Wilder, L. Douglas 1931–
L. Douglas Wilder 1931–
Governor of Virginia
At a Glance…
Learned About Life as an Invisible Man
Became Known as the State Senate’s Angry Young Man
Took on a More Conservative Bent
Won the Governorship by a Slim Margin
Entered the National Political Arena
Sources
On January 14, 1990, L. Douglas Wilder was sworn in as governor of Virginia, joining a line that includes Patrick Henry, Thomas Jefferson, and Harry F. Byrd. Wilder became Virginia’s 66th governor and the nation’s first elected black governor. The grandson of slaves, Wilder is a moderate who immediately became a major influence in the U.S. political arena, announcing—but eventually repealing—his decision to run for the Democratic nomination in the 1992 U.S. presidential election. As a Washington Post correspondent wrote shortly before Wilder’s gubernatorial inauguration, “Willingly or not, Wilder becomes a symbol of the changing climate of politics in the South and the nation as a whole, the aspirations of American blacks to assume an equal place in society, and the uncertainties that confront any public leader as a new century looms.”
Wilder himself appeared aware of the significance of his victory in Virginia, noting in the Richmond News Leader that his office would be housed just blocks from the old White House of the Confederacy and just miles from the segregated neighborhood where he grew up. “As a boy,” he recalled in the News Leader, “I read the writings of [former U.S. President] Abraham Lincoln about freedom and equality, and I knew they were referring to me. My victory fulfills all of the dreams that could be dreamed by any person.”
Surprisingly, race was hardly an issue in the campaign leading to Wilder’s November 1989 election. Rather, abortion became the pivotal controversy, and Wilder benefitted from his highly publicized pro-choice stance. His media campaign cast the issue in terms of government intervention and personal privacy, and it invoked such symbols as the American flag and Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello to illustrate Wilder’s abortion-rights views. In the end, one exit polling sample indicated that single-issue voters concerned about abortion were 62 percent to 38 percent for him. After the elections, analysts predicted that abortion would be one of the litmus tests for candidates in the early 1990s and that politicians favoring a woman’s right to an abortion would most often benefit.
Wilder was born in 1931 in the poor and strictly segregated Richmond neighborhood of Church Hill, a few miles—and a world—away from the state capitol. His father’s parents—James Wilder and Agnes Johnson Wilder—had been slaves in nearby Goochland County. The two were sold to separate owners after their wedding, and James
Born Lawrence Douglas Wilder, January 17, 1931, in Richmond, VA; son of Robert Wilder (in insurance sales) and Beulah (Richards)Wilder; married Eunice (divorced, 1978); children: Loren, Lynn, Lawrence, Jr. Education: Virginia Union University, B.S., 1952; Howard University, J.D., 1959.
Attorney, 1959—;Virginia state senator, 1969-86; lieutenant governor of Virginia, 1986-90; governor of Virginia, 1990—;member of Democratic Party. Military service: U.S. Army, served in Korea; received Bronze Star.
Awards: Spingarn Medal, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), 1990.
Addresses: Home —Richmond, VA. Office —Office of the Governor, State Capitol Bldg., Richmond, VA 23219.
Wilder needed a pass to visit his wife on Sundays. Douglas Wilder was the seventh of eight children born to Robert Wilder, a salesman and supervisor of agents for a black-owned insurance company, and Beulah Wilder, a woman who loved books and kept house full time for her large family.
According to the Atlanta Constitution, Wilder described his family’s financial situation as “gentle poverty;” his parents never had spare money, but were always able to provide hot meals and warm beds for their children. He remarked in the Washington Post: “It was stressed that however things are, they can be better if you make them better. We were never told there were limitations. Our parents acted as if we had great opportunities compared to what they had. We were never afraid of challenge.” As a youth, Wilder shined shoes, delivered papers, and waited tables at clubs and hotels in Richmond while attending the all-black Armstrong High School, where he acted in plays, was a sergeant in the cadet corps, and earned good grades.
During his early years, Wilder explained, he was hardly aware of racism because he rarely encountered white people. But as he began riding streetcars he noticed that black people were always seated in the rear. After high school, he was barred from even considering the state’s all-white public colleges, so he enrolled in Virginia Union University, a private all-black school in Richmond. There, he studied chemistry, waiting tables to pay his tuition money and learning about racism firsthand.
