aisle to fellow freshman Ted Cruz of Texas". washingtonpost.com. Retrieved December 29, 2012.
- ^ Alex Rogers (January 6, 2021). "Democrats to take Senate as Ossoff wins runoff, CNN projects". CNN. Retrieved January 6, 2021.
- ^ Alex Rogers (January 5, 2021). "Raphael Warnock wins Georgia runoff, CNN projects, as control of US Senate down to Perdue-Ossoff race". CNN. Retrieved January 6, 2021.
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- ^ "Ross Barnett, Segregationist, Dies; Governor of Mississippi in 1960s". The New York Times. November 7, 1987". The New York Times. November 7, 1987.
- ^ "South Carolina Governor James Francis Byrnes". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 8, 2011.
- ^ "BYRNES, James Francis, (1882–1972)". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 8, 2011.
- ^ "Kentucky Governor Albert Benjamin Chandler". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 9, 2011.
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- ^ "Florida Governor Lawton Chiles". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "CHILES, Lawton Mainor, Jr., (1930–1998)". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 9, 2011.
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- ^ Campbell, Karl E. (2001). "Preserving the Constitution, Guarding the Status Quo: Senator Sam Ervin and Civil Liberties". The North Carolina Historical Review. 78 (4): 457–482. ISSN 0029-2494. JSTOR 23522438.
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- ^ "Carl M. Marcy". senate.gov. U.S. Senate. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "HEFLIN, Howell Thomas, (1921–2005)". bioguide.congress.gov. U.S. Congress. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "HOLLAND, Spessard Lindsey, (1892–1971)". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 8, 2011.
- ^ "Florida Governor Spessard Lindsey Holland". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 8, 2011.
- ^ "South Carolina Governor Olin De Witt Talmadge Johnston". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 8, 2011.
- ^ "JOHNSTON, Olin DeWitt Talmadge, (1896–1965)". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 8, 2011.
- ^ "KEFAUVER, Carey Estes, (1903–1963)". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "Louisiana Governor Earl Kemp Long". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 7, 2011.
- ^ "Louisiana Governor Huey Pierce Long". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 7, 2011.
- ^ "LONG, Huey Pierce, (1893–1935)". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 8, 2011.
- ^ "McCLELLAN, John Little, (1896–1977)". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 8, 2011.
- ^ "McDONALD, Lawrence Patton, (1935–1983)". bioguide.congress.gov. U.S. Congress. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "RAYBURN, Samuel Taliaferro, (1882–1961)". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "Speaker of the House Sam Rayburn of Texas". house.gov. U.S. House of Representatives. October 9, 2011. Archived from the original on June 2, 2011. Retrieved October 9, 2011.
- ^ "Governors of Texas, 1846-present". lrl.texas.gov/. Legislative Reference Library of Texas. March 22, 2024.
- ^ "SANFORD, (James) Terry, (1917–1998)". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "North Carolina Governor James Terry Sanford". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "STENNIS, John Cornelius, (1901–1995)". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 8, 2011.
- ^ Simkins, Francis (1944). Pitchfork Ben Tillman, South Carolinian. Louisiana State University Press.
- ^ "Alabama Governor George Corley Wallace". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "YARBOROUGH, Ralph Webster, (1903–1996)". bioguide.congress.gov. U.S. Congress. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "Florida Governor Reubin O'Donovan Askew". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 8, 2011.
- ^ "BENTSEN, Lloyd Millard, Jr., (1921–2006)". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 8, 2011.
- ^ "Louisiana Governor Kathleen Babineaux Blanco". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 8, 2011.
- ^ "BUMPERS, Dale, (1925 – )". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "Arkansas Governor Dale Bumpers". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "A Senator's Shame". washingtonpost.com.
- ^ "BYRD, Robert Carlyle, (1917–2010)". bioguide.congress.gov. U.S. Congress. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "1976 Presidential Campaign". 4president.org. 4President Corporation. October 9, 2011. Archived from the original on October 23, 2011. Retrieved October 10, 2011.
- ^ "CLELAND, Joseph Maxwell (Max), (1942 – )". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "EDWARDS, Edwin Washington, (1927 – )". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "Louisiana Governor Edwin Washington Edwards". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "Kentucky Governor Wendell Hampton Ford". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "FORD, Wendell Hampton, (1924 – )". bioguide.congress.gov. U.S. Congress. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "Florida Governor Daniel Robert Graham". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 8, 2011.
- ^ "GRAHAM, Daniel Robert (Bob), (1936 – )". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 8, 2011.
- ^ "HAGAN, Kay, (1953 – )". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "South Carolina Governor Ernest Frederick Hollings". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 8, 2011.
- ^ "HOLLINGS, Ernest Frederick, (1922 – )". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 8, 2011.
- ^ "JOHNSTON, John Bennett, Jr., (1932 – )". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "LEWIS, John R., (1940–2020)". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. February 2, 2023.
- ^ "Georgia Governor Lester Garfield Maddox". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "MILLER, Zell Bryan, (1932 – )". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "Georgia Governor Zell Miller". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "THURMOND, James Strom, (1902–2003)". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "South Carolina Governor James Strom Thurmond". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "Meet the Dixiecrats". pbs.org. PBS. October 9, 2011. Archived from the original on April 15, 2013.
- ^ "PRYOR, David Hampton, (1934 – )". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 8, 2011.
- ^ "Arkansas Governor David Hampton Pryor". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 8, 2011.
- ^ "Georgia Governor Roy E. Barnes". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 8, 2011.
- ^ "Barrow, John, (1955 – )". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "Arkansas Governor Mike Beebe". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "Kentucky Governor Steven L. Beshear". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "BREAUX, John Berlinger, (1944 – )". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "Tennessee Governor Phil Bredesen". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 8, 2011.
- ^ "CHANDLER, A. B. (Ben), (1959 – )". bioguide.congress.gov. U.S. Congress. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "CHILDERS, Travis W., (1958 – )". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "Kentucky Governor Martha Layne Collins". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "North Carolina Governor Results: Roy Cooper Wins". The New York Times. August 2017.
- ^ "Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards". nga.org. National Governors Association. September 10, 2016.
- ^ "EDWARDS, John, (1953 – )". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 8, 2011.
- ^ "John Edwards (D-N.C.)". boston.com. Boston Globe. October 8, 2011.
- ^ "Former Congresswoman Gwen Graham Announces Run For Florida Governor". WFSU News. May 2, 2017. Retrieved January 20, 2025.
- ^ "South Carolina Governor Jim Hodges". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 8, 2011.
- ^ "Who is Alabama Senate victor Doug Jones?". BBC News. December 13, 2017. Retrieved December 14, 2017.
- ^ "LANDRIEU, Mary L., (1955 – )". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 9, 2011.
- ^ Jr, Al Lawson. "'It has been my great honor and privilege to serve' | Congressman Al Lawson". Tallahassee Democrat. Retrieved January 20, 2025.
- ^ "LINCOLN, Blanche Lambert, (1960 – )". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 8, 2011.
- ^ "MD-Martin O'Malley". Southern Governors Association.
- ^ "West Virginia Governor Joe Manchin III". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "MANCHIN, Joe, III, (1947 – )". bioguide.congress.gov. U.S. Congress. October 9, 2011.
- ^ Wong, Scott; Santaliz, Kate (May 31, 2024). "Sen. Joe Manchin leaves the Democratic Party and registers as an independent". NBC News. Retrieved November 23, 2024.
