Florida’s Rick Scott and Alabama’s George Wallace: Two Peas in a Pod

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On June 11, 1963, Alabama Gov. George Wallace stands in the doorway of a school auditorium in a symbolic effort to prevent two African-Americans from enrolling at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa. Wallace eventually stepped aside.

Dear Gov. Rick Scott,

Take note of this photograph. On a June day in 1963, Alabama Gov. George Wallace stood in a schoolhouse door to keep black students from enrolling at the University of Alabama. He refused U.S. Deputy Attorney General Nicholas Katzenbach’s request to move, stepping aside only after President John F. Kennedy federalized the Alabama National Guard and ordered Wallace to let the students enroll.

This June, the governor of another Southern state is challenging the federal government’s authority. Nearly 50 years after Wallace’s showdown, you are standing between Floridians and their right to vote as U.S. citizens. We agree that only citizens should vote, but your approach to cleaning up the voter rolls is fatally flawed. The U.S. Justice Department and county supervisors of election have reached the same conclusion and told you to stop, yet you persist.

Gov. Scott, we do not believe you share Wallace’s hateful views on race. Nor are we equating young African-American students of the ’60s with non-citizens of today. But it was wrong then to deny those students their right to a public education, and it is wrong now to use an inaccurate database that could deprive U.S. citizens of their right to vote. Of nearly 2,700 voters the state identified as potentially ineligible because they were not citizens, hundreds already have proven they are citizens. Only a handful have been confirmed as non-citizens, and many Floridians who are citizens stand to lose their voting rights by not responding to threatening letters from elections officials. The practical result disproportionately affects poor and minority residents and prevents them from voting in much the same way that black students were denied entry to public schools and universities in Alabama.

Wallace spoke of states’ rights and defended the indefensible by portraying the federal government as the enemy. Your administration’s intemperate letter to the Justice Department strikes a similar tone. The rights of U.S. citizens to vote in Florida elections should not be compromised by your continuing political fights with the Obama administration.

Florida should not be at war with Washington, and Floridians should not have to rely on the Justice Department to prevent their rights from being compromised by their state government. Governor, we again join in the call for you to stop this flawed purging of the voter rolls. To continue this approach puts at risk the image of this state, the rights of its citizens and your own reputation.

Letter courtesy of the Tampa Bay Times

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About Post Author

Peter Lake

Peter Lake hails from the Midwest, but is now living in Germany. He is a professional writer who spent many years honing his craft at a well known newspaper. Peter originally sent an article to us through the citizen journalist program and decided to stay. We are glad he did.
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Bill Formby
11 years ago

Peter, Having lived through the Wallace era in Alabama and having met and gotten to know some of the politicians of the same time frame today’s Republicans are truly racist compared to Wallace. According to Johnny Ford the long time Black mayor of Tuskegee, Alabama, and a friend of Wallace’s, George Wallace was very deliberate racist in that he made everything so obvious in order to force the federal courts to make him do things. This, according to Ford, allowed him to stay politically correct in Alabama while helping Blacks achieve a certain level of status in the state. Most people today do not understand the mood in Alabama during the civil rights days in Alabama but things were very tense. It wasn’t the wish of every White person in the state that the Blacks be held back but even those who weren’t racist feared for their safety from the klan and other good old boys. Wallace played that card to the hilt while knowing that if he made enough noise the federal government would force the change without him risking his political career. In his later days, especially after he had been shot he said that he was sorry that he had not done things differently and taken a different stand on racism. His son, George Wallace, Jr., has just written a book about his life which covers the later years when he was repentant for his racial rhetoric.

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