“I read Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man, and I didn’t understand it at first,” Wilder told the Washington Post. “But then I realized, I’m experiencing this. I’m invisible. Here I am serving the coffee, pouring the tea, and guys are telling all these kinds of [racial] jokes around me.” Washington Post reporter Donald P. Baker wrote that Wilder eventually became so outraged that he half-seriously considered “sprinkling poison in the salads” of white diners. Wilder himself told the Philadelphia Inquirer that he instead sought more peaceful solutions. “I won’t mislead you and say I was not angry, but I didn’t react to anger.”
After graduating from college in 1952, Wilder was drafted into the army and served in the Korean War; the experience changed his life dramatically. The army, which had been desegregated by presidential order, was Wilder’s first experience in an integrated environment. It also gave him his first opportunity for leadership: he was promoted to sergeant and won the Bronze Star for heroism at Pork Chop Hill in 1953. While dodging enemy fire, he and another soldier had captured 19 North Korean soldiers by hurling smoke grenades in their bunkers.
Back from Korea and armed with a degree in chemistry, Wilder answered an advertisement run by the state of Virginia for a chemist-technician. Upon applying, he was told that the job was not available but that he could become a cook at a state school for troubled boys. He called the experience “humiliating.” Around the same time, the U.S. Supreme Court issued its 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision outlawing segregation of public schools. Wilder said the ruling prompted him to attend law school. “It restored my faith,” he acknowledged in the Philadelphia Inquirer. “It had a very startling effect on me because nine white men wrote the decision. Whether it was because of political expediency, I don’t care, but it was something that was cathartic [for me].”
Since there were no Virginia law schools open to blacks, Wilder soon enrolled at Howard University in Washington, D.C. His roommate, Henry Marsh, who later became Richmond’s mayor, told the Washington Post, “Doug was one of the more outstanding members of the class. He was articulate and intelligent. He had a lot of skills.” Upon obtaining his degree, Wilder returned to Church Hill in 1959 to open a law practice. He quickly developed a reputation for flamboyance, driving convertibles and wearing trendy clothes, and for competence, taking on difficult criminal defense cases. He ran a one-man firm specializing in lucrative personal injury cases and eventually became wealthy.
After establishing himself as one of Richmond’s up-and-coming criminal lawyers, Wilder entered politics in 1969. He announced his bid for a vacant state senate seat, fully aware that no black had ever been elected to that body. Wilder, a Democrat, won a three-way race with less than 50 percent of the vote. Over the next 16 years, however, he was never opposed in a reelection bid for the seat.
In the Virginia state senate Wilder immediately attracted attention. In his maiden speech, in February of 1970, he called for dropping the state song, “Carry Me Back to Old Virginia,” because its lyrics glorified slavery and were offensive to blacks. Wilder told his fellow legislators that he and his wife had walked out of an official dinner when the song was played, with its warm words about “old massa” and the state where “this old darky’s heart am long’d to go.” His bill never passed and “Carry Me Back” remains Virginia’s official, if rarely sung, anthem. His protest, however, immediately established Wilder as the senate’s angry young man. Though he had never attended a civil rights demonstration, he was now seen as a spokesperson for black Virginians.
“I was perceived as the fair housing guy, the Martin Luther King guy, the ‘Carry Me Back’ guy,” he pointed out in the Atlanta Constitution. “All the pictures of me showed the Afro [haircut], and I was always frowning or snarling. But my record was working with people, too.” In fact, Wilder de-emphasized civil rights issues during his 16 years in the legislature, instead focusing on becoming a power among established leaders in the senate. He did, however, launch a nine-year campaign for a state holiday honoring the slain civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., with the effort ending in a compromise; the day was combined with a long-standing state holiday in January honoring Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson, resulting in a “Lee-Jackson-King Day.”
