With the exception of the 1928 election, when fierce anti-Catholicism and Prohibitionism caused Herbert Hoover to defeat the wet Catholic
Al Smith, Florida since the end of the
Reconstruction era had been a classic Southern one-party state dominated by the Democratic Party. Disfranchisement of African-Americans and many poor whites had virtually eliminated the Republican Party – only nine Republicans had ever been elected to the state legislature since 1890 – and
Democratic primaries were the sole competitive elections. Under the influence of Senator
Claude Pepper, Florida had abolished the
poll tax in 1937, leading to steady increases in voter turnout during the following several elections; however, there was no marked increase in
African-American voting and Democratic hegemony remained unchallenged:
FDR did not lose a single county in the state during his four elections. However, on February 2, 1948, incumbent President
Harry S. Truman, fearing that the anti-democratic practices and racial discrimination of the South would severely denigrate the United States' reputation in the
Cold War, launched the first
civil rights bill since the end of Reconstruction, along with
Executive Order 9981 to desegregate the military.
Mississippi governor
Fielding Wright had already sounded a call for revolt, which he took to the Southern Governors Conference at
Wakulla Springs to say that calls for civil rights legislation by national Democrats would not be tolerated in the South. After Truman was renominated at the
1948 Democratic National Convention, Southern Democrats walked out and convened at
Birmingham, Alabama on July 17, nominating
South Carolina Governor James Strom Thurmond for president and
Mississippi Governor Fielding L. Wright for vice president. Due to its smaller proportion of African Americans in its population than in other Southern states, Florida experienced less dissent from the national Democratic Party in response to these actions. Florida Senator
Claude Pepper argued that, unless
Dwight D. Eisenhower was nominated instead, Truman was the only viable nominee, while
Frank D. Upchurch, a long-time adversary of Pepper, recommended that the renomination of Truman be fought. Eventually, those opposed to Truman won the primary fight, taking eleven and a half votes out of twenty and control of the state's delegation. When Florida's Democrats designated their presidential electors, four were pledged against Truman and four to vote for him, However, after the "States' Rights" convention in July,
Miami Herald publisher Reuben Clein filed a civil suit to disqualify the four original electors who planned to vote for Thurmond. Pepper reversed his earlier pledge not to support Truman, and a special session of the state legislature provided separate lists for all candidates, and Truman made a whistle-stop tour of the state in mid-October. ==See also==