Tuesday, July 2, 2024

July 2, 1964: The Civil Rights Act Becomes Law

July 2, 1964, 60 years ago: President Lyndon B. Johnson signs the Civil Rights Act of 1964 into law. Among those attending the signing ceremony is Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., then the nation's leading civil rights activist.

Angry over various events holding African-Americans back, President John F. Kennedy gave a nationally-televised speech on June 10, 1963, asking Congress for a bill that would ban racial and religious discrimination "in facilities which are open to the public: Hotels, restaurants, theaters, retail stores, and similar establishments."

There were 3 key hurdles to the bill's passage. Many Congressional committees were then chaired by powerful Southern Democrats, unwilling to help civil rights. The bill had to pass the House Judiciary Committee. Fortunately, it was then chaired by Emmanuel Celler, a Jewish New Yorker, who got it through. The next step was being passed by the House Rules Committee, then chaired by Howard W. Smith, a racist from Virginia.

And before that could happen, Kennedy was assassinated on November 22, 1963. Johnson, his Vice President and a Texan who favored the bill, became President, and demanded that the bill pass.

Smith knew the rules of the U.S. House of Representatives as well as anyone. But so did Celler, who had a plan: He filed a petition to discharge the bill from the Rules Committee, and move it directly to the House floor, for a vote by the full House. That required the support of a majority of House members.

When the Winter recess began, Celler was 50 votes short, but letters, telegrams and phone calls were coming in to members on the fence. Smith "read the room," and realized that he would be utterly humiliated if the bill was discharged, so he told the Rules Committee members they could vote their conscience, and it passed.

On February 10, 1964, the full House voted 290-130 to pass it. It went on to the Senate, and Southern Democrats filibustered it for 54 days. But Northern and Western Democrats, and Republicans who were conservative but believed that civil rights could be good for business, worked on breaking the filibuster. In particular, 2 Senators led the way: Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota, the Democrats' "Whip"; and Everett Dirksen of Illinois, the Republicans' Leader. Each man's personal popularity was enough.

On June 19, 1964, the Senate passed the bill. The vote was 73-27. The Senators who voted No:

* Democrats: Lister Hill and John Sparkman of Alabama, William Fulbright and John McClellan of Arkansas, Spessard Holland and George Smathers of Florida, Richard Russell and Herman Talmadge of Georgia, Allen Ellender and Russell Long of Louisiana, James Eastland and John Stennis of Mississippi, Sam Ervin and Everett Jordan of North Carolina, Strom Thurmond and Olin Johnston of South Carolina, Albert Gore and Herbert Walters of Tennessee, Harry Byrd and Willis Robertson of Virginia, and Harry's cousin Robert Byrd of West Virginia.

* Republicans: Norris Cotton of New Hampshire, Bourke Hickenlooper of Iowa, Edwin Mechem of New Mexico, John Tower of Texas, Milward Simpson of Wyoming, and Barry Goldwater of Arizona.

The only Southern Senator of either Party to vote for the bill was Ralph Yarborough of Texas, an ally of LBJ's, who was with him in the car behind the one carrying JFK, Governor John Connally, and their wives when JFK was assassinated in Dallas. One of the reasons JFK went to Dallas in the first place was because, after Tower won LBJ's Senate seat, becoming the 1st Republican Senator in the South since Reconstruction, Texas' Democrats were split between factions led by Yarborough (a liberal) and Connally (a conservative who would later switch to the Republicans).

Robert Byrd, the Senate Majority Leader from 1977 to 1988, would later renounce his racist past. Ervin didn't, but redeemed himself somewhat with his Chairmanship of the Select Committee investigating Watergate in 1973 and '74.

Thurmond had been Governor of South Carolina in 1948, and briefly left the Democratic Party to run for President on the ticket of the States' Rights Party, all former Democrats. From that point onward, Southern Democrats who opposed civil rights were known as "Dixiecrats." Thurmond launched a filibuster designed to stop the Civil Rights Act of 1957, lasting a little over 24 hours, setting a record previously held by Huey Long of Louisiana, Russell's father. When the CRA of 1964 became law, Thurmond became the 1st major Democratic official in the South to switch to the Republican Party.

Gore was running for re-election, and was, by his own later admission, afraid to vote for the bill. He had previously voted for the Civil Rights Acts of 1957 and 1960. His re-election secure, he went on to vote for the Voting Rights Act of 1965, the confirmation of Thurgood Marshall as the 1st black Justice on the U.S. Supreme Court, and the Fair Housing Act of 1968. He lost his next bid for re-election in 1970, but that's been attributed to his opposition to the Vietnam War, rather than to his pro-civil rights votes. His son, usually known as Al Gore, would also be elected to both houses of Congress, serve as Bill Clinton's Vice President, and be the Democratic nominee for President in 2000.

