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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Racist, reactionary and defender of dictatorships: Former
Senator Jesse Helms dead at 86
By Patrick Martin
7 July 2008
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The US media treated the death of former senator Jesse Helms
July 4 as a major national event. His demise led several of the
national newscasts and there were lengthy obituaries the next
day in the national newspapers. But one would search in vain for
serious analysis of how this bigoted hatemonger came to play a
significant role in American political life, to the point where
he was described, in numerous right-wing tributes, as the second
most important conservative of the past half century, after
former president Ronald Reagan.
Particularly obscene were the commentariesfrom the Wall
Street Journal, the Reverend Billy Graham, several Republican
congressmen from North Carolina, and, inevitably, President Bushwhich
noted the coincidence of Helmss death and the US Independence
Day. The official White House statement declared, Jesse
Helms was a kind, decent and humble man and a passionate defender
of what he called the Miracle of America. So it is
fitting that this great patriot left us on the Fourth of July.
The Journal editorial said of Helms, The main
cause of his life was defending liberty. By liberty,
the right-wing press means the defense of class and race privilege,
the causes to which Helms actually devoted his political career.
A racist, religious bigot and redbaiter to the end, Helms personified
the reactionary forces that rose to political power in Washington
over the past three decades.
Below we reprint the article
published by the World Socialist Web Site when Helms announced
his retirement from Congress in 2001.
Jesse Helms to retire from US Senate:
a career based on racism, bigotry and contempt for democratic
rights
By Patrick Martin, 31 August 2001
The announcement by North Carolina Senator Jesse Helms that
he will retire rather than run for reelection in 2002 has produced
the outpouring of clichés, designed to conceal rather than
illuminate, that is generally churned out by the American media
in lieu of political analysis. Not a single commentator on the
television networks, cable outlets or major daily newspapers would
address the central issue: what does it say about modern American
politics that a proponent of racism and repression at home, and
defender of fascist and military dictatorships abroad, should
play such a major role?
Helms began his career as a radio spokesman for segregation,
anticommunism and religious fundamentalism, and never moved far
from this noxious political axis. Born in Monroe, North Carolina
in 1921, he received some initial training in radio in the military
during World War II and returned to take a position at a radio
station in the state capital, Raleigh.
In 1950 he worked as a researcher for racist Democratic Senate
candidate Willis Smith, whose campaign included a doctored photo
of the incumbents wife dancing with a black man. (Helms
biographer Ernest Furgurson reports the claim that Helms personally
cut up the photos and combined them.)
Helms went to Washington as Smiths staff administrative
assistant, then returned to North Carolina two years later as
executive director of the states banking association, where
he spent seven years helping enrich the financial institutions
that exploited the struggling farmers and small businessmen Helms
would later claim to represent. He also ran for and won a seat
on the Raleigh City Council.
In 1960 Helms took a job as a TV commentator, the position
that would prove the real launching pad for his political rise.
For 12 years he railed against Negro hoodlums, sex
perverts, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and other civil rights
agitators, and denounced welfare recipients, saying
in one broadcast, A lot of human beings have been born bums.
By 1972 the Democratic Party in North Carolina was deeply split
over the issue of race. Senator B. Everett Jordan, a three-term
incumbent and longtime defender of segregation, was challenged
for the Democratic nomination by Congressman Nick Galifianakis,
who won a bitter primary fight with the support of many newly
registered black voters. Helms switched parties, sought the Republican
nomination and won a narrow victory, becoming the first Republican
ever to win a Senate race in North Carolina. Former Democrats,
many motivated by white racism, provided his 54-46 percent margin.
A similar pattern developed throughout the regionhailed
by President Richard Nixon as a vindication of his Southern
strategy. The Republican Party, once the party of Abraham
Lincoln, revived its fortunes in the South by adopting the cause
of racial prejudice, under a thin disguise of opposing special
privileges for blacks. Helms followed in the footsteps of
other diehard racist politicians, like Strom Thurmond of neighboring
South Carolina, in switching parties. But more than any of them,
even Thurmond, he retained the closest ties to far-right and Ku
Klux Klan elements openly committed to white supremacy.
