It is in the context of having been through the "long, hot, summer" that, in December, Miami police chief
Walter E. Headley uttered the now-infamous phrase, "
When the looting starts, the shooting starts", after which
Frank Rizzo,
Richard Daley and
George Wallace also spoke out in favor of a hardline approach towards looters and rioters. In early July, the
Justice Department met with local media to ask for "restraint in reporting". In December,
The New York Times asked a psychologist about "deterrents" and was told that the riots would continue. The
FBI blamed the misery of ghetto life, oppressive summer weather, and Communist agitation. President
Lyndon B. Johnson was convinced that inner-city poverty and despair were the principal ingredients behind the summer upheavals. Johnson publicly denounced the violence and looting occurring during the riots, calling on citizens to reject lawlessness and work towards peaceful solutions.
Political response Throughout the summer that year, both the
Republican and
Democratic parties were split on how to handle the riots. In both parties two factions existed: one that advocated for
law and order, and another that supported an approach based on
social justice. Democrats held the majority of seats in both Houses of Congress while the Republicans held the minority. Despite common historiographical perceptions that depict the Republicans as being entirely in favor of a "law and order" styled approach to the riots, there was division in the party. President Johnson's popularity levels decreased that summer because of the riots. During July, conservatives in the Republican Party dominated its response to the riots. Republicans believed this would be an opportunity to attack President Johnson and his
War on Poverty initiative. Many Republicans would end up blaming Johnson for what happened that summer and many supported cutting back on programs that benefited urban areas. In the Senate, Republicans took a largely different approach that month than those who were in the House with most Republican Senators supporting Johnson's anti urban poverty programs. In the
1968 presidential primaries, the Republican candidates split into two factions.
Ronald Reagan aligned himself with the law and order faction;
Nelson Rockefeller sided with the social justice faction; and
Richard Nixon catered to both factions. Nixon emerged victorious. Nixon called for policies to control crime, scale back the war on poverty and encourage
black capitalism as a way to "restore urban areas".
Kerner Commission with some members of the
Kerner Commission in the Cabinet Room of the White House The riots confounded many civil rights activists of both races due to the recent passage of major civil rights legislation. They also caused a backlash among Northern whites, many of whom stopped supporting civil rights causes. President Johnson formed an advisory commission, informally known as the
Kerner Commission, on July 28, 1967, to explore the causes behind the recurring outbreaks of urban civil disorder. The commission's scope included the 164 disorders occurring in the first nine months of 1967. The president had directed them, in simple words, to document what happened, find out why it happened, and find out how to prevent it. The commission's 1968 report identified police practices, unemployment and underemployment, and lack of adequate housing as the most significant grievances motivating the rage. It suggested legislative measures to promote racial integration and alleviate poverty and concluded that the nation was "moving toward two societies, one black, one white—separate and unequal." The president, fixated on the Vietnam War and keenly aware of budgetary constraints, barely acknowledged the report. On August 10, the Kerner Commission would recommend in a letter to President Johnson that they should substantially and immediately increase the amount of African Americans serving in the National Guard and Air National Guard. The reason being they thought with more African Americans serving in the National Guard it could be a more effective force at preventing civil disorder.
Polling In a March 1968 Harris poll reported in
The Washington Post, 37% of Americans agreed with the Kerner Commission's report that the 1967 race riots were brought on mainly by inequalities; 49% disagreed. A majority of whites (53%) rejected the idea, with just 35% agreeing. In contrast, 58% of blacks supported it, and only 17% disagreed. == List of riots ==