With this structure in place, Byrd's organization practically selected every governor from 1930 until 1970, even as Virginia became friendlier to
Republicans. Many Virginia Democrats began drifting away from the national party due to
Franklin D. Roosevelt's support for
organized labor during the
New Deal. This only accelerated during the
Civil Rights Movement, when Byrd drafted the
Southern Manifesto in opposition to the
U.S. Supreme Court's decision in
Brown v. Board of Education (1954). Consequently, many Byrd Democrats began splitting their tickets in national elections as early as the 1930s, well before ticket-splitting became a trend across the South in the 1960s. This trend was especially pronounced in western Virginia, Byrd's home region. Several counties in that region have not supported a Democrat for president since Roosevelt. For instance,
Highland and
Shenandoah Counties last supported a Democrat for President in
1932,
Page County last supported a Democrat in
1936, while
Augusta and
Roanoke Counties both last supported a Democrat in
the 1944 election. Byrd was vehemently opposed to
racial desegregation even early in the New Deal, and later opposed Presidents
Harry S. Truman and
John F. Kennedy despite their also being Democrats (as well as losing Democratic Presidential candidate
Adlai Stevenson) because they opposed
racial segregation within the U.S. military and federal workforce. Meanwhile, conservative Democrats controlled the General Assembly until the mid 1990s. Some Byrd Democrats, such as Governors
John S. Battle and
Thomas B. Stanley, were sober enough to realize that racial integration was inevitable, and were willing to take cautious steps toward rolling back
Jim Crow laws. However, their efforts were short-circuited in 1954, when a little over a month after the
Brown v. Board of Education decision by the U.S. Supreme Court, Byrd vowed to block any attempts to integrate Virginia's public schools. While the state superintendent of education had promised "no defiance of the Supreme Court." Byrd, on the other hand, issued a statement saying Virginia faced "a crisis of the first magnitude" and calling the decision by the
Warren Court the "most serious blow" ever to
states' rights. Byrd decreed a policy of "
massive resistance" to integrating the state's public schools which he rationalized on
anti-miscegenation grounds. Miscegenation was illegal under Virginia's
Racial Integrity Act of 1924. He was joined by Virginia's other Senator,
A. Willis Robertson, and most other members of the organization. Byrd had a powerful ally in the
United States House of Representatives, where the chairman of the
House Rules Committee,
Howard W. Smith, kept many civil rights bills from even coming to a vote on the floor. Governor Stanley joined with Byrd and
Garland Gray, head of the powerful Democratic Caucus in the Virginia Senate, and established the Virginia Public Education Commission, that became known as the
Gray Commission, to draft and pass a series of laws known as the
Stanley Plan to implement the "massive resistance" program announced in 1956. After Virginia's school-closing law was ruled unconstitutional in January 1959, the General Assembly repealed the compulsory school attendance law and made the operation of public schools a local option for the state's counties and cities. When journalist
Edward R. Murrow, presented the program "The Lost Class of '59" on the
CBS television network that focused on the organization's "massive resistance" program that had caused the shuttering of the public schools in several Virginia localities it caused national indignation. State and federal courts struck down most of the "massive resistance" laws by 1960. In response, Stanley's successor as governor, J. Lindsay Almond Jr., drafted several laws that implemented an extremely gradual desegregation process, popularly known as "passive resistance." Most members of the organization considered "passive resistance" to be rank heresy, as it abandoned
white supremacy. In 1968, however, the federal Supreme Court held that this didn't go far enough in
Green v. County School Board of New Kent County. By then, continued resistance to integration was almost a moot point because Virginia's anti-miscegenation law that Byrd had used to rationalize "massive resistance" had been overturned in 1967 by the U.S. Supreme Court in
Loving v. Virginia. Also by this time, whites in Virginia localities with large black populations had largely abandoned the public schools for private
segregation academies or in what became known as
white flight fled
Richmond and other inner cities for new
suburbs just outside the
city limits in neighboring rural (and predominately white) counties. Even before then, the failure of "massive resistance" caused some Byrd Democrats to conclude that segregation could not be maintained forever. For example, in 1963, when the
Prince Edward County school board balked at reopening the schools after four years, Governor
Albertis S. Harrison advised the board members to comply with a court order to reopen unless they were willing to face prosecution. Earlier, Harrison had led the state's defense of "massive resistance" while serving as attorney general. A number of Byrd Democrats, like Governor Mills Godwin, made efforts to appeal to black voters. Godwin had been one of the leaders of "massive resistance" as a state senator. However, while serving as lieutenant governor under Harrison from 1962 to 1966, he had campaigned for Lyndon Johnson during Johnson's presidential bid, during which he courted black voters as a prelude to his run for governor in 1965. During that latter campaign, Godwin won the endorsement of the Virginia NAACP. However, Byrd, Robertson, Smith, Gray and a few others continued to oppose any form of integration. ==Demise==