- ^ "NELSON, Clarence William (Bill), (1942 – )". bioguide.congress.gov. U.S. Congress. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "Sources: Ed Gillespie Has Called Ralph Northam to Concede". NBC News. Retrieved December 14, 2017.
- ^ "NUNN, Samuel Augustus, (1938 – )". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "Kentucky Governor Paul E. Patton". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "Georgia Governor Sonny Perdue". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 9, 2011.
- ^ "Georgia goes Republican The rain fell". Economist. November 7, 2002. Retrieved October 9, 2011.
- ^ "PRYOR, Mark, (1963 – )". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 8, 2011.
- ^ "Virginia Governor L. Douglas Wilder". nga.org. National Governors Association. October 9, 2011.
- ^ Earl Black, and Merle Black, "The Wallace vote in Alabama: A multiple regression analysis." Journal of Politics 35.3 (1973): 730–736.
- ^ The ticket won 11 states; its best result was in Texas where it received 75.5%.
- ^ Electors not pledged to any candidate were on the ballot in South Carolina and Texas, where they received 7.5% and 11.8%, respectively.
- ^ Running as the nominees of the States' Rights Democratic Party, the ticket won 4 states, and received one additional vote from a Tennessee faithless elector pledged to Harry S. Truman. Its best result was in South Carolina, where it received 87.2% of the vote. In Alabama and Mississippi, Thurmond was listed as the Democratic nominee; Truman was the "National Democratic" candidate in Mississippi and was not on the ballot in Alabama.
- ^ Electors not pledged to any candidate were on the ballot in several states.
- ^ Running as the nominees of the States' Rights Party and Constitution Party, the ticket's best result was in Virginia, where it received 6.2% of the vote.
- ^ Jones and Talmadge received one electoral vote from an Alabama faithless elector pledged to Adlai Stevenson.
- ^ Electors not pledged to any candidate were on the ballot in several states. In Mississippi, the slate of unpledged electors won the state. In Alabama, eleven Democratic electors were chosen, six unpledged and five for nominee John F. Kennedy. The Mississippi and Alabama unpledged electors voted for Harry F. Byrd for President and Strom Thurmond for Vice President; in addition, one faithless elector from Oklahoma pledged to Richard Nixon voted for Byrd for President, but for Barry Goldwater for Vice President.
- ^ Running as the nominees of the National States' Rights Party, the ticket's best result was in Arkansas, where it received 6.8% of the vote.
- ^ Electors not pledged to any candidate were on the ballot in Alabama, where they replaced national nominee Lyndon B. Johnson and received 30.6% of the vote.
Further reading
[edit]- Barone, Michael, and others. The Almanac of American Politics 1976: The Senators, the Representatives and the Governors: Their Records and Election Results, Their States and Districts (1975–2017); new edition every 2 years; detailed political profile of every governor and member of Congress, as well as state and district politics
- Bateman, David, Ira Katznelson and John S. Lapinski. (2020). Southern Nation: Congress and white supremacy after reconstruction. Princeton University Press.
- Black, Earl and Merle Black. Politics and Society in the South (1989)
- Bullock III, Charles S. and Mark J. Rozell, eds. The Oxford Handbook of Southern Politics (2012)
- Bullock, Charles S.; MacManus, Susan A.; Mayer, Jeremy D.; Rozell, Mark J. (2019). The South and the Transformation of U.S. Politics. Oxford University Press.
- Glaser, James M. The Hand of the Past in Contemporary Southern Politics (2013)
- Key, V. O. Southern Politics in State and Nation (1951), famous classic
- Kuziemko, Ilyana, and Ebonya Washington. "Why did the Democrats lose the south? Bringing new data to an old debate" ( No. w21703. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2015.) online
- Rae, Nicol C. Southern Democrats (Oxford University Press, 1994)
- Richter, William L. Historical Dictionary of the Old South (2005)
- Shafer, Byron E. The End of Southern Exceptionalism: Class, Race, and Partisan Change in the Postwar South (2006) excerpt and text search
- Twyman, Robert W. and David C. Roller, eds. Encyclopedia of Southern History LSU Press (1979).
- Woodard, J. David. The New Southern Politics (2006)
Southern Democrats
View on GrokipediaSouthern Democrats were the faction of the United States Democratic Party based in the Southern states, who regained political control following the end of Reconstruction in 1877 and maintained dominance until the mid-20th century by enforcing Jim Crow segregation laws, poll taxes, and other mechanisms to disenfranchise African Americans while preserving white supremacy.[1][2]
This group solidified the "Solid South" as a reliable Democratic electoral bloc from the 1870s through the 1960s, winning nearly every presidential, congressional, and state-level election in the former Confederate states due to one-party rule that suppressed Republican and black opposition.[3][4]
Ideologically conservative on race and social issues, they prioritized states' rights to resist federal interference, exemplified by the 1948 Dixiecrat revolt against President Harry Truman's civil rights proposals, which led to the formation of the States' Rights Democratic Party under Strom Thurmond that carried four Deep South states.[5][6]
Their defining controversy arose from blocking civil rights advancements, including leading a prolonged filibuster against the 1964 Civil Rights Act, after which empirical data shows a sharp exodus of white Southern voters from the Democratic Party beginning around 1963–1964, accelerating the realignment toward Republicans as the national Democrats embraced federal civil rights enforcement.[7][8][9]
Definition and Characteristics
Regional Definition and Scope
Southern Democrats encompassed members of the Democratic Party primarily from the eleven states that comprised the Confederate States of America: Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia. This regional core formed the backbone of the "Solid South," a political phenomenon characterized by near-unanimous Democratic victories in presidential elections from 1876 through 1960, reflecting the party's control over state legislatures, governorships, and congressional delegations in these territories.[10][3] The scope of Southern Democrats extended beyond the strict Confederate boundaries to include border states like Kentucky and Missouri, where Democratic affiliations aligned with Southern agrarian interests and resistance to federal overreach, albeit with interruptions due to divided Civil War allegiances and stronger Unionist elements. Oklahoma, settled largely by Southern migrants following its 1907 statehood, similarly produced Democratic representatives who echoed Southern positions on states' rights and racial hierarchy until mid-century realignments. These peripheral areas contributed to the broader influence of Southern Democrats in national party politics, often tipping balances in Congress through seniority and committee control.[11] This geographic definition underscores the cultural and economic homogeneity of the region—marked by reliance on cotton agriculture, sharecropping, and a hierarchical social order—that fostered ideological cohesion among Southern Democrats, distinct from Northern party factions advocating progressive reforms. Empirical voting data from the era, such as the Democratic sweep of all eleven Confederate states' electoral votes in every presidential contest from 1880 to 1944, verifies the solidity of this regional bloc prior to the Republican "Southern strategy" and civil rights legislation eroding its monopoly.[3]Ideological Foundations
