Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 233, Decatur, Adams County, 3 October 1957 — Page 9

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1957

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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR, INDIANA

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Soulfi Leaders Ponder Future Politics-Wise South Being Cut Adrift Politically Over Segregation By LYLE C. WIISON .. United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON (UP)-The evidence is piling up that southern leaders are thinking hard about the fact that the South is being cut adrift politically. The influence of southerners in the councils of the Democratic Party gradually has been pinched off. Southern votes casj for Republican presidential candidates have gaineji no influence there for the souther* point of view. What to do about all of this is something southern Democratic spokesmen and office holders must now consider — along with the significant fact that the new coming up with new leaders and new office holders. The direction of southern politiNegro vote in the South may be cal thinking was indicated last week by James F. Byrnes of South Carolina, a qualified spokesman for his state. South Carolina is one of those in the South committed by its legislature to defy racial integration in the schools by every legal means. Byrnes Lists Objectives He served in the House and Senate, as associate justice of the Supreme Court, as secretary of state and, more recently, as governor of South Carolina. At Bennettsville. S.C., last week, Byrnes snipped out a pattern for southern political action and objectives, as follows: “Notwithstanding the political gloom which now surrounds us, the South may be restored to its place In the councils of the nation if its leaders, forgetting all political differences, will now begin to organize for a united South. “You may be sure that, under present conditions, no man South of the Potomac will be • placed on the presidential ticket of either party unless that man is willing to betray his people. “But, if you organize and let the people know the southern states are not in, the bag for either political party, we may have some chance ’of securing written pledges that will assure some respect for the U. S. Constitution and a greater respect for local government.’’ That’s about it.'Byrika^prescription is that the South find a political alliance within which it may regain a substantial voice in the making of national policy. It seems more likely that the South will go it alone politically than establish the political alliance Byrnes suggested. South’s Natural Policy The natural policy which the South most urgently desires to establish would relate to the over-all problem of race relations, what Sen. Richard B. Russell (D-Ga.) termed the commingling of the white and Negro races. Neither the Republican Party nor the non-southern elements of the Democratic Party would be likely to welcome an alliance on those terms. The Negro vote outside the South is too important for either party to dicker with the South on civil rights or onstate’s rights, either. ■ U.S. News and World Report estimates in its current issue that four-million Negro voters hold a balance of power in 14 states outside the South. These 14 range from Maryland with 15.6 per cent to California with 4.6 per cent of Negro voters. The others are Delaware, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Missouri, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania and West Virginia. These 14 states cast a powerhouse of 261 presidential electoral votes. Needed to win: 266! ——. ■ , ; ... .i ■< i . . "■« IRENE DUNNE listens pensively during a UN General Assembly session in New York. She was named to UN by President Elsenhower. flntemetioiMd;