Opinion: No More Enduring Symbol Have We Than They (2024)

Continuing on with the Democrat party being the most enduring symbol of racism and slavery we have in this country, while at the same time, keeping in mind that one of the main advantages for those who work for such “main-stream” media outlets as USA TODAY or the Washington Post is the Constitutional freedom given or granted to the main-stream media, rags like USA TODAY and the Washington Post, to be able to lie with impunity, to warp, twist, bend and distort history and to practice intellectual dishonesty with impunity, let’s return for some fact-checking of our own to the USA TODAY article entitled “Fact check: Democratic Party did not found the KKK, did not start the Civil War” by somebody named Devon Link, listed as a Fact-Check Intern on their website, on 30 JUNE 2020, where we find as follows:

Abolitionists founded the Republican Party and elected President Abraham Lincoln in response to escalating tensions around slavery after the Kansas-Nebraska Bill of 1854 threatened the balance of slave states to free states.

Southern states, primarily lead by Democrats, initiated secession proceedings and launched the Civil War.

However, historians say the party is not to blame.

“The short answer is that the Democratic Party did not start the Civil War,” Hunter said.

“The war was initiated by Southern slaveholding states seceding from the United States.”

end quotes

Except without the people who comprised the Democratic Party at that time, there was no Democratic party, so the two cannot be separated as this apologist for the Democrat Party Princeton University Edwards Professor of American History Tera Hunter is trying to do here, and the same goes for the Southern slaveholding states.

It is in fact intellectually dishonest on the part of Princeton University Edwards Professor of American History Tera Hunter to try and mislead us that way, which takes us to the U.S. Senate website for their take on that history, to wit:

The Civil War Senate Reacts to Secession

Declares Seats Vacant and Expels Disloyal Members

Background

In November 1860 a deeply divided nation teetered on the brink of civil war.

Abraham Lincoln’s victory in the presidential election prompted a rapid succession of dramatic events.

On November 10 James Chesnut of South Carolina became the first senator to leave the Senate to support the Confederacy.

As we have already seen, Chesnut was a member of the Democrat party at the time he left the Senate in order to be able to support the Democrat party Confederacy instead.

On December 20 South Carolina seceded from the Union.

That same day, the Senate established a “Committee of Thirteen” to examine plans to save the Union, including the proposal of Kentucky senator John J. Crittenden to extend to the Pacific the line established by the 1820 Missouri Compromise, prohibiting slavery north of the 36th parallel.

On January 9, 1861, Mississippi became the second state to secede.

This action prompted Senator Jefferson Davis to address the Senate on January 10, imploring his colleagues to allow for peaceful secession of the Southern states.

As we have already seen above, Jefferson Davis was also a member of the Democrat party at that time.

On January 21 five senators from Florida, Alabama, and Mississippi, led by Davis, bade farewell to the Senate.

Those other four senators were David Yulee and Stephen Mallory of Florida and Benjamin Fitzpatrick and Clement Clay of Alabama, all of whom were Democrats.

Staying with the actual history, as opposed to the distorted version being fed to us by USA TODAY and Princeton University Edwards Professor of American History Tera Hunter, the secession of Southern states and the withdrawal of their elected representatives forced an unprecedented constitutional crisis in Congress.

On March 14, 1861, senators debated what to do with seats left vacant by their Southern colleagues.

Some senators, such as Maine’s William Pitt Fessenden, insisted that Southern states did not have the right to withdraw from the Union.

By leaving the Senate, Fessenden argued, Southern members had effectively resigned their seats.

Others, such as Delaware’s James Bayard, believed states did have the right to secede and that seats held by Southern secessionists no longer existed.

The Senate should not declare their seats vacant but simply strike their names from the roll.

After a heated exchange, the Senate sided with Fessenden and passed a resolution declaring the seats of six of their departed colleagues “vacant” and authorizing the Secretary of the Senate to strike their names from the Senate roll.

In July the Senate debated the fate of Southern members whose terms had not expired and who had not formally notified the Senate of their withdrawal.

An intense debate followed.

Senator Milton Latham of California opposed expulsion, insisting that it reflected poorly “upon the personal character of the individual” and implied “turpitude.”

The author of the resolution, New Hampshire’s Daniel Clark , urged his colleagues to pass the resolution and “deny here, on the floor of the Senate, the right of any State to secede,” by expelling Southern members “from the councils of the nation.”

