U.S. Senate
In
1934, Bilbo defeated Stephens to win a seat in the
United States Senate. There he spoke against "farmer murderers", "poor-folks haters", "shooters of widows and orphans", "charity hospital destroyers", "spitters on our heroic veterans", "rich enemies of our public schools", "private bankers 'who ought to come out in the open and let folks see what they're doing'", "European debt-cancelers", "unemployment makers", pacifists, Communists, munitions manufacturers, and "skunks who steal
Gideon Bibles from hotel rooms". In Washington, Bilbo feuded with Mississippi's senior Senator
Pat Harrison. Bilbo, whose base was among tenant farmers, hated the upper-class Harrison, who represented the rich planters and merchants. When Harrison faced a primary challenge from former Governor
Mike Conner, Bilbo supported Conner. Bilbo's former law partner Stewart C. "Sweep Clean" Broom, campaigned for Harrison. Harrison won
reelection. When the Senate majority leaderhip job opened up in 1937, Harrison ran and faced a close contest with Kentucky's
Alben Barkley. Harrison's campaign manager asked Bilbo to consider voting for Harrison. Bilbo said he would vote for Harrison only if Harrison asked him personally. When asked if he would make the personal appeal to Bilbo, Harrison replied, "Tell the son of a bitch I wouldn't speak to him even if it meant the presidency of the United States." Harrison lost by one vote, 37-to-38, and his reputation as the Senator who wouldn't speak to his home-state colleague remained intact. Bilbo had taken revenge by voting against his fellow Mississippian. Bilbo's outspoken support of
segregation and
white supremacy was controversial in the Senate. Attracted by the ideas of
black separatists such as
Marcus Garvey, Bilbo proposed an amendment to the federal work-relief bill on June 6, 1938, which would have deported twelve million black Americans to
Liberia at federal expense to relieve unemployment. Bilbo wrote a book advocating the idea. Garvey praised him in return, saying that Bilbo had "done wonderfully well for the Negro." But
Thomas W. Harvey, a senior
Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League leader in the US, distanced himself from Bilbo because of his racist speeches. Bilbo continued to pursue the idea of repatriating African Americans, with support from black separatists such as
Mittie Maude Lena Gordon, founder of the
Peace Movement of Ethiopia. Gordon collaborated with Bilbo on his proposed legislation, the "Greater Liberia Bill", and directed the
Peace Movement of Ethiopia in a national grassroots campaign in support. Gordon’s support of Bilbo was motivated by her belief that only "government aid" could attain her foreign policy goal of African-American repatriation to West Africa. Her desire for this foreign policy measure was shaped by her belief in racial separatism, which she shared with Bilbo and which also attracted him to this foreign policy measure. However, his desire for racial separatism was motivated by his white supremacist views, but hers by a perception that African-Americans could never attain desirable social conditions in American society. Moreover, Gordon’s recognition of the power of government officials to help her attain her goal provoked her to use her gender in her communication with Bilbo in order to appeal to his masculinity. On April 24, 1939, Bilbo presented the bill to the Senate. It proposed relocating African Americans to
Liberia and further suggested the purchase of 400,000 square miles of West African territory from France and Britain, credited on debt from
World War I, for the emigrants. The movement was to be funded through federal expenditures, initially suggesting $1 billion, and encouraged support from "any country in Europe that owes us a war debt". In his 1940 re-election bid, President Roosevelt praised Bilbo as "a real friend of liberal government." Bilbo, in turn, boasted himself as being "...100 percent for Roosevelt ... and the New Deal." After 1940, however, he moved steadily to the right becoming isolationist in foreign policy, pro-business in economic policy, and the hostile to rights of labor unions. He opposed the draft and preparations for war. He increasingly voted with the
Conservative Coalition that controlled domestic policy. He switched from a supporter to an opponent of labor unions. He ridiculed blacks, Jews and Italians and helped defeat the renewal of Roosevelt's
Fair Employment Practice Committee, which tried to abolish job discrimination based on race or ethnicity. He always favored agriculture, and he owned a large farm himself. As the war began, he complained that Roosevelt's policies were driving up wages and reducing his profits. He supported programs sought by large farmers. Bilbo revealed he had joined the second
Ku Klux Klan in the 1920s an August 1946 interview on the radio program
Meet the Press. He was a prominent participant in the lengthy southern Democratic
filibuster of the
Costigan-Wagner anti-lynching bill before the Senate in 1938, during which he argued, "If you succeed in the passage of this bill, you will open the floodgates of hell in the South. Raping, mobbing, lynching, race riots, and crime will be increased a thousandfold". Bilbo denounced
Richard Wright's autobiography,
Black Boy (1945), on the Senate floor. "Its purpose is to plant the seeds of devilment and trouble-breeding in the days to come in the mind and heart of every American Negro ... It is the dirtiest, filthiest, lousiest, most obscene piece of writing that I have ever seen in print." He also commented in the
Congressional Record that a woman from an old New England family who entered into a mixed marriage with a black Harvard-trained social worker "appears to be sustained in her mad insane determination to mingle blood impregnated with the highest genetic values of the Caucasian and the blood of an African whose racial strains have dwelt for six thousand years or more in the jungles of a continent.” Bilbo was outspoken in saying that blacks should not be allowed to vote anywhere in the United States, regardless of the
Fourteenth and
Fifteenth amendments to the United States Constitution. In 1946, he wrote to General MacArthur, head of the Allied occupation of Japan, that the Japanese should "all be sterilized." During the 1946 Democratic Senate primary in Mississippi, his last race, Bilbo was the subject of a series of attacks by journalist
Hodding Carter in his paper, the
Greenville Delta Democrat-Times. Dismayed that the Supreme Court had ruled that
white primaries were unconstitutional, Bilbo urged his white supporters to prevent black citizens from voting. At least half of all black citizens were prevented from voting in the primary due to threats of violence. He won that primary against three other opponents with 51.0 percent of the vote. As usual, Bilbo faced no Republican opposition in the 1946 general election. Based on a request by liberal Democratic Senator
Glen H. Taylor of
Idaho, the newly elected Republican majority in the United States Senate refused to seat Bilbo for the term to which he was elected because of his speeches. He was charged to have incited violence against blacks who wanted to vote in the South. In addition, a committee found that he had taken bribes—one contractor gave him a Cadillac for Christmas in 1946. A filibuster by Southerners threatened to delay the seating of all the new senators. It was resolved when a supporter proposed that Bilbo's credentials remain on the table while he returned to Mississippi to seek medical treatment for
oral cancer. ==Death==