The ideological foundations of Southern Democrats emerged from Jeffersonian republicanism and Jacksonian democracy, which prioritized an agrarian economy, limited federal authority, and the sovereignty of individual states to govern local affairs without northern-imposed moral or economic constraints. This worldview viewed the federal government as a potential threat to the rural, farming-based society of the South, where smallholders and planters alike depended on agricultural production, often supported by slave labor framed as a property right protected under the Constitution.[12] Southern Democrats advocated for strict construction of the Constitution, interpreting it to reserve powers like regulating domestic institutions—including slavery—to the states, as articulated in defenses against perceived encroachments like the Wilmot Proviso of 1846, which sought to ban slavery in new territories.[13] Central to their ideology was a commitment to states' rights as a bulwark against centralized power, rooted in the causal reality that federal intervention threatened the South's social and economic order predicated on racial hierarchy and unfettered local control.[14] This principle, drawn from the Tenth Amendment, justified opposition to national policies that could disrupt agrarian interests or enforce uniform standards across diverse regions, such as tariff policies favoring northern industry over southern exports.[15] Post-Civil War, this evolved into fervent defense of segregation and Jim Crow laws as extensions of state autonomy, with Southern Democrats arguing that such measures preserved social stability and prevented racial conflict, rather than viewing them as moral failings—a perspective reinforced by their portrayal of federal Reconstruction efforts (1865–1877) as tyrannical overreach that undermined white southern self-governance.[16] Economically, Southern Democrats espoused agrarianism, favoring policies that sustained rural economies through low taxes, minimal regulation, and resistance to unionization or industrialization that might erode the planter-farmer dominance.[17] They opposed high protective tariffs, such as the Tariff of 1828 derided as the "Tariff of Abominations," which burdened southern cotton exporters while benefiting manufacturing in the North, reflecting a broader suspicion of federal economic planning that could favor urban elites over decentralized agricultural production.[18] This stance aligned with a conservative fiscal outlook, prioritizing balanced budgets and states' fiscal independence, as seen in their resistance to expansive New Deal programs that risked federal dependency, though some accommodated limited interventions for rural relief without compromising core autonomies.[19] Underlying these positions was an unapologetic embrace of white supremacy as a foundational social order, not merely as prejudice but as a pragmatic necessity for maintaining sectional harmony and economic viability in a biracial society, where empirical patterns of post-emancipation violence and sharecropping perpetuated de facto segregation.[17] Southern Democrats, like those in the 1948 States' Rights Democratic Party platform, explicitly opposed federal mandates on desegregation, miscegenation laws, or employment quotas, framing them as violations of states' rights and private enterprise.[5] This ideology persisted through the mid-20th century, with figures invoking constitutional federalism to defend local customs against national civil rights pushes, highlighting a causal prioritization of regional stability over abstract equality.[14]Core Ideology and Policy Positions
Commitment to States' Rights and Limited Federal Power
Southern Democrats historically emphasized states' rights as a bulwark against perceived federal encroachments, drawing from the Tenth Amendment's reservation of powers to the states and viewing the Union as a compact among sovereign entities rather than a consolidated national government. This doctrine, articulated by figures like John C. Calhoun, posited that states held the authority to nullify unconstitutional federal laws within their borders to protect local interests, as exemplified in Calhoun's 1828 "South Carolina Exposition and Protest" against protective tariffs that disadvantaged Southern agriculture.[20][21] The Nullification Crisis of 1832–1833 underscored this commitment, when South Carolina, led by Calhoun's allies, declared federal tariffs null and void, threatening secession unless the duties were repealed; the crisis resolved with a tariff compromise, but it entrenched states' rights as a core Southern Democratic principle against federal economic coercion.[21] During the antebellum period, Southern Democrats extended this to defend slavery's expansion, arguing in congressional debates and party platforms that federal interference via restrictions like the Wilmot Proviso violated states' sovereignty over domestic institutions.[22] In the Civil War era, this ideology culminated in secession ordinances, such as South Carolina's 1860 declaration citing states' rights to withdraw from a Union that failed to protect Southern property in slaves against Northern aggression. Postwar Reconstruction (1865–1877) saw Southern Democrats vehemently oppose federal military governance and the Fourteenth Amendment's expansions of national authority, framing them as tyrannical violations of state autonomy; by 1877, the Compromise of 1877 withdrew federal troops, restoring Democratic control and enabling "redemption" governments that prioritized local rule.[1] Twentieth-century manifestations included resistance to New Deal centralization where it threatened regional control, though selectively accommodated for economic relief, and culminated in the 1948 States' Rights Democratic Party (Dixiecrats) platform, which rejected "totalitarian, centralized bureaucratic government" and federal civil rights mandates as unconstitutional intrusions, nominating Strom Thurmond on a ticket that won four Deep South states.[5][23] Southern Democratic senators, such as Richard Russell, filibustered civil rights legislation in the 1950s and 1960s, invoking states' rights to block bills like the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which passed only after invoking cloture against 18 filibusters led predominantly by Southern Democrats.[24] This stance reflected a broader ideological aversion to federal power that extended beyond race to fiscal conservatism, as seen in opposition to expansive welfare programs that eroded state fiscal independence, though often pragmatically navigated within the national party.[8]Approaches to Race, Segregation, and Social Order
Southern Democrats, dominant in the post-Reconstruction South, implemented and defended Jim Crow laws to enforce racial segregation across public life, including schools, transportation, and accommodations, as a framework for maintaining white supremacy and social stability after the perceived failures of federal Reconstruction policies.[1] These laws, enacted primarily between 1890 and 1910 by Democratic-controlled state legislatures, codified the "separate but equal" doctrine upheld by the Supreme Court in Plessy v. Ferguson (1896), though facilities for African Americans were systematically underfunded and inferior.[25] Accompanying disenfranchisement mechanisms, such as poll taxes adopted in states like Mississippi in 1890 and South Carolina in 1895, reduced black voter registration from over 90% in some Louisiana parishes in 1896 to under 2% by 1904, ensuring Democratic hegemony while framing such measures as protections against electoral corruption and social unrest.[1] Ideologically, Southern Democrats justified segregation as essential to preserving racial integrity, social harmony, and states' rights against federal intrusion, arguing that voluntary separation aligned with natural differences in culture and capacity that, if ignored, would provoke violence and disorder.[23] This stance crystallized in the 1948 States' Rights Democratic Party (Dixiecrats) platform, drafted by Southern Democratic bolters against President Truman's civil rights proposals, which pledged to uphold "the segregation of the races and the racial integrity of each race" and resist any federal laws mandating integration or employment equality, viewing them as violations of the Tenth Amendment.[5] The Dixiecrats, led by Governor Strom Thurmond of South Carolina, secured 39 electoral votes from four Deep South states, demonstrating the depth of opposition to national Democratic shifts toward civil rights.[23] In response to the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education ruling declaring school segregation unconstitutional, Southern Democrats issued the 1956 Southern Manifesto, signed by 19 senators and 82 representatives from 11 former Confederate states—nearly all Democrats—which condemned the decision as an abuse of judicial power that usurped states' rights and urged "lawful means" of resistance, including litigation and local evasion, to avert "chaos and confusion" from forced mixing.[26] Organized by Senator Harry F. Byrd Sr. of Virginia, the document reflected a consensus among Southern congressional Democrats that desegregation threatened established social orders proven by decades of relative peace under separation, prioritizing community autonomy over uniform national standards.[27] This resistance often involved ties to groups like the White Citizens' Councils, formed in 1954 to organize middle- and upper-class whites against desegregation through economic pressure and social ostracism, with support from Southern Democratic politicians exemplifying overlapping sentiments with segregationist causes akin to white supremacist ideologies, as seen in figures like Strom Thurmond and George Wallace who campaigned on staunch segregation platforms.[28] These associations largely ended with the 1960s realignment as the national Democratic Party embraced civil rights under President Lyndon B. Johnson. To obstruct federal civil rights initiatives, Southern Democrats routinely deployed Senate filibusters, leveraging their committee chairmanships and procedural rules to delay or defeat bills perceived as eroding local control over race relations.[7] For example, in 1957, senators from the South filibustered the first civil rights bill since Reconstruction, requiring Republican votes to invoke cloture after extended debate, as Democrats split regionally with Northern members supporting passage.[7] This pattern persisted into the 1960s, where Southern Democratic opposition to the Civil Rights Act of 1964, including a 75-day filibuster led by figures like Richard Russell of Georgia, underscored their commitment to defending segregation as a bulwark against federal overreach that they contended would exacerbate racial tensions rather than resolve them.[7] Such tactics, rooted in parliamentary traditions, allowed Southern Democrats to portray their resistance as principled defense of constitutional federalism amid mounting national pressure for change.[24]Economic Policies: Agrarianism, Low Taxes, and Anti-Union Stance
