A
PRIVILEGED CONVERSATION: CARL SANDERS
REFLECTS ON HIS CAREER AND THE CURRENT STATE OF POLITICS
Sometimes you get to
do something for free that you would pay for the privilege of doing —
like having a two-hour conversation with one of your political heroes,
former Georgia Gov. Carl Sanders. He even bought lunch. It doesn’t get
much better than that.
I got to know Gov.
Sanders while he was a member of the board of directors of the Atlanta
Committee for the Olympic Games, but I had admired him from afar long
before that. I voted for him when he was elected in 1962, and I voted
for him again in 1970 when he ran against Jimmy Carter for governor and
lost.
Looking fit and trim
at 81 years old — the former UGA quarterback works out three days a week
— Sanders reflected on his political career and the current state of
politics in Georgia, and dispensed some advice to the current generation
of officeholders in the state.
His tenure as
governor came at a critical time in the state’s history as the South
grappled with the volatile issue of integration. “Looking back,” he
said, “I wasn’t thinking about history then. I was thinking about doing
the best I could as governor, and as it turned out, some of the work I
did has stood the test of time.”
Sanders, generally
considered the first “New South governor,” led Georgia through one of
its most turbulent periods and put the state on an economic path that
helped it leapfrog past neighboring states, in part because of the way
the state handled its civil rights issues. “At the time I was elected,
Birmingham was as well positioned — or maybe better positioned — as
Atlanta, but look what happened there,” he said. “We had some tensions
in Albany and Crawfordville and a few other places, but we were able to
avoid significant clashes in our state between law enforcement and
people who were protesting.”
The governor talked
about the support he received from white business leaders such as Robert
Woodruff, the legendary Coca-Cola executive and philanthropist, bankers
Mills Lane and John Sibley, Atlanta Mayor Ivan Allen, along with the
black leaders of the day: Leroy Johnson, the state’s first black
senator, State Rep. Grace Hamilton, educator Benjamin Mays, and Martin
Luther King Sr. Collectively, they were instrumental in keeping a lid on
the emotions of both black and white Georgians. “I will always be
grateful,” Sanders said, “to these business and community leaders for
their support of my efforts.”
Sanders also credits
his predecessor, the late Ernest Vandiver, for making the decision to
keep the state’s universities open when politicians like Alabama Gov.
George Wallace were blocking the schoolhouse door to keep black students
out. Sanders, then a state senator, admits he “strongly” counseled
Vandiver, in an emotional meeting with the governor and members of the
Legislature, not to close the University of Georgia.
Did he feel a lot of
pressure to knuckle under to those who wanted to emulate our neighbors
in Alabama, Mississippi, Arkansas and other Southern states? “Not one
bit,” Sanders says with emphasis. “I knew what I was going to do. We
were going to follow the law of the land. I appointed the leaders in the
Legislature, and they knew they had better support my programs.
Otherwise, they wouldn’t be in the leadership for long.”
Such tactics
wouldn’t fly today, he admits. “When Lester Maddox was elected governor,
the Legislature took a lot of political power away from the governor’s
office, and they have never given it back.”
Sanders doesn’t
think having Georgia governors eligible for two terms is necessarily a
good thing. “They become risk-averse in the first term so they can get
re-elected,” he says, “and then take eight years to do what previous
governors did in four.” He cites Roy Barnes as an example of a
risk-taking governor, whose first-term activism cost him a second term.
We finally got
around to talking about his run for governor in 1970 against Jimmy
Carter. “Jimmy Carter effectively used race as a wedge issue against
me,” Sanders says matter-of-factly. More next week on the sleazy
campaign Carter conducted, the one he would like you to forget.
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