1967 Mississippi gubernatorial election
The 1967 Mississippi gubernatorial election took place on November 7, 1967, in order to elect the Governor of Mississippi. Incumbent Democrat Paul B. Johnson Jr. was term-limited, and could not run for reelection to a second term.
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County Results
Williams: 50-60% 60-70% 70-80% 80-90% >90% | |||||||||||||||||
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Elections in Mississippi |
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Democratic primary
No candidate received a majority in the Democratic primary, which featured seven contenders, so a runoff was held between the top two candidates.[1]
It was the first Democratic primary for the governorship since the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965, resulting in an accrued registration for Black voters going from 29,500 to 195,000, making overt segregationist rhetoric less acceptable, as the Citizens' Councils complained by asking the contestant "why our ideals of states' rights and racial segregation" were not being "featured in this campaign as in the past." On the other hand, the abolition of poll tax benefited many poor Whites, most of them were supporters of segregation. As a result, each one of the seven candidates aired support for segregation, although witn varying degrees.[1]
Waller, who prosecuted Byron De La Beckwith and attacked the Ku Klux Klan, additioned with attacks against civil rights "rabble-rousers", was the more moderate on the race question along with Winter, who had to embrace segregationnist rhetorics to stay in the run.
Barnett attempted to do a come-back but more militant segregationists complained he did not enough during the Ole Miss riot of 1962. Staunch segregationist Williams ironically used the least rhetoric since he could claim to have sacrificed his House career for Goldwater three years ago on 1964, although his supporters handed flyers telling that "if William F. Winter is elected governor, the Negroes will run Mississippi."[1][2]
The most segregationist candidate was Jimmy Swan, running on a promise to establish "FREE, private, SEGREGATED SCHOOLS for every white child in the State of Mississippi" in the first twelve months of his term, or else he would resign and publicly apologize. He called to save Mississippi "from the moral degeneracy of total mass integration that Washington has decreed for our children this fall", said that to granting equality to the Blacks was to make savagery the equal of civilization and promising to use extreme force against any Black urban riot, which he viewed as a "Communist monster", and openly courted the Klan, whose his campaign bodyguard Pat Massengale was member;[3] such rhetoric might have contributed to have relatively less extremist voters move to vote Barnett, viewed as more moderate, and similarly winning most extreme segregationists from Barnett[2][4] He always wore a white suit to demonstrate his beliefs on race.[5]
Vernon E. Brown, a 65-year-old tax assessor from Stone County, Mississippi,[6] and C. L. McKinley, a Creole pipefitter living in Pennsylvania, had no campaign organization.[1]
The runoff election was won by U.S. Representative John Bell Williams, who defeated state treasurer William Winter.
As was common at the time, the Democratic primary had higher turnout than the general election, as it was a given the Democrat would win. Black leaders avoided to publicly support a candidate, for fear he might lose voters. In some places, the MFDP called Blacks to boycott the primaries.[1]
Results
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | William Winter | 222,001 | 32.46 | |
Democratic | John Bell Williams | 197,778 | 28.92 | |
Democratic | Jimmy Swan | 124,361 | 18.18 | |
Democratic | Ross Barnett | 76,053 | 11.12 | |
Democratic | Bill Waller | 60,090 | 8.79 | |
Democratic | Vernon E. Brown | 2,051 | 0.30 | |
Democratic | C. L. McKinley | 1,671 | 0.24 | |
Total votes | 684,005 | 100.00 |
Runoff
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | John Bell Williams | 371,815 | 54.49 | |
Democratic | William Winter | 310,527 | 45.51 | |
Total votes | 682,342 | 100.00 |
General election
Campaign
Phillips, a former Democratic public service commissioner, had no running-mate. His previous nominee for lieutenant governor, Stanford Morse, endorsed Williams. Phillips later said that the GOP did not at the time realize the importance of offering full candidate slates.[9] The unopposed Democratic nominee for lieutenant governor, Charles L. Sullivan of Clarksdale, had defeated in his party's primary Governor Paul Johnson, who ran in 1967 for his former post of lieutenant governor. At the time Mississippi governors could not succeed themselves but could sit out a term and enter the next race four years later.[10] Sullivan earlier said that he could work with either Phillips or Williams, but he endorsed the Democratic nominee, having verbally sparred with Phillips at a meeting in Biloxi of the Mississippi Manufacturing Association.[11]
Clarke Reed of Greenville, who succeeded Yerger as state chairman in 1966, recalled that Phillips did not wish to run for governor again in 1967 but was persuaded to do so my party leaders in need of a candidate though there was little expectation of success.[12] For his second race, Phillips shed his past segregationist image and ran to the middle, as had Williams' unsuccessful primary opponent, state Treasurer William F. Winter, who ultimately won the governorship in 1979. Time magazine called Phillips "an erstwhile segregationist who this year appealed for an end to the racial rancor."[13] Phillips later said that his moderate stance hurt the Republicans at that time but that the party since "benefited from the things we did."[10]