Southern Democrats prioritized an agrarian economic model that emphasized rural self-sufficiency, family farming, and the dominance of cash crops such as cotton, tobacco, and rice, reflecting the region's historical reliance on agriculture from the antebellum period through much of the 20th century.[29] This stance drew from Jeffersonian ideals of an independent yeoman farmer class, opposing northern industrial favoritism and protective tariffs that inflated costs for southern exports and imports needed for farming.[30] In practice, they supported federal agricultural subsidies and programs like the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1933, which aimed to stabilize crop prices by reducing surpluses, thereby aiding southern planters while transforming the region's three-crop system toward diversification.[31] However, their agrarianism often preserved a hierarchical plantation economy dependent on low-wage labor, resisting broader industrialization that might disrupt rural power structures.[29] On taxation, Southern Democrats historically advocated low federal and state taxes to avoid burdening the agrarian sector with fiscal policies geared toward northern manufacturing interests, favoring revenue measures that minimally impacted agricultural producers.[32] They opposed high protective tariffs, such as those in the Tariff of 1828 (derisively called the "Tariff of Abominations"), which raised duties on imported goods to 50% on average and disproportionately harmed southern exporters by provoking retaliatory foreign tariffs on cotton.[33] In the 20th century, this evolved into support for regressive state-level sales taxes over progressive income taxes, maintaining low corporate and property tax rates to sustain an economy reliant on cheap land and labor rather than heavy public investment.[29] By the mid-1900s, southern states under Democratic control consistently ranked among the lowest in per capita taxation, with figures like South Carolina's effective tax rate on the wealthy remaining under 5% of income in the 1950s, prioritizing fiscal restraint to preserve local autonomy.[29] Southern Democrats maintained a staunch anti-union position, viewing organized labor as a northern import that threatened the low-cost, non-wage labor systems underpinning southern agriculture and nascent industry.[34] This opposition dated to the post-Civil War era, where they resisted federal interventions like the Wagner Act of 1935 by diluting its enforcement in the South through congressional amendments and state-level barriers, ensuring union membership remained below 10% in southern states by 1940 compared to over 30% nationally.[35] Leaders such as Senator James Eastland of Mississippi filibustered pro-union bills in the 1940s and 1950s, arguing that unions would inflate wages and disrupt racial labor hierarchies essential to agrarian profitability.[19] Their resistance contributed to the South's enduring right-to-work culture, with states like Texas and Georgia enacting such laws by the 1940s to deter unionization and attract investment on terms favorable to landowners.[34] This stance persisted despite wartime labor shortages, as southern Democrats prioritized maintaining cheap, flexible agricultural workforces over collective bargaining rights.[35]Historical Evolution
Antebellum Period and Party Formation (1828–1861)
The Democratic Party coalesced in 1828 around Andrew Jackson's presidential candidacy, with Southern states providing crucial backing due to Jackson's Tennessee roots, military heroism, and emphasis on states' rights against federal overreach, as seen in his opposition to the Second Bank of the United States.[36] In the 1828 election, Jackson carried every Southern state except Kentucky, capturing 56% of the national popular vote and 178 electoral votes, as Southern voters aligned with the party's agrarian populism that favored small government, low tariffs, and protection of local economic interests tied to cotton and slavery.[37] This formation marked a shift from the earlier Democratic-Republican coalition, solidifying Southern Democrats as a faction prioritizing white male suffrage expansion, Indian removal for land acquisition (as in the 1830 Indian Removal Act leading to the Trail of Tears), and resistance to Northern mercantilism.[36] The Nullification Crisis of 1832–1833 highlighted internal tensions within Southern Democrats, as South Carolina, under John C. Calhoun's influence, declared federal tariffs of 1828 and 1832 null and void, arguing states' rights allowed rejection of laws harming the South's export-driven economy.[38] Jackson, a staunch unionist, responded with the Force Bill authorizing military enforcement, yet compromised via the Tariff of 1833, revealing the party's dual commitment to federal authority when secession threatened but states' sovereignty as a core principle to shield Southern institutions, including slavery, from external interference.[38] Calhoun's exposition of nullification doctrine, rooted in compact theory of the Constitution, influenced subsequent Southern Democratic rhetoric framing federal policies as threats to regional autonomy and property in slaves.[39] Expansionist policies under Democratic presidents like James K. Polk fueled slavery debates, with the Mexican-American War (1846–1848) adding vast territories where Southern Democrats demanded equal rights for slaveholders, opposing the Wilmot Proviso's ban on slavery in new lands.[40] The 1854 Kansas-Nebraska Act, championed by Southern Democrats alongside Stephen Douglas, introduced popular sovereignty—allowing territories to vote on slavery—repealing the 1820 Missouri Compromise line and intensifying "bleeding Kansas" violence over slave state balance.[41] The 1857 Dred Scott v. Sandford ruling, penned by Democratic Chief Justice Roger Taney, declared Congress powerless to exclude slavery from territories and slaves ineligible for citizenship, vindicating Southern Democratic arguments that slavery constituted protected property under the Fifth Amendment.[40] By 1860, slavery's territorial extension fractured the party at its Baltimore convention, where Southern delegates rejected Douglas's popular sovereignty platform lacking explicit federal slave code protections, seceding to nominate John C. Breckinridge on a states' rights agenda demanding congressional enforcement of slave property recovery across states.[42] Breckinridge garnered 72 Southern electoral votes, underscoring Southern Democrats' prioritization of slavery's expansion and defense against perceived Northern aggression, which they viewed as existential threats to the South's labor system and social hierarchy.[42] This schism reflected the faction's evolution into uncompromising guardians of sectional interests, where states' rights served as the constitutional mechanism to preserve slavery amid rising abolitionism.[43]Civil War, Reconstruction, and Southern Redemption (1861–1900)