The Senate approved Clark’s resolution on July 11, 1861, expelling 10 absent members by a vote of 32-10.

Senators barred four more members for disloyalty during the course of the war.

On December 4, 1861, the Senate expelled John Breckinridge of Kentucky for taking up “arms against the Government he had sworn to support.”

John Breckinridge of Kentucky was a Democrat.

On January 10, 1862, the Senate voted unanimously to expel Missouri’s two senators, Waldo Johnson and Trusten Polk, for “sympathy with and participation in the rebellion against the Government of the United States.”

Waldo Johnson and Trusten Polk were Democrats.

On February 5, 1862, the Senate passed a resolution to expel Indiana’s Jesse Bright for disloyalty to the Union based on a letter he addressed to “His Excellency Jefferson Davis,” in which Bright introduced his acquaintance, a Texas arms dealer, to the president of the Confederacy.

Jesse Bright was a Democrat and was considered a COPPERHEAD.

In the 1860s, the Copperheads, also known as Peace Democrats, were a faction of Democrats in the Union who opposed the American Civil War and wanted an immediate peace settlement with the Confederates.

Republicans started calling anti-war Democrats “Copperheads,” framing them as poisonous as a venomous snake (the pit viper Agkistrodon contortrix).

Republican prosecutors accused some prominent Copperheads of treason in a series of trials in 1864.

Getting back to the history, we have:

A few states, such as Missouri and Kentucky, elected new members to replace those who were expelled.

The Unionist government in Virginia sent two senators to Capitol Hill.

Many desks remained unoccupied in the Senate Chamber throughout the war years and into the Reconstruction era, serving as painful reminders of the nation’s disunion.

The Senate continued to admit Southern members from reconstructed states to representation through the early 1870s.

Senate Action Against Disloyal Members, 1861-1862

Alabama

Clement Clay, Jr: Did not appear on March 14, 1861; salary paid to January 21, 1861; seat declared vacant on March 14, 1861; member of the Confederate Senate 1861-1863; was a diplomatic agent of the Confederate States; arrested and imprisoned in Fortress Monroe in 1865.

Clement Clay was a Democrat.

Benjamin Fitzpatrick: Salary paid to February 4, 1861; term expired on March 3, 1861, and Senate took no formal action against him; president of the constitutional convention of Alabama in 1865.

He was a Democrat, as well.

Arkansas

William K. Sebastian: Expelled on July 11, 1861; returned to Helena, Ark., where he resided during the Civil War and practiced law; after federal troops occupied Helena, Ark., moved to Memphis, TN., in 1864 and resumed the practice of law.

He too was a Democrat.

Charles B. Mitchel: Expelled on July 11, 1861; elected to the Confederate senate at the first session of the State legislature and served until his death in Little Rock, AR, September 20, 1864.

Yet another Democrat.

Florida

David Yulee: Withdrew on January 21, 1861; salary paid to this date; term expired on March 3, 1861, and Senate took no formal action against him; due to his support of the Confederacy, was a prisoner at Fort Pulaski in 1865; president of the Florida Railroad Company 1853-1866.

Stephen Mallory: Withdrew on January 21, 1861; seat declared vacant on March 14, 1861; salary paid to this date; Secretary of the Navy of the Confederacy; imprisoned at the close of the Civil War 1865-1866.

Both Democrats as we saw above.

Georgia

Robert A. Toombs: Withdrew on February 4, 1861; salary paid to this date; seat declared vacant on March 14, 1861; during the Civil War served in the Confederate Provisional Congress; Secretary of State of the Confederate States; brigadier general in the Confederate Army; in order to avoid arrest at the end of the Civil War, fled to Havana and then to London; returned to his home in Washington, GA., in 1867.

Alfred Iverson, Sr: Withdrew on January 28, 1861; term expired on March 3, 1861, and Senate took no formal action against him; resumed the practice of law in Columbus, Ga., until 1868, when he purchased a plantation in East Macon, GA., and engaged in agricultural pursuits until his death there on March 4, 1873.

Again, two more Democrats.

Indiana

Jesse D. Bright: Expelled on February 5, 1862 for disloyalty to the Union; unsuccessful candidate for election in 1863 to the United States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by his expulsion.

As we saw above, he was a Democrat.

Kentucky

John C. Breckinridge: Expelled on December 4, 1861, for disloyalty to the Union; entered the Confederate Army during the Civil War as brigadier general and soon became a major general; Secretary of War in the Cabinet of the Confederate States from January until April 1865.

