THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 2026
...Dems like Jim Clyburn hung on: In November 1992, Bill Clinton regained the White House for the Democratic Party. For the record, he was a white Southerner. So was his running mate, Senator Al Gore (D-Tenn.).
After twelve years of Presidents Reagan and Bush, the Democrats were actually back in the White House! And in that year's congressional elections, the ancien regime prevailed:
Congressional elections, November 1992
Democrats: 258 seats
Republicans: 176 seats
It had been that way since the dawn of time. Two years later, the deluge:
Congressional elections, November 1994
Democrats: 204 seats
Republicans: 230 seats
Say what? What the Capitol Hill? Yes, that actually happened! For all the data, click here!
The numbers can get a little confusing, but 34 incumbent Democratic House members were defeated in the general election that year. (That included Rep. Tom Foley, D-Wash., the speaker of the House.)
In 22 other races, Republicans won open seats previously held by Democrats.
Rep. Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.) became the new speaker of the House. The GOP had seized control of the House, by a fairly comfortable margin, for the first time in forty years!
Republicans also seized control of the Senate with a pick-up of eight seats. The very next day, Senator Shelby (D-Alabama) party-switched, transitioning to an R. President Clinton would win re-election two years later, but the co-called "Republican Revolution" was very much underway.
Overall, Republicans had gained 54 seats in the House. Some of those gains, though by no means all, had occurred in Southern states as part of the process whereby "the solid South" (principally meaning the white South) was completing a slow, chaotic change from solidly Democratic to solidly GOP.
It would be hard to overstate the shock at the size of the realignment, which brought a whole new generation of major Republican players to D.C. Indeed, six (6) future Republican senators won election as freshmen congressmen that year. We refer to future senators Brownback, Burr, Chambliss, Coburn, Lindsey Graham and Wicker.
Joe Scarborough even arrived in D.C. as a Republican congressman from the Florida panhandle! Today, Scarborough conducts the most intelligent conversations found on any of our struggling nation's daily cable news programs.
Yesterday, he was denounced as a "douchebag" on the most-watched "cable news" show in our profoundly challenged nation. More on that this afternoon. For now, let's return to the Republican wave of 1994:
The solid South had always been politically and culturally conservative. But as the region fitfully moved from solidly D to solidly R, it moved away from the non-ideological alignment which had characterized our party politics for a great many years.
That said, please remember this:
Even as the GOP was seizing final control of the South, an important change in the way certain House districts were formed meant that a new group of Black Democrats were entering the House from that region.
To cite one prominent example, Rep. James Clyburn had won a House seat in November 1992. He was a straight-ahead Democratic congressman from the state of South Carolina!
He would go on to be a major figure in American politics. He had won election in that state's new majority Black 6th congressional district, a district which had been created in the manner described by the leading authority:
Jim Clyburn
James Enos Clyburn (born July 21, 1940) is an American politician serving as the U.S. representative for South Carolina's 6th congressional district. First elected in 1992, Clyburn is serving his 17th term, representing a congressional district that includes most of the majority-black precincts in and around Columbia and Charleston, as well as most of the majority-black areas outside Beaufort and nearly all of South Carolina's share of the Black Belt.
[...]
After the 1990 census South Carolina's district lines were redrawn. Due to prior racial discrimination before the Voting Rights Act of 1965, the Supreme Court required the 6th district, which had previously included the northeastern portion of the state, to be redrawn as a black-majority district. The 6th was reconfigured to take in most of the majority-black areas near Columbia and Charleston, as well as most of the Black Belt. Five-term incumbent Robin Tallon's home in Florence stayed in the district, but he chose to retire.
Rep. Clyburn has had an extremely significant congressional career. As other people have frequently noted, he's an extremely capable person.
Could he have won a House seat from his home state absent the creation of that majority Black district? We can't necessarily answer that question, but the answer might be no.
Those majority Black Southern districts have been in the news of late, due to several Supreme Court decisions involving redistricting in Louisiana and Alabama. As a result of one of those decisions, Alabama will have one majority Black district this November—one such district out of seven districts total, instead of the current two.
These districts were formed in various Southern states in the wake of an addition to the Voting Rights Act in 1982. The Republican Party strongly supported that addition to the VRA.
After the 1990 census, the Republican Party also supported the creation of those majority Black districts—districts which were virtually guaranteed to send Democrats to the House, even as the region was party-switching its way to Republican control.
Today, we're involved in a great civil war about the likely dismantling of many or all of those majority Black districts. Blue America, including the nation's many Black Democrats, is faced with the challenge of deciding what to think and say, and what to do, in the face of this likely dismantling.
First, though, why did the GOP support the creation of those surefire Democratic districts in the first place? As their revolution was emerging, why did the GOP support the creation of those Democratic districts?
Carl Hulse recently outlined the standard history in this Congressional Memo for the New York Times.
Tomorrow, at long last, we believe we'll finally get to Hulse's account. Rep. Sewell's recent assessments still lie ahead.
Tomorrow: At long last, Hulse explains
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ReplyDeleteI wish Bob would analyze black media. Watch this appalling video: https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2026/06/new_trend_shows_blacks_attacking_random_whites_and_accusing_them_of_being_part_of_karmelo_anthony_s_jury_selection.html
ReplyDeleteWhere did this young man get the idea that Karmelo's jury misbehaved in some way. The media I follow says that this murder was entirely unjustified, that Karmelo deserved 100% of the blame. Where did the maker of this video get the idea that Karmelo's conviction was an instance of racism--something to be protested with violence as well as words?
The racial difference in perception became obvious after OJ's trial. Even my brilliant black cousin Blanche believed OJ was innocent.
The difference in perception never went away. It needs to be fixed.
