Houston Chronicle Sunday

Why Southern Democrats support Joe Biden

- By Mara Gay

At the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, where the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinat­ed in 1968, things look much as they did a half-century ago.

The site is now home to the National Civil Rights Museum, a remarkable collection that includes a replica of a firebombed bus ridden by the Freedom Riders as they traveled through the South protesting segregatio­n in 1961.

Inside the museum the other day, a woman sat down beside me and wiped away tears. “I’m sorry,” she said. “What gets me is, after all this time, look what’s happening right now.”

Southern Democrats — particular­ly black Democrats — are hoping to keep the history that surrounds them in the past.

Rep. Jim Clyburn of South Carolina explained this in visceral terms when he announced his support for presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden late last month, an endorsemen­t that began with Clyburn, 79, talking about the first time he was arrested protesting for civil rights decades ago. “When I sat in jail that day, I wondered whether we were doing the right thing, but I was never fearful for the future,” he said. “As I stand before you today I am fearful of the future of this country. I’m fearful for my daughters and their futures, and their children, and their children’s futures.”

Clyburn said he was sure Biden was the right choice. “I know Joe. We know Joe. But most importantl­y, Joe knows us,” he said. Three days later, Biden won a convincing victory in the South Carolina primary, launching him into his Super Tuesday triumph and the frontrunne­r status he enjoys today.

My friends in New York, many of them Elizabeth Warren or Bernie Sanders supporters who see Biden as deeply uninspirin­g, were mystified. But after traveling through the

South this past week, I began to understand. Through Southern eyes, this election is not about policy or personalit­y. It’s about something much darker.

Not long ago, these Americans lived under violent, antidemocr­atic government­s. Now, many there say they see in President Donald Trump and his supporters the same hostility and zeal for authoritar­ianism that marked life under Jim

Crow.

For those who lived through the trauma of racial terrorism and segregatio­n, or grew up in its long shadow, this history haunts the campaign trail. And Trump has summoned old ghosts.

“People are prideful of being racist again,” said Bobby Caradine, 47, who is black and has lived in Memphis all his life. “It’s right back out in the open.”

In Tennessee and Alabama, in Arkansas and Oklahoma and Mississipp­i, Democrats, black and white, told me they were united by a single, urgent goal: defeating Trump this November, with any candidate, and at any cost.

“There’s three things I want to happen,” Angela Watson, a 60-year-old black Democrat from Oklahoma City, told me at a campaign event there this week. “One, beat Trump. Two, beat Trump. And three, beat Trump.”

They were deeply skeptical that a democratic socialist like Sanders could unseat Trump. They liked Warren but, burned by Hillary Clinton’s loss, were worried that too many of their fellow Americans wouldn’t vote for a woman.

Joe Biden is no Barack Obama.

But he was somebody they knew. “He was with Obama for all those years,” Caradine said. “People are comfortabl­e with him.” Faced with the prospect of their children losing the basic rights they won over many generation­s, these voters, as the old Chicago political saw goes, don’t want nobody that nobody sent.

Biden understand­s this. “If the Democrats want a nominee who’s a Democrat — a lifelong Democrat! a proud Democrat! an Obama-Biden Democrat! — then join us!” he told voters in South Carolina in his victory speech.

Despite enormous progress, poverty in this still largely rural region, for Southerner­s of every race, remains crushing.

Confederat­e flags proudly paid for by the Sons of Confederat­e Veterans dot the highways.

Michael Bloomberg’s campaign office in Montgomery, Ala., faced a town square where human beings once sold other human beings into slavery.

In Memphis last week, steps from the campaign trail, hundreds gathered across town for the 68th annual Mid-South Farm & Gin Show. Inside a massive convention hall, white Southerner­s mingled amid the giant steel claws of farm equipment and cardboard cutouts of Donald Trump and Mike Pence. At one booth, vendors sold a shirt that read, “Make Cotton Great Again.”

“The past is never dead,” as Mississipp­i novelist William Faulkner wrote in “Requiem for a Nun.” “It’s not even past.”

Faulkner was on my mind when I picked up the keys to a rental car in Memphis for the long drive to Selma, Ala. Along the way, I stopped for breakfast in Olive Branch, Miss., where I met a man named Dave Wright. His grandfathe­r, Leonard Wright, was William Faulkner’s physician.

“Faulkner wrote about Granddaddy. Granddaddy didn’t like what he said, but it was all true,” Wright told me. He stopped there.

On Sunday, I marched across Selma’s Edmund Pettus Bridge with thousands, an annual exercise in rememberin­g that draws Americans from all walks of life. In 1965, police attacked civil rights protesters here in an event that came to be called Bloody Sunday.

This year, the Democratic presidenti­al candidates joined. So did Bob Smith, an older black man, who stood at the edge of the crowds holding a sign. “I was here in 1965, pistol whipped and kicked by police,” it read.

When I asked him about it, Smith smiled. “Yeah, I was here all right. Got the crap kicked out of me, too!” he told me with an easy laugh.

The march began, and the Edmund Pettus Bridge, a dull block of concrete named for a Confederat­e brigadier, was suddenly flooded with life. Choirs sent the sounds of gospel high into the thick Alabama air. Drummers walked the route alongside school groups, and church groups, and black sorority women in their pink and green regalia. Parents carried young children on their shoulders, hoping to catch a glimpse of the presidenti­al candidates. “This is better than Mardi Gras,” Sharon Holmes, of Pontiac, Mich., told me.

At the crest of the bridge, hundreds stood with their faces to the warm Southern sun, breathing it all in.

Together, they are determined to hold on to a country that was paid for 55 years ago in blood. In the South, as in the rest of America, that may be a hard thing to do.

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