The Republican Party never established complete predominance
in North Carolina, with conservative Democrats retaining control
of the state legislature and the governorship for most of Helms
30 years in the Senate. Helms own seat was never secure,
not so much because of the black voteless than 20 percent
in the statebut because of deep-seated opposition among
workers of all races to a politician so closely linked to the
banks and the textile and tobacco bosses. Helms never won more
than 55 percent of the vote in any of his races, while the states
other Senate seat changed parties every six years, as four consecutive
incumbents were defeated for reelection.
Helms held on, not so much because of his in-state popularity,
but due to the powerful financial backing of big business and
right-wing elements nationally. He became the principal spokesman
for what is, in all but name, the fascist wing of the Republican
Party, voicing their obsessive hatred of blacks, immigrants, gays,
liberals, socialists, foreigners and the United Nations. Helms
developed an enormous nationwide fundraising machine and spent
record amounts to eke out reelection after reelectionhe
spent more than $10 million in 1984 and a staggering $16 million
in 1996, in a state with only a handful of mid-sized media markets.
In the Senate, Helms could be counted on, not only to vote
against any semblance of progressive reform, but also to engage
in tirades and one-man delaying tactics that frequently prevailed
against the increasingly timid stance of the waning group of liberals.
He opposed minimum wage increases, abortion and fetal tissue research,
food stamps, anti-pollution legislation, reparations for the internment
of Japanese Americans during World War II, funding for the National
Endowment for the Arts and the establishment of Martin Luther
King Day as a national holiday. He regularly backed legislation
tailored to the religious right, including bills to reestablish
Christian prayer in the public schools, outlaw flag burning and
bar any federal action to protect the rights of gays and lesbians.
In one revealing episode in 1982, when the Reagan administration
grudgingly supported reauthorization of the 1965 Voting Rights
Act, Helms waged war against the bill, introducing amendment after
amendmentto exempt North Carolina counties from its provisions,
to weaken the enforcement powers of the Civil Rights Division
of the US Department of Justice, to reduce the extension from
25 years to 15 years. All were defeated by overwhelming bipartisan
majorities. Ultimately, Helms voted against final passage of a
bill that even Strom Thurmond eventually supported.
His greatest impact on government policy was in foreign affairs.
He obtained a seat on the Foreign Relations Committee and used
it to attack Third World regimes that he regarded as communist,
applying this label to any nationalist government that came into
conflict with American foreign policy. Cuban President Fidel Castro
was naturally his number one target, and when the Republican Party
gained control of Congress in the 1994 elections he sponsored
the Helms-Burton Act, which imposed tight trade restrictions on
American companies, as well as corporations based in Europe and
Asia, that sought business dealings with the island nation.
Throughout the 1970s and 1980s Helms was a leading backer of
right-wing terrorist groups opposed to the regimes that he demonized:
UNITA in Angola, the RENAMO guerrillas in Mozambique, the Contras
in Nicaragua, the Afghan mujahedin. He gave full support to apartheid
South Africa and to military dictatorships in Central and South
America.
When presented with evidence that Roberto DAubuisson,
the US-backed death squad leader in El Salvador, was involved
in atrocious human rights abuses, Helms responded, All I
know is that DAubuisson is a free enterprise man and deeply
religious. One peace activist who met with Helms staffers
to describe the murders of Nicaraguan doctors, nurses and children
by the Contras was told, Well, theyre just communiststhey
deserve to die.
In his early years in the Senate Helms was viewed as an eccentric,
a peculiar throwback to a more primitive political era. It is
a measure of the sharp shift to the right in the whole official
political spectrum in the United States that such a figure eventually
came to be regarded as an ideological standard-bearer of the majority
party in Congress, a man whose support was courted by presidential
candidates and cabinet officialsas in the disgusting display
of groveling by Clintons Secretary of State Madeleine Albright.
Even late in his career Helms occasionally outflanked his own
party from the right, as in 1997, when he blocked the nomination
of fellow Republican William F. Weld, then governor of Massachusetts,
as ambassador to Mexico, because of his liberal views on certain
cultural issues.