Robertson was the father of Marion G. "Pat" Robertson, the Virginia Beach-based televangelist who ran for the Republican nomination for President in 1988, and was a major figure in "Christian" conservatism, often on the back of various forms of bigotry, until his death in 2023.

Cotton -- no relation to current Republican Senator Tom Cotton of Arkansas -- also ended up voting for every other Civil Rights Act from 1957 to 1968, including the Voting Rights Act of 1965, as well as the 24th Amendment, banning poll taxes. (Gore was not present for the vote on that.) He voted against the Civil Rights Act of 1964, he said, on the grounds that part of it was unconstitutional.

Goldwater, like Cotton, claimed the bill was unconstitutional. Although he was the conservative movement's favorite son at the time, he had never previously been accused of racism. Indeed, in Arizona, a State then with few Black people, Hispanics and Native Americans praised him for his efforts on their behalf.

Hickenlooper was the great-uncle of John Hickenlooper, now a Senator from Colorado, previously that State's Governor and Mayor of Denver -- and a Democrat. Simpson was the father of a later Senator from Wyoming, Alan Simpson.

The bill the Senate passed was slightly different from the one passed by the House, so the House had to approve it again. That took until July 2, and the vote was 289-126. Now, it headed to the President's desk, and LBJ wasted no time: He called in the media, and he called in key figures, including Dr. King, and the Attorney General, who was also the previous President's brother, Robert F. Kennedy.

It was Johnson who began the tradition of the President using a different pen to sign each letter of his name, including the period after the middle initial B. This way, he could give out 15 ceremonial pens -- 6 for "Lyndon," 2 for "B.," and 7 for "Johnson" -- and 15 different people could truthfully say, "I have the pen that made this bill a law."

On the film, he can be heard telling RFK to give pens to his deputies, Nicholas Katzenbach and Burke Marshall, as well as to take one for himself. The best-known photograph of the ceremony, shown above, shows LBJ giving a pen to MLK.

A generous gesture, given that LBJ and RFK couldn't stand each other, for reasons that don't matter here. Soon, RFK would resign as Attorney General -- he probably would have if his brother lived, anyway, to run the re-election campaign -- and ran for a U.S. Senate seat from New York. He won it -- but won by a smaller margin than Johnson did in the State.

By this point, Goldwater had already secured the Republican nomination for President, beating out pro-civil rights candidates like Governors Nelson Rockefeller of New York and William Scranton of Pennsylvania, and former Senator Henry Cabot Lodge of Massachusetts.

But people who cared about civil rights -- for or against -- didn't care why Goldwater voted against the Act, only that he did. Southerners who would never have voted for the nominee of "the Party of Lincoln" before this voted for Goldwater, because he voted the way they wanted. And Midwesterners and Westerners that would have normally voted Republican went for Johnson.

On Election Day, November 3, Johnson won 61.0 percent of the national popular vote, still an all-time record, while Goldwater got just 38.4 percent. Johnson won 44 States with 486 Electoral Votes, Goldwater 6 with 52. Goldwater won Mississippi, Alabama, South Carolina, Louisiana and Georgia, all in the South; and his home State of Arizona, barely, with 50.4 percent, a winning margin of 4,782 votes.

He came close in some other Southern States. He got 48.8 percent in Florida, 46.1 in Virginia, and was the 1st Republican in the 20th Century to top 40 percent in Tennessee, Oklahoma, North Carolina and Arkansas.

He also got 49.1 percent in Idaho, 47.4 in Nebraska, 45.1 in Utah and 45.0 in Kansas. But if he had won every State where he got at least 45 percent, that still would have given him only 98 Electoral Votes. Even if he had won every State where he got at least 40 percent, including California (40.8, then with 40 EVs) and Illinois (40.5, 26), he still would have had only 199, well short of the necessary majority of 270.

To be fair, the false perception that Goldwater was racist was not the only reason he lost. But it didn't help. As no less than Jackie Robinson, a Republican who had worked for Rockefeller, put it, "It would make everything I worked for meaningless if baseball were integrated, but America's political parties were segregated."

Johnson knew it, too: "I think we have just given the South to the Republican Party for a generation." It's now been 3 generations. There have been blips since, but:

* Virginia has voted for the Democratic nominee for President in every election since 2008. But, before that, it hadn't voted for one since 1976, Jimmy Carter; and not for a non-Southern Democratic nominee since 1948, Harry Truman.

* Georgia voted for Joe Biden in 2020. Other than that, they haven't voted for the Democratic nominee since Bill Clinton in 1992.

* Florida last voted for the Democratic nominee in 2012, Barack Obama.