In a television address, Phillips reaffirmed his belief in segregation but spoke in conciliatory language toward African Americans:
The influence of race ... is so dominant that it is utterly unrealistic to expect any significant progress in such vital fields as education, economic development, and federal-state relations until we have brought the race issue out into the open and begun, at least begun, to deal with it effectively. ... I advocate spending money to develop our underdeveloped human resources ... with the expectation of getting all that money back ... With God's help and your help, I will bring peace and harmony and material progress to Mississippi.[14]
The Meridian Star charged that Phillips had "made it plain that he is no conservative. He is a member of the Republican Party, not just here ... but at the national level."[15] The Clarion-Ledger judged Phillips' in his second race as "a weak candidate with a weak pitch" and termed his prospects as virtually "hopeless."[16]
Phillips took other heretical positions, having urged a "long-range master plan for education" and the reinstatement of compulsory attendance, which had been repealed in 1958.[17] Phillips questioned the need of the Mississippi Milk Commission, which he said kept the price of milk artificially too high.[18]
Presidential politics played some role in the 1967 campaign, as Williams stressed his friendship with George C. Wallace of Alabama, who was preparing for an independent candidacy in 1968. Phillips countered that only a Republican, perhaps Nixon or Governor Ronald Wilson Reagan of California, could defeat a national Democratic presidential nominee. Reagan cut a campaign commercial for Phillips; Maureen Reagan made some twenty appearances on Phillips' behalf at various places in the state.[19] Neighboring Governor Winthrop Rockefeller of Arkansas, younger brother of Nelson Rockefeller, spoke in Corinth and assisted Phillips in fundraising. Phillips raised $300,000 in the 1967 race.[20]
Williams rejected Phillips' pleas for debates, as had Paul Johnson in 1963. In fact, the congressman spent few days on the general election campaign trail and urged friends "to do the campaigning for me."[21] Williams, who had lost the lower part of his left arm while service in the United States Army Air Corps during World War II, was hospitalized during the campaign with a leg ailment, which also stemmed from war injuries.[22] At a $40 per person fundraiser attended by some five thousand and hosted by the state's congressional delegation, Williams vowed to "destroy that Republican crowd so bad that they won't be able to find a Rubel in the rubble."[23]
Endorsements
Phillips obtained the endorsement of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, which sent a rival delegation to the 1964 national party convention in Atlantic City, New Jersey, but he repudiated the support of that group.[24] The Freedom Democrats backed Phillips because he had expressed doubts that Williams as governor would be able to fight the desegregation policies of the then United States Department of Health, Education and Welfare.[25]
As in 1963, the Greenville Delta Democrat-Times endorsed Phillips, having hailed his racial-moderation speech as "frank, honest, courageous ... the unvarnished truth."[26] The paper claimed that Phillips had abandoned the earlier GOP efforts to "out-Dixiecrat the Dixiecrats," a reference to Strom Thurmond's 1948 presidential campaign.[26] An unidentified Republican told U.S. News and World Report that the GOP had "thrown off the tag of being a racist, segregationist party in the South." [27]
Results
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | John Bell Williams | 315,318 | 70.27 | |
Republican | Rubel Phillips | 133,379 | 29.73 | |
Total votes | 448,697 | 100.00 | ||
Democratic hold |
References
- J., B. (August 8, 1967). "The Mississippi Election Today". The Harvard Crimson. Retrieved 2019-05-23.
- Hawkins, James K. (2010-03-11). A Case Study of the Educational Reform Efforts of Former Mississippi Governor William F. Winter. Universal-Publishers. pp. 46–54. ISBN 9781599423111.
- Newton, Michael (2009-12-21). The Ku Klux Klan in Mississippi: A History. McFarland. pp. 174–175. ISBN 9780786457045.
- Wilkie, Curtis (2002-05-16). Dixie: A Personal Osyssey Through Historic Events That Shaped the Modern South. Simon and Schuster. p. 170. ISBN 9780743226042.
- McCain, William David (2008). The Journal of Mississippi History. Mississippi historical society. p. 386.
- New South. 1967. p. 98.
- "MS Governor D Primary 1967". Our Campaigns. Retrieved December 5, 2016.
- "MS Governor D Primary Runoff 1967". Our Campaigns. Retrieved December 5, 2016.
- "Challenging the Status Quo," p. 258
- "Challenging the Status Quo", p. 259
- Greenville Delta Democrat-Times, October 15, 26, 1967
- "Interview with Clarke Reed". docsouth.unc.edu. Retrieved May 12, 2014.
- Time, XC (November 17, 1967), p. 29
- Biloxi-Gulfport Daily Herald, October 4, 1967
- Meridian Star, October 13, 1967
- Jackson Clarion-Ledger, October 18, 1967
- Meridian Star, October 17, 1963; estimates were that 84,000 pupils were not attending school in Mississippi in 1967.
- Hattiesburg American, October 10, 1967
- Congressional Quarterly Weekly Report, XXV (November 10, 1967), pp. 2295-2296; Vicksburg Evening Post, September 23, 1967
- Hattiesburg American, November 1, 1967
- Jackson Daily News, October 25, 28, 1967; Jackson Clarion-Ledger, October 28, 1967
- Vicksburg Evening Post, October 25, 1963
- Jackson Clarion-Ledger, October 31, 1967
- Jackson Clarion-Leger, October 28, 1967
- U.S. News and World Report, LXII (November 20, 1967), p. 35
- Greenville Delta Democrat-Times, November 5, 1967
- U.S. News and World Report, November 20, 1967, p. 35
- "MS Governor 1967". Our Campaigns. Retrieved December 5, 2016.