Read The History of Florida Online
Authors: Michael Gannon
Tags: #History, #United States, #State & Local, #Americas
damaging their cars.
World War II also created new opportunities for 500,000 black residents
of Florida. The length of World War II in contrast to the twenty months of
U.S. participation in World War I, and the resulting social and geographic
dislocation, had mobilized the black community behind racial reform in
ways the country (and state) had not seen. The war propaganda had given
many hope that racial change would be forthcoming in the wake of the
conflict. Change would not come quickly.
The state’s white political leaders did what they could to keep race rela-
tions as they had been in the prewar era. Governor Caldwell and his succes-
sors, Ful er Warren (1949–53) and Dan McCarty (1953), did what the federal
courts required of the state, but they stonewalled implementation at every
turn.
In the postwar era, local leaders and law enforcement officials, often in
cooperation with white militants, also took steps to make sure that segrega-
tion barriers remained intact. They systematical y repressed black desires
for equality and greater freedom. As an example to others in Florida, Klan
leaders and allies in Orange County murdered Harry T. Moore, state leader
proof
of the NAACP, and his wife in their home on Christmas Eve 1950 for con-
ducting a statewide campaign to register blacks to vote in Florida during
1949 and 1950. The FBI led the inquiry into Moore’s death and found that
there was a widespread network of local officials, police, and militant whites
operating throughout central Florida to suppress the rights of blacks.13
By the late 1940s and throughout the 1950s, battle lines were drawn be-
tween proponents of traditional southern values and those who sought to
build a “new” Florida. Racial and social traditions were steadily eroded by
development policies embraced by political leaders. Business leaders and
residents who had come predominantly from the Northeast and Midwest
had no intention of having their interests jeopardized by a commitment to a
long-dead southern past. A series of federal court rulings and congressional
acts in the 1960s and 1970s reconfigured the state’s political power structure
racial y and geographical y, which sped up the state’s transformation into a
two-party political system.
Florida Politics · 425
Federal Actions on Civil Rights (Education, Voting,
Reapportionment) Open up the State’s Political System
With the infusion of newcomers into the state’s urban areas, pressures to in-
crease urban representation in the state legislature intensified. By 1950, the
legislature remained unreapportioned; 13.6 percent of the state’s population
elected more than one-half of the state senators, and 18 percent of the popu-
lation elected more than half the members of the House of Representatives.
It was an all-white male legislature, with no women or minorities.
Governor LeRoy Col ins (1955–61), who was elected with substantial
backing from the urban regions of the state and with especial y strong sup-
port from south Florida, made legislative reapportionment one of his top
priorities. Collins introduced reapportionment in each legislative session,
only to see it blocked by rural legislators, who dominated the senate leader-
ship and held nearly a majority of the seats in the house.14
If Collins, south Florida legislators, and residents of that region had any
hope of winning this fight, their plans were set back by the emergence of
the civil rights movement. When the Supreme Court issued its
Brown
v.
Board
of
Education
of
Topeka
edict on 17 May 1954, few in Florida were
prepared for such a decision. Pork Chop elements in the state legislature
quickly seized the lead, denouncing the decisions and drafting proposals
proof
of resistance. Representatives from south Florida also criticized the Court’s
Governor LeRoy Collins, whose
administration (1955–61) was
perhaps the most enlightened
and successful in modern Florida
history, promoted New South
values of business pragmatism,
social harmony, and governmen-
tal reform. During his first years in
office, which directly followed the
U.S. Supreme Court decision of
1954 ending racial segregation in
the nation’s schools, he adopted a
moderate stance that prevented
defiance of the court. On his death
in 1991, the state House of Repre-
sentatives unanimously named
him “Floridian of the Century.”
426 · Susan A. MacManus and David R. Colburn
pronouncement, but they found themselves and their state being led by
north Florida politicians who militantly rejected any compromise.
Locked in a struggle to win the governorship in a special election at the
time of the Court’s pronouncement, Collins announced his commitment to
segregation. As a business progressive, however, Collins was not an extrem-
ist. Col ins pursued a variety of measures that were designed to preserve
school segregation but also sought to avoid racial extremism. The governor
was able to keep the racial militants at bay so that he and Florida gained a
reputation for racial moderation, and tourists, new residents, and new busi-
nesses continued to stream into the state. Only the veto of Governor LeRoy
Col ins prevented Florida from creating a private school system to avoid
desegregation and jailing teachers who taught desegregated classes.15
The efforts by north Floridians to continue to hold on to the reins of
power in the state took on a note of desperation in the 1960s. Without the
political skil of a LeRoy Col ins in the governor’s chair and with Florida
continuing to be a seedbed of change as a result of massive population
growth, a burgeoning tourist economy, and an expanding civil rights move-
ment, Governors Farris Bryant (1961–65) and Haydon Burns (1965–67),
both of Jacksonville, together with rural, north Florida legislators, pursued
efforts to maintain the status quo. Attempts to stymie desegregation took
proof
on a harder edge. Florida’s reputation for racial moderation slipped badly
during the first half of the 1960s.16
Ironical y, as Burns fought to block school desegregation, he led a state-
wide effort in 1965 to bring the Walt Disney Corporation to Florida. Disney
and the other tourist operations that opted to follow Disney’s new theme
park in Orlando would further undermine racial extremism and the social
instability that accompanied it. Above al , these businesses insisted on a
secure environment in which to conduct their business operations.