Southern Democrats, viewing the election of Republican Abraham Lincoln on November 6, 1860, as a direct threat to slavery and states' rights, spearheaded the secession movement.[44] The Democratic Party had fractured at its 1860 convention, with Southern delegates rejecting Stephen A. Douglas's popular sovereignty stance and nominating John C. Breckinridge, who secured 72 electoral votes primarily from slaveholding states.[45] South Carolina seceded first on December 20, 1860, followed by Mississippi on January 9, 1861, Florida on January 10, Alabama on January 11, Georgia on January 19, Louisiana on January 26, and Texas on February 1, forming the Confederate States of America.[46] Jefferson Davis, a longtime Democrat and former U.S. Senator from Mississippi, was elected Confederate president on February 18, 1861, reflecting the party's dominance in Southern leadership./) During the Civil War (1861–1865), Southern Democrats governed the Confederacy, prioritizing defense of agrarian interests, low tariffs, and decentralized authority while mobilizing resources for the conflict.[47] The war's devastation, including over 258,000 Confederate deaths and widespread economic ruin, intensified Democratic resolve against Northern-imposed policies post-Appomattox.[48] Following the war, President Andrew Johnson, a Democrat and former Tennessee senator, initially pursued lenient terms for former Confederates, issuing pardons and advocating quick restoration of Southern states, but clashed with Radical Republicans over black enfranchisement and federal protections.[49] Reconstruction (1865–1877) saw Southern Democrats vehemently oppose Radical Republican measures, including the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments, which abolished slavery, granted citizenship, and protected voting rights.[50] They decried "carpetbagger" and "scalawag" collaborations with freedmen as corrupt misrule, forming paramilitary groups like the Ku Klux Klan, established in Pulaski, Tennessee, in December 1865, to terrorize Republican voters, officeholders, and African Americans through intimidation, whippings, and murders.[51] Federal responses, such as the Enforcement Acts of 1870–1871 and President Ulysses S. Grant's suspensions of habeas corpus, temporarily curbed violence but failed to dismantle underlying resistance. The Redemption era, led by "Redeemer" Democrats, culminated in the regaining of state governments through electoral violence, fraud, and mobilization of white voters. North Carolina's Democrats seized the legislature in 1870 via the Kirk-Holden War, employing militias against Republican incumbents.[52] Similar successes occurred in Georgia (1871), Texas (1873), and other states, emphasizing fiscal retrenchment, reduced taxes, and white supremacy. The disputed 1876 presidential election between Republican Rutherford B. Hayes and Democrat Samuel Tilden resolved via the Compromise of 1877, which awarded Hayes the presidency on March 2, 1877, in exchange for withdrawing the last federal troops from Louisiana and South Carolina on April 24, 1877, effectively ending Reconstruction. By 1900, Redeemers had entrenched Democratic one-party rule, enacting constitutions and laws initiating disenfranchisement—such as literacy tests and poll taxes—and segregationist policies, restoring pre-war social hierarchies while prioritizing low-debt governance and agricultural economies.[53]Solid South Dominance and Jim Crow Era (1900–1932)
The Solid South achieved unchallenged Democratic hegemony in the early 20th century, with the party controlling all state legislatures, governorships, and congressional seats across the former Confederate states from 1900 to 1932.[54] This era featured minimal Republican presence, as the party held fewer than 10% of Southern congressional seats on average, confined mostly to black-majority districts or border areas.[54] Democratic primaries effectively served as the decisive elections, given the negligible general election opposition, fostering intra-party factionalism between agrarian conservatives and emerging urban progressives while excluding non-Democrats.[55] Electoral loyalty manifested in presidential contests, where the 11 ex-Confederate states plus Kentucky and Oklahoma uniformly supported Democratic nominees from William Jennings Bryan in 1900 through Al Smith in 1928, amassing over 90% of the vote in Deep South states like Mississippi and South Carolina.[56] Voter turnout among whites remained high, but systemic barriers ensured black participation neared zero; for instance, in Louisiana, black registration fell from 130,000 in 1896 to 1,342 by 1904 following constitutional revisions.[57] These mechanisms—poll taxes averaging $1-2 annually (equivalent to a day's wages for many), literacy tests requiring interpretation of constitutional passages, and grandfather clauses exempting pre-1867 voters or descendants—in Southern constitutions like North Carolina's 1900 suffrage amendment and Alabama's 1901 provisions—disenfranchised over 90% of eligible black men by 1910.[57][58] Jim Crow enforcement peaked under Democratic state governments, mandating racial separation in railroads (e.g., Tennessee's 1903 law), schools, and public accommodations, with penalties including fines up to $500 or imprisonment for violations.[55] Southern Democrats justified these as preserving social order and states' rights, often invoking biological and cultural rationales amid rising lynchings—over 1,200 documented between 1900 and 1932, concentrated in Mississippi (over 500) and Georgia. White primaries, codified in Texas (1903), Georgia (1900), and Mississippi (1902), barred black participation in nominating contests, rendering general elections perfunctory and entrenching white supremacy as the party's foundational tenet.[59] This regime correlated with economic stagnation, as Democratic policies prioritized low taxes and agrarian subsidies over industrialization, yielding per capita incomes in the South at 50-60% of the national average by 1930.[60] Tensions simmered over Progressive Era reforms, with Southern Democrats like James K. Vardaman of Mississippi (governor 1904-1908) advocating strict segregation while opposing federal interventions, yet accommodating Woodrow Wilson's 1912 victory, which saw federal offices resegregated.[55] By 1932, amid the Great Depression, the Solid South endured despite Al Smith's 1928 Catholicism sparking rare Republican inroads in border states like Virginia and North Carolina, where Hoover captured 45-50% of the vote, foreshadowing New Deal realignments without yet fracturing core allegiance.[56]New Deal Accommodation and Growing Tensions (1933–1960)
Southern Democrats provided crucial support for President Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal programs initiated in 1933, enabling passage of key legislation amid the Great Depression. With Democratic majorities in Congress bolstered by the Solid South's near-unanimous representation, Roosevelt secured votes from conservative Southern congressmen by refraining from aggressive civil rights measures that might alienate them. For instance, he declined to endorse the Costigan-Wagner anti-lynching bill in 1935, prioritizing economic relief over federal intervention in Southern racial practices.[61] New Deal agencies like the Agricultural Adjustment Administration (AAA) disproportionately benefited white Southern farmers through price supports and crop reductions, often at the expense of black sharecroppers evicted to meet quotas, while programs such as the Tennessee Valley Authority advanced rural electrification and infrastructure in the region.[62] Accommodation extended to labor policies, where Southern exemptions preserved low-wage agriculture; the National Recovery Administration codes frequently ignored minimum wages in Southern industries, and the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 excluded agricultural and domestic workers—predominantly in the South—from coverage to gain senatorial approval.[61] This bipartisan conservative coalition of Southern Democrats and Republicans began forming by 1937, obstructing further expansive reforms like the Wagner National Health Bill, as Southern leaders grew wary of federal encroachments threatening local autonomy and fiscal conservatism.[63] Despite these programs aiding economic recovery—Southern per capita income rose from $285 in 1933 to $456 by 1940—administration often reinforced segregation, with Civilian Conservation Corps camps racially separated and Works Progress Administration jobs allocated by local customs.[62] Tensions escalated post-World War II under President Harry Truman, whose 1946 Committee on Civil Rights produced the 1948 report To Secure These Rights, advocating anti-lynching laws, poll tax abolition, and fair employment practices—proposals that provoked Southern backlash against perceived threats to states' rights.[64] At the 1948 Democratic National Convention, the adoption of a civil rights plank led 35 Southern delegates to bolt, forming the States' Rights Democratic Party (Dixiecrats) under Governor Strom Thurmond, who campaigned on preserving segregation and local control.[5] The Dixiecrats secured 2.4% of the popular vote and electoral votes from four Deep South states (Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina), totaling 39 votes, signaling fractures in the Democratic coalition without derailing Truman's victory.[6] Throughout the 1950s, Southern Democrats maintained congressional dominance, filibustering civil rights bills like the 1957 Civil Rights Act, which passed only after dilutions to appease senators such as Richard Russell of Georgia.[24] Ideological rifts deepened as national Democrats increasingly aligned with emerging civil rights advocacy, yet Southern loyalty endured electorally, delivering all former Confederate states to John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson in 1960 despite growing unease over federal judicial interventions like Brown v. Board of Education (1954).[8] This period marked the onset of realignment pressures, with Southern voters' racial conservatism clashing against the party's northern liberal wing, foreshadowing deeper schisms.[65]Civil Rights Era Schisms and Dixiecrat Challenges (1960–1980)
