Lindsey Graham autobiography sheds light on record on race
The Guardian – World
theguardian.com
Summary
Memoir details upbringing of late senator – who denied existence of systemic racism – in segregated south A little-known autobiography from Lindsey Graham published in 2015 sheds light on his complicated record of acknowledging and addressing racism in South Carolina . Graham, born in 1955, came of age in a small textile town in the segregated south, located in Pickens county, the site of the last documented lynching in South Carolina in 1947. My Story, which came across as political spin to anyone who knew the background of Graham’s unlikely rise to political prominence , is a window into the conservative white man’s view of the south’s enduring racial tensions. By Graham’s account, he was the one who convinced his reluctant parents, Millie and Florence James, “FJ”, to finally open their popular Sanitary cafe to Black people – until then they only served Black neighbors through a take-out window. His high school, like others in the state, had been forced to admit a handful of Black students by a supreme court decision. His parents died 15 months apart while he was in college, and he took custody of his teenage sister, Darline, to whom he remained close. (Donald Trump on Monday recommended that Darline Graham Nordone be appointed as interim senator, “a fabulous tribute to Lindsey, who loved her dearly”. Later on Monday Henry McMaster, South Carolina’s governor, appointed her to serve the rest of Graham’s term.) The racial climate remained tense as Graham, then the city attorney in Central, a city of about 3,000 people, entered politics in 1994 as a congressional candidate in the third district. Graham took over Thurmond’s Senate seat in 2003, absorbing some of the late senator’s longtime staff and trying to match Thurmond’s record of constituent service. Graham continued the trend in a 2021 interview after the guilty verdict of police officer Derek Chauvin in the murder of George Floyd. “Our systems are not racist,” he told interviewer Chris Wallace on Fox News. “America is not a racist country.” His views were tested again when he and other conservatives got into a tussle in 2022 over his support of a Black jurist, South Carolina district judge J Michelle Childs , for a supreme court vacancy. On Sunday, Clyburn paid tribute to Graham in a post on X. “ For more than three decades , we served the people of the Palmetto State together in Congress.
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Memoir details upbringing of late senator – who denied existence of systemic racism – in segregated south A little-known autobiography from Lindsey Graham published in 2015 sheds light on his complicated record of acknowledging and addressing racism in South Carolina. Graham, born in 1955, came of age in a small textile town in the segregated south, located in Pickens county, the site of the last documented lynching in South Carolina in 1947. My Story, which came across as political spin to anyone who knew the background of Graham’s unlikely rise to political prominence , is a window into the conservative white man’s view of the south’s enduring racial tensions. Continue reading...
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Published by The Guardian – World on theguardian.com

