Dixiecrat (pronounced dik-see-krat)
(1) In US
political history, a member of a faction of southern Democrats stressing
states' rights and opposed to the civil rights programs of the Democratic
Party, especially a southern Democrat who left the party in 1948 to support
candidates of the States' Rights Democratic Party.
(2) In
historic US use, a member of the US Democratic Party from the southern states (especially
one of the former territories of the Confederacy), holding socially
conservative views, supporting racial segregation and the continued
entrenchment of a white hegemony.
1948: A portmanteau word of US origin, the construct being Dixie + (Demo)crat. Wholly unrelated to other meanings, Dixie (also as Dixieland) in this context is a reference to the southern states of the United States, especially those formerly part of the Confederacy. The origin is contested, the most supported theory being it’s derived from the Mason-Dixon Line, a historic (if not entirely accurate) delineation between the "free" North and "slave-owning" South. Another idea is it was picked up from any of several songs with this name, especially the minstrel song Dixie (1859) by (northerner) Daniel Decatur Emmett (1815-1904), popular as a Confederate war song although most etymologists hold this confuses cause and effect, the word long pre-dating any of the known compositions. There’s also a suggested link to the nineteenth-century nickname of New Orleans, from the dixie, a Confederate-era ten-dollar bill on which was printed the French dix (ten) but again, it came later. The –crat suffix was from the Ancient Greek κράτος (krátos) (power, might), as used in words of Ancient Greek origin such as democrat and aristocrat; the ultimate root was the primitive Indo-European kret (hard). Dixiecrat is a noun and Dixiecratic is an adjective; the noun plural is Dixiecrats. The noun Dixiecratocracy was a humourous coining speculating about the nature of a Dixiecrat-run government; it was built on the model of kleptocracy, plutocracy, meritocracy, gerontocracy etc.
Universally called Dixiecrats, the States' Rights Democratic Party was formed in 1948 as a dissident breakaway from the Democratic Party. Its core platform was permanently to secure the rights of states to legislate and enforce racial segregation and exclude the federal government from intervening in these matters. Politically and culturally, it was a continuation of the disputes and compromises which emerged in the aftermath of the US Civil War almost a century earlier. The Dixiecrats took control of the party machine in several southern states and contested the elections of 1948 with South Carolina Governor Strom Thurmond as their presidential nominee but enjoyed little support outside the deep South and by 1952 most had returned to the Democratic Party. However, in the following decades, they achieved a much greater influence as a southern faction than ever was achieved as a separatist party. The shift in the south towards support for the Republican Party dates from this time and by the 1980s, the Democratic Party's control of presidential elections in the South had faded and many of the Dixiecrats had joined the Republicans.
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