The Democratic Party's deepening commitment to civil rights in the early 1960s exacerbated longstanding divisions with its Southern wing, as national platforms increasingly endorsed federal intervention against segregation. At the 1960 Democratic National Convention, the party adopted a platform pledging to protect voting rights and eliminate discrimination in employment and education, prompting unease among Southern delegates who prioritized states' rights.[66] John F. Kennedy's nomination proceeded despite these tensions, but the platform's civil rights provisions foreshadowed future conflicts, with Southern Democrats viewing them as encroachments on local autonomy.[66] These schisms intensified with the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which faced a 75-day Senate filibuster led by Southern Democrats including Richard Russell of Georgia, Robert Byrd of West Virginia, and Strom Thurmond of South Carolina, comprising 21 of the 22 opposing Democratic senators.[7] Only Texas Senator Ralph Yarborough, a Southern Democrat, voted in favor among the region's senators, while the final Senate passage relied on Republican votes to invoke cloture by 71-29.[7][67] President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the act on July 2, 1964, but the Southern Democratic bloc's near-unanimous opposition highlighted irreconcilable differences, accelerating party realignment.[68] In response, Thurmond switched to the Republican Party on September 16, 1964, becoming the first prominent Southern senator to defect over civil rights enforcement, citing the national Democrats' abandonment of federalism principles.[69][70] The Dixiecrat legacy, originating from the 1948 States' Rights Democratic Party revolt against Truman's civil rights agenda, persisted through third-party challenges embodying Southern resistance. Many Southern Democrats aligned with segregationist causes that overlapped with white supremacist sentiments, including ties to groups like the White Citizens' Councils, which collaborated with Democratic politicians in efforts to maintain racial segregation.[71][72] In 1968, Alabama Governor George Wallace, a Democrat, ran as the American Independent Party candidate, securing 13.5% of the popular vote and 46 electoral votes from five Deep South states, drawing support from disaffected Dixiecrats opposed to federal desegregation mandates.[73] Wallace's campaign echoed Dixiecrat emphases on states' rights and opposition to "forced busing," fracturing the Democratic vote and underscoring the Southern wing's alienation from Hubert Humphrey's national ticket.[74] By the 1970s, while some Southern Democrats accommodated civil rights advancements to retain power, the faction's influence waned amid electoral losses and further defections, with these associations largely ending as the Democratic Party embraced civil rights under leaders like Lyndon B. Johnson. Jimmy Carter, a Georgia Democrat and former governor, navigated these divides in his 1976 presidential bid by affirming civil rights compliance while appealing to Southern conservatives through evangelical and rural outreach, winning every Southern state except Virginia.[75][76] However, Carter's victory represented a transitional moment, as national Democratic policies continued eroding the Solid South's loyalty, with white Southern voters increasingly shifting toward Republicans by 1980.[8]Party Realignment and Contemporary Decline (1981–Present)
The realignment of Southern voters away from the Democratic Party intensified during the presidency of Ronald Reagan, whose appeals to economic conservatism, traditional values, and limited government resonated with white Southerners disillusioned by the national Democratic Party's liberal shift on social issues. In the 1980 presidential election, Reagan carried ten of the eleven former Confederate states, losing only Georgia to incumbent Democrat Jimmy Carter.[77] This pattern persisted, with Republican presidential candidates winning a majority of ex-Confederate states in every election since 1980, including sweeps in 1984, 1988, and 2004.[77] Congressional realignment lagged behind presidential trends, as incumbency advantages and local loyalties sustained many Southern Democrats in the House and Senate through the 1980s and early 1990s. On the eve of the 1994 elections, Democrats held roughly twice as many Southern congressional seats as Republicans. The 1994 "Republican Revolution," led by House Speaker Newt Gingrich, shattered this hold, with Republicans netting 52 House seats nationwide, many from the South, driven by voter backlash against gun control, welfare reform debates, and perceived federal overreach. Senate flips in states like Tennessee and North Carolina further eroded Democratic dominance. The pace of decline accelerated in subsequent decades amid national party polarization, where conservative Southern voters found the Democratic platform increasingly incompatible with their views on issues like abortion, gun rights, and immigration. The 2010 Tea Party wave delivered additional Republican gains, including state legislative supermajorities across the South, enabling redistricting that solidified GOP advantages. By 2020, Republicans controlled all Southern governorships except Louisiana and Georgia, and Democratic U.S. senators from the region were limited to Georgia's Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock, reflecting reliance on urban and minority voter bases rather than the conservative white electorate that once defined Southern Democracy. Contemporary Southern Democrats, numbering fewer than a dozen in the House from deep South states as of 2025, primarily represent majority-minority districts and align more closely with national party orthodoxy, marking the effective end of the conservative Southern Democratic faction. This decline stems from a generational voter shift, where post-civil rights white Southerners prioritized ideological consistency over historical party ties, as evidenced by data showing conservative racial attitudes predicting Republican affiliation by the late 20th century. Remaining holdouts, such as moderate figures like former Senator Zell Miller, retired or switched parties, underscoring the causal role of nationalization in rendering regional deviations untenable.[78]Major Controversies and Debates
Filibusters Against Federal Civil Rights Mandates
Southern Democrats in the U.S. Senate repeatedly deployed the filibuster to obstruct federal civil rights bills, viewing them as unconstitutional encroachments on states' rights and local customs of racial segregation.[7] This tactic, requiring a supermajority for cloture until 1975, allowed a minority of senators—often 18 to 20 from the South—to delay or derail legislation addressing lynching, voting discrimination, and public accommodations.[79] Empirical records show these efforts succeeded in killing multiple proposals outright while forcing dilutions in others, though eventual bipartisan coalitions, including substantial Republican support, enabled passage of landmark acts after prolonged debates.[68] Efforts began prominently with anti-lynching bills in the 1920s and intensified in the 1930s, when Southern senators filibustered measures like the 1935 Costigan-Wagner bill, which aimed to impose federal penalties on states failing to prosecute lynchings.[80] Senator Richard B. Russell Jr. of Georgia orchestrated a six-day filibuster against it, arguing federal intervention would undermine Southern self-governance and jury systems, resulting in the bill's defeat.[81] Similar obstructions blocked earlier Dyer bills in 1922 and subsequent Wagner-Gavagan proposals through the late 1930s, preserving state-level impunity for over 4,000 documented lynchings since 1882, as lynchings correlated with weak local enforcement rather than federal absence.[82] The 1957 Civil Rights Act, focused on voting rights enforcement via federal oversight of voter registration, faced Senator J. Strom Thurmond's solo filibuster on August 28, 1957, lasting 24 hours and 18 minutes—the longest individual Senate speech on record.