Showing posts with label Texas Constitution Party. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Texas Constitution Party. Show all posts
Saturday, September 21, 2019
Kent Harbinson Courtney
Kent Harbinson Courtney, October 23, 1918 (St. Paul., Minn.) – August 12, 1997 (Alexandria, La.)
VP candidate for Conservative Party of New Jersey (aka Conservative Party) (1960)
Running mate with nominee: Joseph Bracken Lee (1899-1996)
Popular vote: 8,708 (0.01%)
Electoral vote: 0/537
The campaign:
Like some other third party figures (e.g. Symon Gould of the American Vegetarian Party) this is a case where the VP nominee was actually the true power behind the scenes.
Kent Courtney was a Louisiana-based extreme Right-wing segregationist, anti-communist and member of John Birch Society. Through the use of radio programs, pamphlets, letters to the editor, and his own newspapers he had been agitating for the creation of a new conservative third party.
Early in 1960 Courtney ran for Governor of Louisiana as a member of the States' Rights Party. After that failed he worked to have US Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-AZ) become the Republican Party nominee. When Goldwater was defeated by Richard Nixon, Courtney returned to the notion of starting a new far-Right party. In 1960 there was a plethora of conservative political parties already in existence and it isn't clear by his actions if Courtney wanted to unite them under his leadership or simply do his own thing.
Also in 1960 Courtney was a States' Rights Party Presidential "Unpledged" Elector for Louisiana. This ballot choice finished with 20.99% of the vote in that state, winning in 17 parishes.
Courtney's efforts to create a strong conservative third party ticket ran into some problems. His idea of the ideal candidate was the populist segregationist Democratic Governor of Arkansas, Orval Faubus. The Governor claimed he had to concentrate on being re-elected to the office he already held so he was dropped from consideration, but as it turned out the National States' Rights Party nabbed Faubus' name for their Presidential nominee. Next was US Sen. Strom Thurmond (D-SC), but at the end of August 1960 Thurmond refused to run: "I have declined previously to be a candidate of a third party for the presidency this year, and I again decline to be an independent candidate, or to permit my name to be used on such a ticket."
When the newly formed Conservative Party managed to file for the only state where they qualified for the ballot-- New Jersey-- they got around the Strom-for-President problem by making the Senator the VP nominee instead! Sen. Goldwater was listed as the nominee for President. But both senators wanted nothing to do with the Conservative Party of New Jersey, so at the last minute the embryonic political group put Joseph Bracken Lee in the Presidential slot and Kent Courtney as his running mate.
Lee, the former Republican Governor of Utah and 1956 VP nominee for the Texas Constitution Party, was now the newly elected Mayor of Salt Lake City. I could not locate any comment by Lee regarding his 1960 Presidential nomination.
On the ballot in New Jersey only, their 8708 poll amounted to 0.31% of the popular vote in the Garden State, where they placed 4th behind the Socialist Workers Party.
Election history:
1954 - City Council, New Orleans, La. (Democratic) - defeated
1960 - Governor of Louisiana (States's Rights Party) - defeated
1976 - US House of Representatives (Independent) - defeated
Other occupations: sailor (US Navy WWII), airline pilot, commercial officer with the British consulate in New Orleans, public relations, teacher, newspaper publisher, author, radio personality
Buried: Bayou Ridge Baptist Cemetery (Evergreen, La.)
Notes:
Also called Kent Harbenson Courtney
Reluctantly supported Goldwater in 1964 even though he felt the Senator was too liberal.
Worked in the American Independent Party for Wallace in 1968
Saw a UFO while piloting a plane from Brazil to Africa in 1944 and became a lifelong UFOlogist.
Was a close associate of JFK assassination conspiracy figure Guy Banister.
