The Herald (South Africa)

New editor for US paper after KKK outrage

- Maria Caspani

A small-town Alabama newspaper that drew condemnati­on for an editorial this month calling for the Ku Klux Klan to “ride again” has named an African-American woman as its new editor and publisher, the paper said.

Elecia R Dexter on Friday took the reins of the weekly Democrat-Reporter in Linden, Alabama, from Goodloe Sutton, 79, longtime owner of the paper who wrote the incendiary editorial, bringing sharp rebukes from elected officials in the state and the public.

“Ms Dexter is coming in at a pivotal time for the newspaper and you may have full confidence in her ability to handle these challengin­g times,” a statement from the paper said.

It is unclear whether Sutton is still owner of the paper.

Dexter had strong roots and a rich history in the area, and would continue the paper’s long journalist­ic tradition while moving it in a new direction, according to the release.

Sutton, who has led the publicatio­n for the past 50 years, told the Montgomery Advertiser newspaper last week he had written the editorial which called for a return of the KKK and railed against Democrats.

The KKK was a white supremacis­t group that terrorised blacks in the US South and later targeted other minority groups, following the Civil War and the emancipati­on of African-American slaves.

“Good riddance Goodloe,” US Senator Doug Jones, an Alabama Democrat, tweeted in response to the news of Sutton stepping down. “His dangerous views do not represent Alabama or the small-town papers in Alabama that do great work every day.”

Sutton and his wife, Jean, won acclaim in the 1990s for a series of articles in the Democrat-Reporter that detailed corruption in their local sheriff’s department.

The paper is more than 100 years old.

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