* North Carolina last voted for the Democratic nominee in 2008, Obama. Other than that, they haven't voted for the Democratic nominee since 1976; and not for a non-Southern Democratic nominee since 1948.

* Arkansas, Tennessee and Louisiana last voted for the Democratic nominee in 1996, Bill Clinton. Arkansas last voted for a non-Southern Democratic nominee in 1956, Adlai Stevenson; Louisiana in 1952, Stevenson; and Tennessee in 1948. Tennessee didn't even vote for native son Al Gore in 2000, although that's been attributed to guns as much as to race. This is also the case for West Virginia, which was a reliably Democratic State until 2000.

* Texas, Mississippi, Alabama and South Carolina last voted for the Democratic nominee in 1976, and haven't voted for a non-Southern Democratic nominee since 1960, John F. Kennedy.

Oklahoma last voted for the Democratic nominee in 1976, and hasn't voted for a non-Southern Democratic nominee since 1948.

We will never know how many of the 21 Democrats who voted against the Civil Rights Act of 1964 would have done so if they weren't afraid of their respective electorates dumping them for more racist candidates in Democratic Primaries, or switching to Republican candidates.

What we do know is that racism, like all other forms of bigotry, is an inherently conservative trait, and the American Southeast remains conservative. And when conservatism meant switching from Democratic to Republican, they did, and have stayed as such.

And what has voting Republican gotten them? Extended poverty and lousy services.

Neil Young may be Canadian, and ineligible to vote in America, but he was right: "Southern man, better use your head." And Lynyrd Skynyrd were wrong: A Southern man does need him around, anyhow.

The last surviving Senator who voted for the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was Birch Bayh of Indiana, who lived until 2019. The last one who voted against it was George Smathers of Florida, who lived until 2007.

Given the decisions of the Roberts Court from 2005 onward, and especially from 2022 onward, I wonder how long it will be before they declare the Civil Rights Act of 1964 unconstitutional.

Monday, July 1, 2024

Have the Yankees Snapped Out of It?

In North American sports, July 1 means two things. One is Canada Day, the anniversary of Canadian independence, which means that Canada's one remaining team in Major League Baseball, the Toronto Blue Jays, not only plays an afternoon game at home, but, despite actually having "Blue" in their name, will wear red jerseys.

The other is Bobby Bonilla Day, a day when we mock the Mets for making a stupid deal with a stupid player with a smart agent. Happy such to all who celebrate.

Anyway... Both the Mets and the Blue Jays were a problem for the Yankees this week. The Yankees went out to Citi Field last Tuesday night, and their injury-induced slump continued. In his 2nd start after coming off the Injured List, Gerrit Cole allowed 6 runs in 4 innings. In other words, if 4 innings hadn't been his limit, he should have been taken out at that point, anyway. After 6 innings, they were behind 9-1, the run coming on a home run by Juan Soto. It was ugly.

They scored a run in the 7th, and then 5 in the 8th, 3 on a home run by Aaron Judge. But they couldn't get anything in the 9th inning, and lost, 9-7.

The Wednesday night game was much the same, without the comeback attempt. Luis Gil, so good for most of the season, got rocked again. Judge hit his 30th homer of the season, but the Mets won, 12-2. Take out the top of the 8th, and the Mets won on aggregate, 21-4.

So the fans of the Small Club in Flushing had their cup final, as would be said in England.

*

Maybe getting out of the City would do the Yankees some good. Or even out of the country. At first, no: They lost 9-2 to the Jays at the Rogers Centre on Thursday night. Carlos Rodón allowed 5 runs in the 1st inning, and 3 in the 2nd, including 2 home runs by George Springer, a former cheating Houston Astro nemesis.

Between them, over the last 7 1/3rd innings, Rodón and relievers Phil Bickford and Jake Cousins allowed just 1 run on 4 hits and no walks, but the damage was done. Trent Grisham hit a home run for the Yankees.

On Friday night, the Yankees turned the tables. Former Blue Jay (and former Met) Marcus Stroman allowed a run in the 1st inning, and didn't get out of the 5th. At one point, he could be seen yelling at Gleyber Torres in the dugout. Torres had come under fire, from fans and media alike, for being lazy, for not running out ground balls, and for sloppy fielding.

It must have woken him up: In the top of the 6th, he homered, and so did Soto, part of a 6-run inning. The Yankees scored 2 in the 8th, and 7 in the 9th. Their linescore over the last 5 innings was 06027. That is the ZIP Code for East Hartland, Connecticut, near Hartford. Michael Tonkin was the pitcher when the Yankees took the lead, and so he was the winning pitcher, as the Yankees won, 16-5.