[83] Thurmond, a South Carolina Democrat, read from phone books and historical texts to protest provisions empowering the Attorney General to sue for voting denials, claiming they bypassed state sovereignty.[84] Though the filibuster failed to halt the bill, which passed 60–15 the next day with Republican votes providing the margin for cloture, it highlighted Southern Democrats' unified resistance, as 18 of 19 Southern senators opposed it.[83] The 1964 Civil Rights Act provoked the Senate's longest sustained filibuster, spanning 75 days of continuous debate from March to June 1964, led by a bloc of 21 Southern Democrats including Russell, Thurmond, Sam Ervin of North Carolina, and Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia.[85] Byrd capped the effort with a 14-hour, 13-minute address on June 9–10, decrying the bill's public accommodations and employment nondiscrimination mandates as federal overreach violating property rights and interstate commerce limits.[86] Cloture succeeded 71–29 on June 10—the first since 1927—thanks to 27 of 33 Republican senators voting yes, overcoming the Southern holdout; the bill then passed 73–27.[86] Southern Democrats' 0% support rate (1–20 in the Senate) underscored their filibuster's role in defending Jim Crow structures against causal pressures from federal enforcement.[87] These filibusters, while rooted in constitutional arguments for federalism, empirically delayed civil rights advancements until demographic shifts and executive pressures—such as President Lyndon B. Johnson's moral appeals post-Birmingham bombings—mobilized cloture thresholds.[88] Post-1964, similar tactics waned as party realignments eroded Southern Democratic ranks, but they exemplified how procedural tools preserved regional autonomy amid national integration mandates.[89]The Southern Manifesto and Massive Resistance
The Southern Manifesto, formally titled the Declaration of Constitutional Principles, was a document drafted and issued on March 12, 1956, by 101 members of Congress from Southern states in direct response to the U.S. Supreme Court's Brown v. Board of Education rulings of 1954 and 1955, which declared racial segregation in public schools unconstitutional.[26] [90] It was signed by 19 senators and 82 representatives, comprising nearly all congressional members from Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, and Virginia, as well as most from North Carolina and one each from Tennessee and Texas.[26] The manifesto condemned the Brown decisions as "a clear abuse of judicial power" that usurped legislative authority, violated the Tenth Amendment by infringing on reserved state powers, and disregarded historical understandings of the Fourteenth Amendment's equal protection clause, which the signers argued had never intended to mandate racial integration.[91] [27] It pledged to use "all lawful means" to resist the rulings, emphasizing restoration of states' rights and urging Southern states to exhaust legal remedies while avoiding violence or interposition doctrines deemed unconstitutional.[27] [90] Primarily authored by Democratic senators like Walter F. George of Georgia and Richard Russell of Georgia, with input from Strom Thurmond of South Carolina, the manifesto reflected the dominant position of Southern Democrats, who controlled Congress from those states and viewed federal judicial intervention as an overreach into local education policies traditionally managed by states.[26] [27] No Republicans from the South signed it, underscoring the partisan alignment of Southern congressional opposition at the time.[26] The document explicitly rejected the notion that Brown settled the issue irrevocably, calling for Congress to propose amendments or legislation to counteract the perceived judicial legislation, and it framed resistance as a defense of constitutional federalism rather than endorsement of segregation per se.[91] [90] The manifesto served as a catalyst for "massive resistance," a coordinated strategy of legislative, administrative, and extralegal measures adopted by Southern state governments—predominantly under Democratic leadership—to evade or nullify school desegregation mandates.[92] The term was popularized in a February 1956 speech by Virginia Senator Harry F. Byrd Sr., a Democrat and architect of the state's resistance policies, who advocated total opposition to integration as a matter of principle.[92] Virginia enacted a comprehensive package of laws in September 1956, including the School Placement Act for segregated pupil assignments, tuition grants for private schooling to bypass public systems, and authority for local school boards to close facilities facing integration orders, which led to the shuttering of schools in Warren County, Charlottesville, Norfolk, and Front Royal in 1958–1959.[92] These measures were struck down by federal courts, including in James v. Almond (1959), forcing partial reopening under desegregated conditions, but Prince Edward County closed its entire public school system from 1959 to 1964, funding private white academies with tax credits while denying education to Black students.[92] Similar tactics proliferated across the South: Alabama's Democratic Governor James F. "Big Jim" Folsom and legislature passed laws in 1956 authorizing school closings and creating state sovereignty commissions to investigate "subversion"; Georgia implemented pupil placement laws and county unit systems to maintain segregation; and Mississippi established a Sovereignty Commission in 1956 to monitor and obstruct civil rights activities.[93] In Arkansas, Governor Orval Faubus, a Democrat, deployed the National Guard in 1957 to block nine Black students from Little Rock's Central High School, prompting federal troops under President Eisenhower to enforce integration.[93] These efforts delayed widespread desegregation; as of 1960, fewer than 1% of Black students in the Deep South attended integrated schools, with Alabama at 0%, Mississippi at 0.001%, and South Carolina at 0.06%.[94] Massive resistance relied on state Democratic majorities to enact evasion statutes, interposition resolutions echoing nullification rhetoric, and economic pressures like teacher purges, but it ultimately faltered against federal enforcement via the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Supreme Court rulings like Griffin v. County School Board of Prince Edward County (1964), which invalidated funding disparities.[92][94]Perceptions of Racism Versus Defense of Local Autonomy
Southern Democrats' opposition to federal civil rights interventions in the mid-20th century sparked enduring debate over whether their stance stemmed primarily from racial animus or from principled commitment to local autonomy and states' rights under the U.S. Constitution. Critics, including contemporary civil rights advocates and later historians, often interpreted these positions as thinly veiled defenses of white supremacy, arguing that invocations of federalism served to perpetuate racial segregation without explicit admission of prejudice.[95] In contrast, many Southern Democrats framed their resistance as safeguarding community self-governance, local traditions, and the Tenth Amendment's reservation of powers to the states, viewing Supreme Court rulings like Brown v. Board of Education (1954) as unconstitutional overreaches into education and social policy.[27] The Southern Manifesto, formally the "Declaration of Constitutional Principles" issued on March 12, 1956, exemplified this defense-of-autonomy perspective, signed by 19 U.S. senators and 82 House members—predominantly Southern Democrats—who condemned the Brown decision for disrupting the "separate but equal" doctrine upheld in Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) and urged exhaustion of "lawful means" to reverse it, without calling for violence or nullification.[27] [26] The document emphasized reliance on the Constitution as "the fundamental law of the land" and decried judicial "encroachments on rights reserved to the States," portraying federal mandates as threats to democratic self-rule rather than endorsing racial hierarchy outright.[91] Proponents saw this as a bulwark against centralized power eroding regional differences in schooling and customs, rooted in post-Reconstruction understandings of federalism where states managed internal affairs like public education.[7] Detractors, however, contended that the manifesto's timing and signatories' records revealed an underlying motive to maintain racial separation, as the policies it implicitly protected—Jim Crow laws—explicitly enforced segregation from the 1890s onward.[1] Prominent figures like Senator Strom Thurmond of South Carolina reinforced the local-autonomy narrative during his record-setting 24-hour, 18-minute filibuster against the Civil Rights Act of 1957 on August 28–29, reciting state voting laws and constitutional arguments to assert that existing protections sufficed without federal intrusion.