In September 1964, two months after President Lyndon Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act into law, Senator Strom Thurmond of South Carolina–the former Dixiecrat candidate for president who specialized in epic filibusters of civil rights laws and who was one of 21 Democrats, plus six Republicans, to vote against the ’64 bill–quit the Democratic Party.
He became one of only two Republican senators to represent a Southern state. (The other was John Tower of Texas.)
When Old Strom passed away in 2008, he was praised by people like Congressman Joe “You Lie” Wilson and Senator Jeff Sessions as having helped to build the modern Republican Party in the South.
Thurmond was one of the most famous party-jumpers in American political history, but he was far from the only one. Lots of politicians have done it–Ronald Reagan, Jesse Helms, Trent Lott…
On the other side, Republican Jim Jeffords and Democrat Joe Lieberman both became Independents in 2001 and 2006, and Arlen Specter, the 29-year Republican senator from Pennsylvania, became a Democrat in 2009.
Which brings us to Charlie Crist, who this morning announced that he will run for Florida governor as a Democrat. Crist has not only been governor of Florida before back in 2006, he was a lifelong, and at one time considered a “conservative,” Republican. John McCain even considered him for his running mate in 2008.
As governor, he signed a ban on gay adoption, and was considered both a social and fiscal conservative. But now, Charlie Crist’s former party has moved so far to the right, that he was essentially pushed out.