“It needs to be fixed”
DeleteHmm. Can’t imagine why there’s a difference in perception. Is the perception that black people have sometimes accurate in ways you don’t wish to acknowledge? Maybe your perception needs adjustment as well.
The gross ass Racetroll is at it again. Fuck him.
DeleteJust a suggestion David: instead of wasting your time trolling this combox, why don't you blog black-on-white crime, especially since Gateway Pundit and Breitbart no longer cover it.
DeleteNice work. You’ve found another racist blog. Really enjoyed the comments section, especially the ones about Obama creating racial tensions. These are obviously the kinds of places that seed your thoughts leading, in one comment a while back in which you called Obama evil. Yes you are a racist prick, and yes, that is largely the reason you voted for one.
DeleteThere is a popular POV that criticizing a black person is always racist. IMO that view hurts black people. Lack of criticism hides a need for improvement. Black heroes would not have been as great if they had been deprived of constructive criticism.
Deletewhere did you read about this supposed "popular" point of view?
DeleteI watched a bunch of grownups recently standing behind an overgrown 80-year-old imbecile smiling and laughing at every fucking idiotic lie that spilled out of his foul mouth, because they were afraid to hurt his feelings.
This same fat fucking felonious cretin lying motherfucker holds televised "cabinet meetinss" every so often where every member of his cabinet has to sing praises of dear leader so as not to hurt his feelings.
Go fuck yourself, dickhead. Go play with your nazi friends.
David, those videos don't tell us much about " black media", They are three social media posts out of the hundreds of millions of social media posts that are posted every day. " Libs on tick tock" makes the same logical fallacy. Pretending that individual posts that are outrageous represent an entire group.
DeleteIt may be that the American Thinker is taking you on a bit of a ride.
"There is a popular POV that criticizing a black person is always racist."
DeletePopular? In your imagination, maybe.
Meanwhile, the Republican Party refuses to speak up when a sitting president regularly characterizes black legislators and journalists as "low IQ individuals."
Black people aren’t playing anymore and it’s got Republicans shaking in their boots.
ReplyDeletewomp womp
Racists are thrilled when black people don't "play". Black misbehavior gives racists an reason to keep their racist views.
DeleteRight. It’s the blacks’ fault. 🙄
DeleteNot sure if white misbehavior registers in your world view. Apparently, if some blacks “misbehave”, “racists” think that justifies being racist against all blacks. Am I allowed to feel that white misbehavior justifies being racist against all whites?
All you are, DiC, is an apologist for racism, if not a racist yourself. Why do you proudly post this bullshit here? Do you think Somerby is a fellow traveler with you?
Thinking in terms of "fault" is not a productive way to look at the world. In the theatre, after a rehearsal, the Director typically send each actor a list of criticism, called "notes". Actors don't respond defensively to seeing "faults" point out. No, they use this criticism to do things that improve their performance.
DeleteLet me be clear about why I post this. IMO well-intentioned people are inadvertently harming blacks by depriving them of useful criticism. Suppose you were directing a show and you decided not to send notes to some black actor, in order to not blame him or find fault with him. He might feel better by not facing criticism, but his performance would suffer.
In closing, let's look at the elephant in the room. Why did Karmelo commit this murder at a time and place where the act could be expected to destroy Karmelo's own future?
You’re an imbecile who voted 3 times for a racist. You’re almost always wrong. What makes you think we care what your reasoning is???
DeleteYesterday the troll dickhead wanted Kristen Welker to be kinder to a lying
Deletesack of shit. Maybe she was just offering constructive criticism? Eh dickface?
I do not understand why Somerby is obsessed with these past events in political history. Is he trying to suggest that these midterms may be like what happened to Clinton? Those were different times and the context and conditions were different. This is more like when Obama won after the horrible presidency of George W. Bush. He did such a terrible job that it was possible to elect a black man president, overwhelming the racist impulses that would normally have put another Republican in office.
ReplyDeleteI do not understand what Somerby hopes to gain by bringing race to the forefront by presenting a supposed backlash against the Voting Rights Act and against women's civil rights, as if triggering men's racist and sexist impulses will make up for Trump's destruction of the economy, waging of unnecessary wars, corruption and senility. Nothing is going to rescue Republicans from the consequences of Trump's incompetence, no matter how much Somerby wants to dwell on the days when blacks had the vote and could do something about racism in our country.
Playing the race card and reminding guys that they are part of the manosphere is not going to prevent the coming blue wave. Somerby is not a subtle man.
"Tomorrow, at long last, we believe we'll finally get to Hulse's account. Rep. Sewell's recent assessments still lie ahead. "
ReplyDeleteSomerby has been mentioning Sewell every day and still hasn't told us what she said or why it matters. It seems like it is enough for him to just say her name, with a teasing and slightly disapproving tone, while repeating that she is sharp, without ever actually saying anything more. If that isn't "identity politics," nothing is. Just repeating the name of a black woman, over and over, every day, seems to be enough to get Somerby's point across. Who does that work for? Racists. Anyone else needs to hear more...
"Today, we're involved in a great civil war about the likely dismantling of many or all of those majority Black districts."
ReplyDeleteCalling the lawsuits and discussion over redistricting "a great civil war" is insulting to all of us. We are still using legal processes and political processes to resolve our differences. When Trump sends troops to help out at polling places, then we will be in a civil war. Today is just business as usual.
Why can't Somerby use language properly?
ReplyDeleteBlack Southern Districts in the past are not the problem. The problem is that when there are a majority of black people today who want to elect someone from their community to represent them in Congress, their district has been gerrymandered to make sure only white people (Republicans) can be elected.
ReplyDeleteI do not understand why Somerby is so fixated on the past when it is the current gerrymandering that is the concern.