[84] [83] Thurmond contended the bill violated states' rights by imposing uniform national standards on suffrage, potentially disrupting local electoral traditions refined over decades, and invoked the Tenth Amendment to argue against "cruel and unusual punishment" via federal coercion.[84] Similarly, Alabama Governor George Wallace's 1963 inaugural address and "Stand in the Schoolhouse Door" episode highlighted sovereignty claims, declaring it his "solemn obligation" to defend the state's rights against federal orders integrating the University of Alabama, framing compliance as submission to "tyranny" over local educational control. [96] Wallace's rhetoric intertwined segregationist pledges with Jeffersonian liberty, appealing to Southern voters who prioritized community autonomy amid fears of cultural homogenization.[97] These defenses coexisted with overt racial rhetoric in some contexts, complicating perceptions; for instance, Wallace's "segregation forever" vow in the same 1963 speech blurred lines between autonomy and racial preservation, leading opponents to dismiss states' rights as euphemistic cover for discrimination.[97] Empirical data from the era, such as the near-unanimous Southern Democratic support for segregationist measures in Congress—e.g., only one Southern senator voted for the 1964 Civil Rights Act—fueled interpretations of systemic racism over abstract federalism concerns.[7] Yet primary sources reveal a causal interplay: Jim Crow's local entrenchment after 1877 reflected not just prejudice but entrenched governance structures where states exercised broad police powers over social relations, defended as democratic experimentation against one-size-fits-all federalism.[1] Modern reassessments, acknowledging institutional biases in post-1960s historiography, note that while racial motivations were undeniable, the autonomy argument resonated authentically with constituents valuing decentralized authority, influencing party realignment as national Democrats embraced federal activism.[8]Electoral History and Representation
Presidential Election Outcomes
Following the end of Reconstruction, the eleven former Confederate states—Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia—delivered their electoral votes to Democratic presidential candidates in every election from 1880 through 1944, reflecting the dominance of Southern Democrats who enforced one-party rule through disenfranchisement of Black voters and suppression of Republican opposition.[10] This "Solid South" provided a reliable bloc of electoral votes, often exceeding 100 by the mid-20th century, crucial for Democratic nominees despite national losses, as seen in Grover Cleveland's 1888 popular vote win without the presidency and Al Smith’s 1928 defeat where southern loyalty held firm.[3] The first significant fracture occurred in 1948 amid President Harry Truman's civil rights proposals, prompting Southern Democrats to bolt and nominate Strom Thurmond as the States' Rights Democratic (Dixiecrat) candidate, who carried Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, and South Carolina with 39 electoral votes and 2.4% of the national popular vote, while Truman secured the remaining southern states and the presidency.[98] Democratic nominees Adlai Stevenson won all southern states in 1952 and 1956 despite national defeats to Dwight Eisenhower, and John F. Kennedy narrowly carried the region in 1960 with 51% of the southern popular vote, aided by his selection of Lyndon B. Johnson as running mate. The 1964 election marked the decisive unraveling, as Barry Goldwater's opposition to the Civil Rights Act of 1964 attracted white Southern voters alienated by Johnson's support for federal intervention; Goldwater won five Deep South states—Alabama (69.5% popular vote), Georgia (54.1%), Louisiana (56.2%), Mississippi (87.1%), and South Carolina (58.9%)—breaking the Solid South pattern for the first time for a Republican.[99][100] In 1968, segregationist George Wallace's American Independent candidacy captured Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Louisiana, and Mississippi (46 electoral votes), with Richard Nixon taking other southern states, further eroding Democratic holds. Jimmy Carter, a Southern Democrat from Georgia, briefly revived regional support in 1976, winning ten of the eleven former Confederate states (all except Virginia) with 54.3% of the southern popular vote, leveraging his outsider appeal and post-Watergate backlash against Gerald Ford.[101][102] However, Carter lost most of the South to Ronald Reagan in 1980, retaining only Georgia and West Virginia (not Confederate). Subsequent Democratic nominees, including Bill Clinton in 1992 and 1996, won scattered southern states like Arkansas, Louisiana, and Tennessee, but none secured a majority of the region's electoral votes, signaling the completion of the partisan realignment where white Southern voters shifted to Republicans. By the 2000s, Democratic presidential candidates rarely exceeded 40% in most southern states, with exceptions in diverse areas like Georgia in 2020.[8]Congressional and State-Level Performance
Southern Democrats exercised near-unanimous dominance in congressional representation from the 11 former Confederate states (Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia) from the end of Reconstruction through the mid-20th century. In the U.S. Senate, all 22 seats from these states were held by Democrats as of 1960, reflecting the Solid South's electoral lock that ensured long tenures and committee chairmanships via seniority rules.[8][103] In the House of Representatives, Democratic strength in the Southern delegation exceeded 90% from the 1920s to the 1960s, with Southern members chairing key committees like Rules, Ways and Means, and Appropriations into the 1970s due to uninterrupted service.[103] This control allowed Southern Democrats to wield disproportionate influence, often blocking civil rights legislation through filibusters while supporting economic measures like New Deal programs that benefited their agricultural constituencies.[103] The passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Voting Rights Act of 1965 accelerated partisan realignment, prompting defections such as Strom Thurmond's switch to the Republican Party in 1964 and eroding Democratic incumbency advantages.[8] By the 1994 midterm elections, Republicans captured a majority of Southern House seats for the first time since Reconstruction, with Democrats retaining fewer than half of the region's approximately 130 House districts.[103] In the Senate, Democratic seats dwindled from 22 in 1960 to just 3 by the 2020s, as states like West Virginia (2005), Arkansas (1996), and North Carolina (2010) flipped to Republican control.[8] Today, Southern Democrats hold isolated seats, such as Georgia's two Senate positions (won in 2020-2021 runoffs), primarily in urban or diversifying areas, while rural districts remain solidly Republican.[103] At the state level, Southern Democrats maintained trifectas—control of the governorship, both legislative chambers, and often other offices—in all 11 states from the early 1900s through at least the 1960s, facilitating the enactment and enforcement of Jim Crow laws and poll taxes.[104] Governors like Alabama's George Wallace (1963–1967, 1971–1979) exemplified this era's resistance to federal desegregation mandates.[104] Democratic legislatures persisted longer than governorships in many states; for instance, Texas held Democratic majorities until 2003, and Alabama until 2010.[104] Realignment progressed unevenly: Republicans secured trifectas in Florida (1999), Georgia (2005), Mississippi (2012), and others by the 2010s, driven by white voter shifts post-civil rights and demographic changes increasing nonwhite electorates.[104] As of 2025, Democrats retain trifectas only in Virginia (since 2020), with fragmented control elsewhere amid Republican dominance in 10 of the 11 states' legislatures and 9 governorships.[104]| State | Year Democratic Trifecta Ended | Notes on Shift |
|---|---|---|
| Alabama | 2010 | Republican gains in legislature post-2010.[104] |
| Arkansas | 2014 | Steady Republican ascendance since 1960s.[104] |
| Florida | 1999 | Early flip among Southern states.[104] |
| Georgia | 2005 | Urban Democratic strongholds persist.[104] |
| Louisiana | N/A (intermittent) | No recent trifecta; divided control common.[104] |
| Mississippi | 2012 | Long Democratic hold until 1990s erosion.[104] |
| North Carolina | 2011 | Competitive but Republican-leaning post-2010.[104] |
| South Carolina | 2003 | Solid Republican since 1990s.[104] |
| Tennessee | 2011 | Shift accelerated in 2000s.[104] |
| Texas | 2003 | Legislature flipped last among major states.[104] |
| Virginia | Ongoing (2020–present) | Rare Democratic retention amid national trends.[104] |