Friday, September 20, 2019
Merritt Barton Curtis
Merritt Barton Curtis, August 31, 1892 (San Bernardino, Calif.) – May 16, 1966 (Washington, DC)
VP candidate for Texas Constitution Party (aka Constitution Party) (1960)
Running mate with nominee: Charles Loten Sullivan (1924-1979)
Popular vote: 18,162 (0.03%)
Electoral vote: 0/537
The campaign:
The Texas branch of the Constitution Party once again split from the national party and nominated their own ticket-- Mississippi attorney and segregationist Democrat Charles L. Sullivan for President and retired Marine Corps General Merritt B. Curtis for Vice-President.
Curtis, who just to confuse things was also running for President the same year under the national Constitution Party banner (but only on the ballot in Washington State), did not seem to be very active in the campaign. In fact I can find no record of him acknowledging his nomination one way or the other.
Curtis was pretty much an under-the-radar figure across the country but seemed to be celebrated in extreme Right-wing circles for his involvement with a group known as Defenders of the American Constitution in the 1950s, an anti-Semitic and anti-communist paramilitary organization. The DAC was co-founded by another retired Marine Corps general, Pedro del Valle, who was said to have urged a military coup in America. Gen. del Valle later became a peripheral figure alleged to be implicated in JFK assassination conspiracy theories by some writers.
On the ballot in Texas only, the Sullivan/Curtis third place result of 18,162 was 0.79% of the popular vote in the Lone Star State.
Election history:
1960 - US President (Constitution Party) - defeated
Other occupations: soldier (WWI, WWII), attorney, insurance executive
Buried: Arlington National Cemetery (Arlington, Va.)
Notes:
Member of the National Sojourners.
Sunday, September 1, 2019
Joseph Bracken Lee
Sen. William E. Jenner, Sen. Joe McCarthy, Gov. J. Bracken Lee
Joseph Bracken Lee, January 7, 1899 (Price, Utah) – October 20, 1996 (Salt Lake City, Utah)
VP candidate for Texas Constitution Party (1956)
Running mate with nominee: William E. Jenner (1908-1985)
Popular vote: 0 (0.00%)
Electoral vote: 0/531
The campaign:
The Texas Constitution Party was yet another protest organization that was part of the states' rights movement of the 1950s-1960s as a reaction to court-ordered racial integration. The national Constitution Party endorsed the States' Rights Party team of Thomas Coleman Andrew/Thomas Harold Werdel. But for reasons that are unclear, the Texas branch decided not to support the SRP ticket and ran their own candidates.
In Feb. 1956 the Texas Constitution Party nominated two extremely conservative Republicans: Sen. William E. Jenner of Indiana and Gov. J. Bracken "Brack" Lee of Utah. Jenner was also on the ballot that year as the VP for the States' Rights Party of Kentucky. Yes, it gets confusing real fast.
Gov. Lee was known for his style of blunt confrontation and for pulling colorful political stunts like being very public about refusing to pay his income tax unless certain conditions were met. In 1956 he was defeated in the Republican primary process for reelection and decided to try for another term instead as an Independent (and finished surprisingly well, but still failed to win).
Lee and Jenner do not seem to have been active in the campaign and were most likely nominated without their permission. Biographies of Gov. Lee give scant mention to the Texas Constitution Party if in fact it is even mentioned at all.
The platform of the party, which reflected Lee's own political beliefs, called for pulling the United States out of the United Nations, a repeal of the income tax laws, and giving communities full control of their schools (i.e. code for pro-segregation).
The Jenner/Lee ticket apparently did not make it to ballot status in Texas.
Election history:
1931 - Mayor of Price, Utah - defeated
1936-1947 - Mayor of Price, Utah
1940 - Republican nomination for Governor of Utah - defeated
1942 - US House of Representatives (Utah) (Republican) - defeated
1944 - Governor of Utah (Republican) - defeated
1949-1957 - Governor of Utah (Republican)
1956 - Republican nomination for Governor of Utah - defeated
1956 - Governor of Utah (Independent) - defeated
1958 - US Senate (Independent) - defeated
1960 - US President (Conservative Party of New Jersey) - defeated
1960-1972 - Mayor of Salt Lake City, Utah
1962 - Republican primary for US Senate - defeated
Other occupations: soldier (WWI), insurance business, semi-professional baseball player, real estate, newspaper publisher
Buried: Mount Olivet Cemetery (Salt Lake City, Utah)
Notes:
Most recent of three non-Mormon Governors of Utah.