Although the state’s economic development program steadily eroded its
commitment to a segregated past, there was no clear sign that political lead-
ers were prepared to abandon Florida’s racial heritage until the federal gov-
ernment intervened. Washington removed the civil rights issue from state
control by adopting the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act
of 1965.
In 1967, in
Swann
v.
Adams
, the U.S. Supreme Court ordered the reap-
portionment of Florida to reflect “one man, one vote.” Within months a new
legislature was formed that oversaw the modernization of state government,
the abandonment of segregation, and the rise of the Republican Party.17 The
world of the Pork Choppers had col apsed, and with it the southern cause
Florida Politics · 427
they had so vigorously championed. In contrast to what happened in the
Reconstruction era of nearly a century earlier, this time the federal gov-
ernment did not renege on its promises to black Americans. Although few
white leaders would have acknowledged it in the 1960s, federal officials had
done Florida an enormous favor by removing racial extremism and rural
domination from its politics.
A New State Constitution and a Legislative Shake-Up
Without race-based politics and without a legislature dominated by rural
north Florida, the state began to address important issues that had been
ignored for years in the battle over segregation and, in the process, to revisit
political loyalties that had gone unchallenged during the twentieth century.
The most immediate impact of these developments was the adoption of a
new constitution in 1968 which recognized the Court-ordered reapportion-
ment in 1967, effectively gave legislative control to south Florida, and com-
pletely overhauled the old constitution of 1885.
The new constitution strengthened the hands of the governor by al owing
him to serve two consecutive terms, consolidating the number of executive
departments, and granting budgetary responsibilities to the chief executive.
proof
At the same time, however, it formal y recognized the cabinet as a constitu-
tional body and granted certain cabinet officers authority over the consoli-
dated executive agencies. These changes, together with the Legislative Re-
organization Act of 1969, which led to annual meetings of the legislature (as
opposed to the biennial meetings) and the creation of permanent legislative
staffs, effectively counterbalanced the new powers of the governor’s office.
Structural changes were one giant step taken to modernize Florida’s govern-
ment. Their importance became even more evident as the state’s population
continued to explode.
“Imported Politics”: A Two-Party State Begins to Take Shape
In 1960, Florida was the nation’s tenth-most-populous state; by 1980, it
ranked seventh; and by 1990, it was fourth.18 Projections are that it will
become the nation’s third-largest state by 2020. By the beginning of the
twenty-first century, Florida had become a microcosm of the United States
at large—a state whose politics was “imported” from other parts of the U.S.
and from Latin and South America (see table 22.1).
As the state’s population exploded, Florida’s economy became increasingly
428 · Susan A. MacManus and David R. Colburn
Table 22.1. Florida’s Racial and Ethnic Composition: A Comparison with the
United States
Race
Percentage of population
Florida 2010 (%)
U.S. 2010 (%)
White
75.0
72.4
Non-Hispanic White
57.9
63.7
Hispanic/Latino
22.5
16.3
African American
16.0
12.6
Asian
2.4
4.8
Native American
0.4
0.9
Pacific Islander
0.1
0.2
Some other race
3.6
6.2
Two or more races
2.5
2.9
Source
: U.S. Bureau of the Census, 2010 Census.
dependent on housing construction, high-technology manufacturing, and
tourism, although agriculture and, to a lesser extent, the phosphate industry
and cattle ranching still played prominent roles. The state’s urban and sub-
urban areas boomed. By the 2010 Census, more than 94 percent of Florida
residents lived in one of the state’s metropolitan statistical areas—one of the
highest metropolitanization rates in the nation.19
proof
The state’s population center shifted from the Panhandle to central and
south Florida. The state’s centroid (exact population center) was in Jefferson
County in 1830, but by 2005, it was in southwestern Polk County.20 Political
power in Florida shifted from the less-populated, rural north Florida coun-
ties to the urban centers in central Florida (Orlando, Daytona, Titusvil e,
and the Space Center), Southwest Florida (from the Tampa–St. Petersburg–
Clearwater area to Sarasota, Fort Myers, and Naples), and southeast Flori-
da’s “Gold Coast” (Palm Beach, Fort Lauderdale, and Miami).21
The infusion of new residents transformed Florida into a true “melt-
ing pot,” prompting a change in the state’s party, racial/ethnic, and gender
makeup of its executive, legislative, and judicial officeholders. Redistricting,
term limits enacted in 2000, and party recruitment of women and minority
candidates helped change the faces of the state’s elected officials to reflect a
more representative picture of Florida’s increasingly diverse population.