Another Democrat.

Louisiana

Judah P. Benjamin : Withdrew on February 4, 1861; seat declared vacant on March 14, 1861; appointed Attorney General under the provisional government of the Confederate States, February 1861; appointed Acting Secretary of War of the Confederate States in August 1861 and served until November 1861, when he was appointed Secretary of War; served in this capacity until February 1862, when he resigned to accept the appointment as Secretary of State in the Cabinet of President Jefferson Davis, in which capacity he served until the end of the war.

John Slidell : Withdrew on February 4, 1861; salary paid to this date; term expired on March 3, 1861, and Senate took no formal action against him; on November 8, 1861, while on a diplomatic mission from the Confederate States to England and France, was taken from the British mail steamer Trent, sailing from Havana to England, and confined in Fort Warren, Boston Harbor; was later released and sailed for Paris.

Both Democrats.

Mississippi

Jefferson Davis: Withdrew on January 21, 1861; seat declared vacant on March 14, 1861; salary paid to this date; elected President of the Confederacy for a term of six years and inaugurated in Richmond, Va., February 22, 1862; captured by Union troops in Irwinsville, Ga., May 10, 1865; imprisoned in Fortress Monroe, indicted for treason, and was paroled in the custody of the court in 1867.

Albert G. Brown: Withdrew on January 12, 1861; salary paid to January 14, 1861; seat declared vacant on March 14, 1861; served as captain in the Confederate Army; elected a member of the Confederate Senate in 1862 and served in the First and Second Confederate Congresses.

Another pair of Democrats.

Missouri

Waldo P. Johnson: Expelled on January 10, 1862, upon rumors he aided the Confederacy; served in the Confederate Army during the Civil War; attained the rank of lieutenant colonel of the Fourth Missouri Infantry; appointed a member of the Senate of the Confederate States to fill a vacancy.

Trusten Polk : Expelled on January 10, 1862, upon rumors he aided the Confederacy; served as colonel in the Confederate Army; judge in the military courts of the department of Mississippi in 1864 and 1865.

More Democrats.

North Carolina

Thomas Bragg: Withdrew on March 8, 1861; expelled on July 11, 1861; appointed Attorney General of the Confederate States November 21, 1861, and served two years.

He was the older brother of Braxton Bragg, and he was a Democrat.

Thomas L. Clingman: Withdrew March 11, 1861; expelled on July 11, 1861; served as brigadier general in the Confederate Army.

He too was a Democrat.

South Carolina

James Chesnut, Jr. : Withdrew on November 10, 1860; salary paid to this date; expelled on July 11, 1861; served as colonel in the Confederate Army; appointed brigadier general in 1864.

James H. Hammond : Withdrew on November 11, 1860; salary paid to this date; term expired on March 3, 1861, and Senate took no formal action against him; died at “Redcliffe,” Beach Island, SC, November 13, 1864.

Both Democrats.

Tennessee

Alfred O. P. Nicholson : Withdrew on March 3, 1861; expelled on July 11, 1861; chief justice of the supreme court of Tennessee 1870-1876.

He too belonged to the Democrat party.

Texas

Louis T. Wigfall: Withdrew on March 23, 1861; expelled on July 11, 1861; served in the Confederate Army during the Civil War; represented the State of Texas in the Confederate Congress.

John Hemphill: Did not appear on March 4, 1861, for the 38th Congress; expelled on July 11, 1861; represented the state of Texas in the Congress of the Confederate States of America until his death.

Louis Trezevant Wigfall was a Democrat who was among a group of leading secessionists known as Fire-Eaters, advocating the preservation and expansion of an aristocratic agricultural society based on slave labor.

John Hemphill was also a member of the Democratic Party and one of the signatories of the Confederate States Constitution.

Virginia

James M. Mason: Withdrew on March 28, 1861; expelled on July 11, 1861; appointed commissioner of the Confederacy to Great Britain and France.

Robert M. T. Hunter: Withdrew on March 28, 1861; expelled on July 11, 1861; Confederate Secretary of State 1861-1862; served in the Confederate Senate from Virginia in the First and Second Congresses 1862-1865 and was President pro tempore on various occasions.

And they were Democrats, as well.

So, if all of those people were Democrats, then who was the Democrat Party?

Did it exist somehow separate from those who were its members?

Stay tuned, for more is yet to come on that subject.

Opinion: No More Enduring Symbol Have We Than They (2024)

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