Freemason.
In Mar. 1964 Louis E. Jaeckel, a Lancaster, SC free-lance writer announced he was running for
President under the American Party (aka American Write-In Party) and "said his running mate may
be J. Bracken Lee, former governor of Utah." Within a few a days wrote a letter of apology to Lee.
Friday, August 30, 2019
William Ezra Jenner
William Ezra Jenner, July 21, 1908 (Marengo, Ind.) – March 9, 1985 (Bedford, Ind.)
VP candidate for States' Rights Party of Kentucky (1956)
Running mate with nominee: Harry Flood Byrd Sr. (1887-1966)
Popular vote: 2657 (0.00%)
Electoral vote: 0/531
The campaign:
The States' Rights Party of Kentucky seems to have had it's origin with the issue of school integration in Union County. In Sept. 1956 Gov. A.B. "Happy" Chandler, a Democrat, was obliged to request the presence of 900 National Guard troops, with tanks, in the town of Sturgis. A crowd of 500 or so segregationists attempted to block a small group of African-American students from attending the previously all-white school-- a familiar scene that would be repeated for the next decade throughout the Southern states.
Said Chandler, "We regret it is necessary to use this means of guaranteeing equal rights to our citizens, but that we must do." White supremacists took advantage of the unrest and organized a rally in Morganifield, the county seat.
The mass-meeting called for the impeachment of Chandler and the formation of a States' Rights Party of Kentucky. Present was Louisville segregationist, KKK member, anti-Semite, and states rights' activist with a name right out of a Faulkner novel, Millard Dee Grubbs. In 1956 Grubbs had also formed an alliance with John Kasper, who was promoting fascist Ezra Pound for President in 1956 and not as an ironic joke. A petition was being handed around Morganfield by Jack Kershaw of Nashville, VP of the Tennessee Federation for Constitutional Government and W.W. "Jerry" Waller, a local farm implement dealer and President of the Union County White Citizens Council.
Kershaw (1913-2010) was an ardent segregationist, Southern secessionist, and later James Earl Ray's defense attorney. In later years he sculpted the infamous Nathan Bedford Forrest Statue, defending himself from the ensuing criticism with, "Somebody needs to say a good word for slavery".
Although information is scarce on the details, the Party apparently made it to the Kentucky ballot with Democratic Sen. Harry F. Byrd Sr. of Virginia as their Presidential nominee and Indiana Republican US Senator and right-hand man to Joe McCarthy, William E. Jenner, as the running mate. It is probable both senators were nominated without their permission but they evidently did not spurn the honor. In this same election Jenner was also the Presidential nominee of another local states' rights party, the Texas Constitution Party.
On the ballot only in Kentucky, the Byrd/Jenner ticket placed third in that state with 0.25% of the popular vote.
Election history:
1934-1942 - Indiana State Senate (Republican)
1940 - Republican nomination for Governor of Indiana - defeated
1944-1945 - US Senate (Ind.) (Republican)
1947-1959 - US Senate (Ind.) (Republican)
1948 - Republican nomination for Governor of Indiana - defeated
1956 - US President (Texas Constitution Party) - defeated
Other occupations: elevator operator, attorney, soldier in WWII, land developer
Buried: Cresthaven Memory Gardens Cemetery (Bedford, Ind.)
Notes:
Defeated Charles M. La Follete, third cousin of 1924 Progressive Party Presidential candidate Robert
M. La Follette, for the Republican nomination for US Senate in 1946.
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