One of his most notorious moments came during President Clintons
first term, when he told a television interviewer that neither
he nor most of the military believed that Clinton was qualified
to be commander-in-chief. He added that because of Clintons
views on gays in the military, and his history of opposition to
the Vietnam War, the president was extremely unpopular on North
Carolina military bases. Mr. Clinton better watch out if
he comes down here, Helms said. Hed better have
a bodyguard.
When this incitement to violence was referred to the Secret
Service, Helms issued a brief retraction. But the statement clearly
expressed the hostility to democracy that motivated the entire
right-wing campaign against the Clinton White House, culminating
in impeachment.
Despite this record of unmitigated reaction, there was no lack
of Democrats and liberals who offered tributes to Helms after
the senator announced his impending retirement. For the most part,
the media presented the arch reactionary as a distinguished spokesman
for a legitimate point of view.
Richard Holbrooke, US ambassador to the United Nations under
Clinton, absurdly compared Helms to Henry Cabot Lodge Sr., the
Boston aristocrat who led opposition to US entry into the League
of Nations in 1919. Democratic Senator Christopher Dodd said it
was the power of his personality that makes him special
as a force in the Senate. People knew if he was the
only person on your side, hed stick with you.
Senator Joseph Biden, a leading Democrat who worked with Helms
on the Foreign Relations Committee, gushed, Perhaps the
most remarkable thing about Jesse Helms is that, notwithstanding
his conservative credentials, when confronted with new facts,
he is willing to reconsider his position.
Perhaps the worst perversion of the truth came from Walter
Russell Meade, a liberal historian and senior fellow at the Council
on Foreign Relations in New York, who published a column in the
Wall Street Journal entitled Farewell to a Great
Jacksonian. Meade suggested that Helms deserves to
be remembered as one of a handful of men who brought white Southern
conservatives into a new era of race relations. Meade said
that Helms had urged compliance with civil rights legislation,
since it was the law, even though he disagreed with it.
The reality is that Helms fought against racial reconciliation
every day of his political life, with only slight changes in terminology.
As late as 1990, in his reelection contest against former Charlotte
Mayor Harvey Gantt, the first black man to run for US Senator
in North Carolina as a candidate of the Democratic or Republican
parties, Helms employed crude race-baiting. A television ad that
gained national notoriety featured white hands holding a letter
rejecting a job application, while the announcer explained that
affirmative action was responsible. Helms and his campaign subsequently
settled a Justice Department complaint over a pre-election mailing
of postcards falsely threatening 125,000 black voters with jail
if they went to the polls.
Bigotry was the font of Helms politics. His hometown,
Monroe, was notorious as a stronghold of the Ku Klux Klan. Racial
oppression was so intense that it sparked one of the most important
acts of armed resistance by black residents during the civil rights
era, led by Robert F. Williams, head of the Monroe NAACP. Williams
was ultimately framed up on charges of terrorism and fled the
United States, living for a decade in exile in Cuba and China.
A new biography of the civil rights leader recounts an incident
of his boyhood:
Walking down Main Street, Williams watched a white police
officer accost an African American woman. The policeman, Jesse
Alexander Helms Sr., an admirer once recalled, had the sharpest
shoe in town and he didnt mind using it. His son,
U.S. Senator Jesse Helms, remembered Big Jesse as
a six-foot, two hundred pound gorillawhen he said
smile, I smiled. Eleven-year-old Robert Williams
looked on in terror as Big Jesse flattened the black woman with
his huge fists, then dragged her off to the nearby jailhouse,
her dress up over her head, the same way that a cave man would
club and drag his sexual prey. Williams recalled her
tortured screams as the flesh was ground away from the friction
of the concrete. The memory of this violent spectacle and
the laughter of white bystanders haunted him for decades.
(Quoted from Timothy Tyson, Radio Free Dixie: Robert F. Williams
and the Roots of Black Power, University of North Carolina
Press, 2001)
Such was the environment that produced Jesse Helms. It is an
indictment of American capitalist society that this son of a racist
policeman, bigot and defender of mass murderers became a powerful
figure in American politics. Like scum on a stagnant pond, the
rottenest elements in American society rose to the top of the
political system during the last quarter of the twentieth century.
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