Did that snap the Yankees out of their slump? Hardly: They lost the Saturday afternoon game, 9-3. Nestor Cortés didn't pitch badly, but Bickford allowed 5 runs in the 6th to throw the game away. Torres went 2-for-4, and Austin Wells hit a home run.

Over the last 10 games, the Yankees had allowed an average of 8.2 runs per game, scoring 5.1, and going 2-8. But, yesterday afternoon, they went back to the way they'd been playing most of the year, scoring 2 in the 1st, including another home run by Judge, and 2 in the 2nd. (Judge is having another Hall of Fame season, but it feels like it's being wasted.)

Cole was much better, allowed to pitch 5 full innings. Torres went 2-for-5. The Yankees won, 8-1, and gained a split of the series with the pesky Blue Jays. 

*

So we begin July, having played more than half the regular season. The Yankees are 54-32, and are officially tied with the Baltimore Orioles in the American League Eastern Division, although we trail them by 1 game in the all-important loss column, and by .003, percentage-wise, which is what really matters. The Boston Red Sox are 8 1/2 back, the Tampa Bay Rays 11, the Toronto Blue Jays 14 1/2.

From March 28 to June 14, the Yankees played at a 112-50 pace. Then, the annual injury crisis kicked in and they've played at a 65-97 pace. That can't go on.

Here's the latest on the significant players out due to injury, in descending order of believed availability:

* Giancarlo Stanton: He resumed activity on a treadmill on Thursday. He could be back right after the All-Star Break.

* Scott Effross: The pitcher is currently in minor-league rehab. It would probably be best to leave him there until returning from the All-Star Break.

* Clarke Schmidt: He has resumed throwing. He probably won't be back before August 1.

Jasson Domínguez: He was mere days away from returning from his last injury when he was stricken with a new one. He may be available by August 1.

* Cody Poteet: Of course, the pitcher meant to take the place of the injured Schmidt gave us a little taste of talent, and then got hurt himself. He may be available by August 1.

* Ian Hamilton: The relief pitcher has been rehabbing, but not yet officially throwing. It would be a shock to see him back before August 1.

* Anthony Rizzo: He is currently expected to return in mid-August.

Jonathan Loáisiga: He had Tommy John surgery. Hopefully, see you in 2025.

The Yankees have today off, then start a 3-game home series with the Cincinnati Reds, including a 4th of July matinee. Then the Red Sox come to The Bronx for the 1st time all season. I hope we pound them. Then comes the All-Star Break, a good time to see if they've snapped out of the slump, or not.

July 1, 1974: Great Adventure Opens

July 1, 1974, 50 years ago: The Great Adventure theme park opens in Jackson, Ocean County, New Jersey, about 60 miles southwest of Midtown Manhattan, and 50 miles northeast of Center City Philadelphia.

It took the place of such already-gone amusement parks as Steeplechase Park in Brooklyn's Coney Island (which closed in 1964, leaving Astroland as Coney's only remaining amusement park), Palisades Amusement Park in the town of the same name in Bergen County (closed in 1971), and Woodside Amusement Park in Philadelphia's Fairmount Park (closed in 1955). It essentially meant the demise of Willow Grove Park in Bucks County, Pennsylvania in 1975. But it also meant a closer option for Philadelphia-area people than the Jersey Shore, 60 miles away at its closest point.

New York businessman Warner LeRoy bought the land from the parachute-making Switlik family, and built the park. The main part of the park was called the Enchanted Forest, and it included roller coasters, a log flume, a monorail, and Wild West-themed rides. Its arcades and eateries, including the ice cream-themed Yum Yum Palace, and its drive-through safari, became beloved by young people in New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania and Delaware.

In 1977, the Six Flags amusement-park company bought Great Adventure. A deal was cut with Warner Brothers to have their cartoon characters, like Bugs Bunny, in costumes. They also cut deals with DC Comics for rides based on their characters, such as Superman and Batman.
The classic rainbow & stars logo

On May 11, 1984, a fire at the Haunted Castle killed 8 teenagers from Queens, and forever cast a pall over the park. But it remains open to this day.

It's hard to believe it's been 50 years. It doesn't seem like something that goes back as far as Richard Nixon. To me, it will always bring up thoughts of the late 1970s, the Jimmy Carter years, or the early 1980s, the 1st Ronald Reagan term. It was an escape from the nonsense of the outside world, which was probably why that '84 fire stands out so much in New Jersey's collective memory: The outside world broke through the bubble.

A wonderland carved out of the Pine Barrens, for, as the Ringling Brothers/Barnum & Bailey Circus put it, "children of all ages." To this day, many of us refuse to use the corporate name of Six Flags. The original name was perfect: Great Adventure.