Rachel Slajda | December 21, 2010, 12:10PM
Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour (R), when defending the Citizens Council in his hometown of Yazoo City, painted himself as oblivious to politics and the civil rights movement as a teenager. When Martin Luther King Jr. came to town, he said, he and his friends paid more attention to the girls than the reverend.
But Barbour's older brother, Jeppie Barbour, was very aware of politics and the civil rights movement, as he was mayor for several years starting in 1968. As the Weekly Standard profilenoted, that meant Jeppie Barbour was in office during the court-ordered but extremely peaceful integration of the city's schools, an integration the elder Barbour saw as inevitable.
It was a question about that non-violent integration that prompted Haley Barbour'scontroversial comments, as he credited thesegregationist Citizens Councils for that peacefulness. Barbour today issued a statementbacking up a bit, saying it was the town leadership that kept integration peaceful but that "their vehicle, called the 'Citizens Council,' is totally indefensible."
While mayor, Jeppie Barbour became a central figure in reporter Willie Morris' 1971 book about the integration of Yazoo City. The book largely portrayed Barbour as a relative moderate on race.
But during one interview for the book, Barbour told Morris that he was having trouble working with the town's biracial commission, complaining that whites could no longer appoint black commissioners of their choosing. From the book, as quoted at length by HuffPo's Amanda Terkel:
He also complained about a black boycott of white businesses -- a tactic the Citizens Council was known to use, albeit in reverse.
He also noted the usefulness of pepper spray when dealing with public drunkenness:
Late update: A reader notes that Jeppie Barbour is now working on the Mississippi gubernatorial campaign of Republican Dave Dennis as the campaign's field director.
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