Category Archives: Bye-Bye Trent

Comparing Repub Leaders-In-Waiting On Health and Civil Rights Issues

Frist and Nickles — is this the best the Repubs can do for Senate leadership? I say, keep trying Shrub…
I had my first experience with Google Answers over the weekend.
I’ve been thinking a lot lately about how Google Answers could be used for the public good: considering all of its answers are made public and searchable. This means, when one of us pays $10 or $20 to have a question answered, we can all benefit from the results.
So I thought I would try a little experiment, and signed up for the Google Answer service.
I haven’t send Google Answers my feedback yet — what do you think of its answer?
Saturday evening, at 10:25 PM (on 12/21/02) I submitted this question:

Of the top four contenders for Republican Senate Majority Leader, which have
the worst voting record on civil rights? (With specific examples.)

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Time Gives Lott’s Ousting Credit to Bloggers!

If Lott didn’t see the storm coming, it was in part because it was so slow in building. The papers did not make note of his comments until days after he had made them. But the stillness was broken by the hum of Internet “bloggers” who were posting their outrage and compiling rap sheets of Lott’s earlier comments.

Tripped Up By History
G.O.P. leader Trent Lott’s remarks on race raise a storm and a hot question: Have Republicans really outgrown their past?
By Dan Goodgame and Karen Tumulty for Time.

So There It Is! Trent Lott Resigns!

Yippie! The first success of my “Bye-Bye ‘insert corrupt politician here'” Series!
As of today, December 20, 2002, Trent Lott has stepped down as Leader of the Republican party.
Good work guys!
The bloggers and the popular press really worked together on this one!
Here’s a Washington Post story by Helen Dewar and Mike Allen (with
Jim VandeHei) to flesh out some of the details of his resignation:
Lott to Step Down as GOP Leader

Southern Senator Will Serve Out Term

Today’s announcement from Trent “Don’t let the door hit your butt on the way out” Lott:
“In the interest of pursuing the best possible agenda for the future of our country, I will not seek to remain as majority leader of the United States Senate for the 108th Congress, effective Jan. 6, 2003. To all those who offered me their friendship, support and prayers, I will be eternally grateful. I will continue to serve the people of Mississippi in the United States Senate.”

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Time On Lott and Reagan and Racism

I’m just reading this myself, but I thought I’d bring your attention to it:
Lott, Reagan and Republican Racism
If the GOP wants to attract black voters, argues TIME’s Jack White, it must confront the legacy not only of Trent Lott, but also of former President Reagan
By Jack White for Time magazine.

Then there was Reagan’s attempt, once he reached the White House in 1981, to reverse a long-standing policy of denying tax-exempt status to private schools that practice racial discrimination and grant an exemption to Bob Jones University. Lott’s conservative critics, quite rightly, made a big fuss about his filing of a brief arguing that BJU should get the exemption despite its racist ban on interracial dating. But true to their pattern of white-washing Reagan’s record on race, not one of Lott’s conservative critics said a mumblin’ word about the Gipper’s deep personal involvement. They don’t care to recall that when Lott suggested that Reagan’s regime take BJU’s side in a lawsuit against the Internal Revenue Service, Reagan responded, “We ought to do it.” Two years later the U.S. Supreme Court in a resounding 8-to-1 decision ruled that Reagan was dead wrong and reinstated the IRS’s power to deny BJU’s exemption.
Republican leaders and their apologists tend to go into a frenzy of denial when members of the liberal media cabal bring up these inconvenient facts. It’s that lack of candor, of course, that presents the biggest obstacle to George W. Bush’s commendable and long overdue campaign to persuade more African-Americans to defect from the Democrats to the Republicans. It’s doomed to fail until the GOP fesses up its past addiction to race-baiting, and makes a sincere attempt to kick the habit.

Is No. 2 Repub Nickles Much Better Than Lott?

Damn. Just what I was afraid of. The first guy that spoke up to oust Lott is only doing it because he wants the job. Fair enough, I guess.
It also looks like his civil rights voting record isn’t much better than Lott’s.
Well at least he doesn’t come out and say he wishes we were still a segregated nation. (Damn. Talk about the lesser of two evils.)
Does it have to be one or the other? Is there a Repub with enough senority to be Leader that also has an admirable civil rights record?
If not. What does that say about the Repubs? (Yes, my new name for them. I’ve just coined it here.)
Here’s the AP story on CNN:
Nickles, Lott share similar records
Both senators win high marks from conservative groups

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Whole Lotta Resignin To Do

We might have to wait till the new year for Lott to be ousted, but perhaps he’ll come to his senses and step down with whatever dignity he might have left and save us all a Lott of trouble.
Congress has a ton of other things to do, true, but I’d say this situation could serve to put a lot of other issues on hold until it is dealt with.
I, for one, am ready to keep the pressure on as long as it takes.
Here’s an excellent progress report from Howard Fineman (With Eleanor Clift and Martha Brantfor) for Newsweek:
Ghosts of the Past.

He (Lott) had begun his career as a staffer to an ardently segregationist congressman. Blacks have a dim view of his record

Conyers Calls on Lott to Resign

Letter from Congressman John Conyers, Jr., Ranking Member of the House Judiciary Committee and Dean of the Congressional Black Caucus to Republican Leader, Trent Lott calling for his resignation

…your remarks are so un-American that they disqualify you from continuing as the Majority Leader of the United States Senate therefore, I must call on you to resign…
Even after you had seen how much you had upset the public, you did not disavow what the Dixiecrat Party stood for. Whatever your choice of words, the plain intent was clear. The Dixiecrat Party’s agenda was to preserve segregated schools, segregated public facilities, and segregated armed forces, and to prevent African-Americans from voting.
Were you suggesting that America would have been better off if President Truman had not desegregated the armed forces? Were you suggesting that America would have been better off if the Nation’s modern the civil rights legislation had been blocked – if we had no Voting Rights Act, no Civil Rights Act of 1964, no Fair Housing Act and no African-American elected officials in Mississippi?

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NY Times Says: Fire Trent Lott

Fire Trent Lott

The birthday party controversy is only the latest evidence that Mr. Lott, the second most prominent elected official in the Republican Party, has never figured any of this out, or come to grips with the bad old days in his state. If he had, he could never have said that his state was “proud” of having given its electoral votes to Mr. Thurmond in 1948 — at a time when most black Mississippians were barred from voting and sometimes killed for making the attempt…
…unless the president wants to spend his next campaign explaining the majority leader’s behavior over and over, he should urge the Senate Republicans to get somebody else for the job.

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Senate Republican Leader Trent Lott Is A Racist And Proud Of It

Pretty big accusation, huh? Here’s my proof:

“What I want to tell you…Ladies and Gentlemen…That there’s not enough troops in the Army…to force the southern people to break down segregation and admit the nigger race into our theatres, into our swimming pools, into our homes and into our churches.”
— Strom Thurman, 1948.
“When Strom Thurman ran for president, we voted for him! We’re proud of it! And if the rest of the country had followed our lead, we wouldn’t have had all of these problems over all of these years either.”
— Trent Lott, December, 2002.
“If we had elected this man 30 years ago, we wouldn’t be in the mess we are today.”
— Trent Lott, 1980.

Strom Thurman, Racist. Trent Lott, Thurman Supporter
(Right mouse click and “save” to download and play the file off of your hard drive.)
Another history lesson, courtesy of the most excellent Daily Show!
Strom Thurman in 1948:

Trent Lott in 1980: