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Deep South Democrats Seek Path Back To Relevance

Albert N. Gore Jr., a Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate, speaks at the Neshoba County Fair in Philadelphia, Miss., on Aug. 2. Gore is running against incumbent Republican Roger Wicker. He says there should have been younger people interested in taking on Wicker — "but they didn't want to fight."
Rogelio V. Solis
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AP
Albert N. Gore Jr., a Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate, speaks at the Neshoba County Fair in Philadelphia, Miss., on Aug. 2. Gore is running against incumbent Republican Roger Wicker. He says there should have been younger people interested in taking on Wicker — "but they didn't want to fight."

It can be lonely being a Democrat in the Deep South. Just ask Steve Wilson.

The young lawyer was a first-time delegate at the Democratic National Convention, but it's not something he brags about back home in Meridian, Miss.

"I don't talk about it," he says. "It's the elephant in the room, so to speak. Most of my friends are Republican, I think, but I just don't bring it up."

That climate can make it hard to recruit viable Democratic candidates in the Deep South — once a solidly Democratic region that is now reliably Republican.

"I'm 82 and I'm running for the United States Senate," says Albert N. Gore Jr. of Starkville. He's the Democratic challenger to Mississippi Republican Sen. Roger Wicker.

"I told them a year and a half ago — I said if y'all don't get somebody, I'm going to do it," Gore says. He says there should have been younger people interested in taking on Wicker — "but they didn't want to fight."

The Financial Factor

Mississippi Democratic Party Chairman Rickey Cole says it's more than not having the fight — it's "money."

Cole acknowledges that Mississippi Democrats have come up short this year and last, offering up few serious candidates for statewide office.

"We've made the mistake of believing that the only way to win is with paid advertising," he says. "And so a candidate feels as though they have to raise multiple millions of dollars in order to win."

He says Democrats can't play by those money rules, so they instead need to build grass-roots support.

State Democratic executive board member Dietrick Johnson agrees. The farmer from tiny Como, Miss., thinks the party lost focus.

"If you stay with your base and build your base out, you can win," he says. "But if you neglect your base and go after independents and liberal Republicans, if there's such thing, then you are going to vote against your own constituents. So the next election you are going to lose because you have lost your base."

We didn't get in this hole overnight, and we sure ain't going to get out overnight. But I think we've at least stopped digging.

A recent trend for Southern Democrats is to try to distance themselves from the national party, but Johnson says that's not a viable long-term strategy.

'Nothing In The Middle'

Finding a path back to relevance in the region is the mission of the Blue South Project, run by Charleston, S.C., strategist Phil Noble.

"We didn't get in this hole overnight, and we sure ain't going to get out overnight," Noble says. "But I think we've at least stopped digging."

Noble thinks Democrats have hit rock bottom — and Republicans have topped out.

"The Republicans have gerrymandered everything they can win, and oftentimes black Democrats have been complicit, so that we get safe white Republican districts and safe black Democratic districts, with nothing in the middle for moderate white Democrats," Noble says.

States that have been able to bridge that divide are the bright spots where Democrats can compete, Noble says. That would include states like Virginia and North Carolina — both in play in the presidential race.

"They were red and now they're competitive. And Georgia, arguably, is not too far behind," Noble says. "You look further down the road — Texas is going to flip, and when Texas flips, it's flipped forever, or at least for a few generations, just simply because of demographics."

Arkansas Gov. Mike Beebe speaks to delegates at the Democratic Party of Arkansas state convention in North Little Rock on Aug. 18.
Danny Johnston / AP
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AP
Arkansas Gov. Mike Beebe speaks to delegates at the Democratic Party of Arkansas state convention in North Little Rock on Aug. 18.

Noble is talking about Hispanic voters. In North Carolina, for example, the number of registered Latino voters doubled in the past four years. The state is also home to middle-of-the-road voters who have moved to the region from the North and Midwest.

Making The Connection

But even as population shifts provide an opening for Democrats in the South, they can't compete without a better bench of candidates, says Arkansas Gov. Mike Beebe.

His state felt the GOP surge in 2010, but Beebe, a Democrat, swept every county. He says the secret is being able to empathize with voters.

"A good example of somebody who could do that is Bill Clinton," Beebe says. "He could connect. He messed up and when he messed up he still could connect."

If you can make that connection, Beebe says, you can win in the South, regardless of whether there's an R or a D behind your name.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

NPR National Correspondent Debbie Elliott can be heard telling stories from her native South. She covers the latest news and politics, and is attuned to the region's rich culture and history.
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