Over the years, noted the Washington Post, “Wilderearned a reputation as a shrewd, pragmatic politician who used his engaging personality and deft sense of humor, as well as his clout with black voters, to maneuver into the inner circles of power in Virginia’s clubby legislature.” Wilder’s close friend and political ally, Jay Shropshire, told the Washington Post, “He was the black kingpin. They all called on Doug Wilder either up front or out back.” The extent of this power was made clear in 1982 when he managed almost singlehandedly to block the nomination of the man chosen by Democratic Governor Charles Robb to run for the U.S. Senate. The aspiring nominee, Owen Pickett, then a member of the state House of Delegates, was too conservative to suit Wilder, so Wilder announced plans to run against Pickett as an independent. The threat scuttled Pickett’s nomination.
As Wilder’s seniority grew in the senate so did his power. By 1985 he was a committee chairman and was rated among the five most influential senators. And while his early legislative record could be considered liberal—particularly on law-and-order issues—he grew more conservative over the years. He began to sponsor fewer antidiscrimination bills and became increasingly interested in stiffening jail sentences.
Republican opponents contended that Wilder changed his views to more conservative positions when he started to think about seeking statewide office. Wilder disagreed, telling a Philadelphia Inquirer correspondent, “When you increase your seniority, you don’t have to fight as hard to be seen and heard. I started growing politically.” Regardless, he was given little chance of success when he ran for lieutenant governor of Virginia in 1985. Prominent Democrats openly feared that public resistance to a black candidate would not only mean defeat for Wilder, but for Democrats on the rest of the statewide ticket as well. But Wilder refused to accept the conventional wisdom, renting a station wagon and, over a period, of two months, visiting each of the state’s 95 counties and hundreds of its towns. The personal approach worked, and in a state where blacks constitute 19 percent of the voting population, Wilder beat his Republican opponent, 52 to 48 percent, becoming the first black candidate ever elected to statewide office.
As lieutenant governor, a job with limited duties, Wilder concentrated on politics. He made a number of highly publicized speeches urging blacks to assume more responsibility for eliminating social problems in the black community. Such addresses drew praise from conservatives who, in the past, had rarely sided with Wilder. By 1989, Wilder was in such a strong position to run for governor that only one Democrat, state senator Daniel W. Bird, Jr., of Wytheville, offered a challenge for the party’s nomination. Bird withdrew early, and Wilder was nominated unanimously.
In the general election, Wilder faced Republican J. Marshall Coleman, a surprise winner of a divisive Republican primary. Coleman tried to paint Wilder as a liberal while presenting himself as the conservative alternative, a stance more in line with Virginia’s political tradition. He pledged to make the war on drugs a central goal of his administration and ran hardhitting television commercials accusing Wilder of being soft on crime. Wilder, meanwhile, focused on positive themes, including his own rise from poverty to a prominent political standing and his ability to form coalitions. The underlying message was clear: He wanted to reassure independent and Republican-leaning whites that he was an approachable politician.
Abortion, however, became the overriding issue of the campaign. Coleman’s staff included activists from anti-abortion organizations, while Wilder’s media consultant had previously worked for a national abortion-rights group. Polls indicated that Wilder benefitted more from the issue than Coleman did because most Virginians favored at least some degree of abortion rights. Coleman opposed abortion in nearly all cases.
And while abortion was the most visible issue, race was regarded as a significant force underlying the election. Although Wilder made few direct appeals to the black community, support for him there was close to unanimous. He campaigned hard in white neighborhoods, especially the rural regions of southern Virginia. Spending a record $7 million on the campaign, Wilder was, according to polls, comfortably in the lead going into election day. When the votes were counted, however, he won by the slimmest of margins, beating Coleman by only 6,741 votes.
Wilder was inaugurated as governor in January of 1990. “As we salute the idea of freedom today, let us pledge to extend that same freedom to others tomorrow,” he told a huge crowd of spectators gathered at Capitol Square. “For we know that freedom is but a word for the man or woman who needs and cannot find a job.” Quoting black playwright Lorraine Hansberry, he added, “Freedom is a dream deferred when it dries up like a raisin in the sun.”
As governor, Wilder became known for conducting matters in Richmond secretively and earned a reputation for being vengeful toward his adversaries and inconstant in his political agenda. Though he has maintained his pro-choice position and continues to stress the importance of enacting civil rights legislation, he has eschewed his liberal views on the death penalty and taxation. He also gained the attention of the national media in what was referred to as a feud with a former governor of Virginia, U.S. Senator Charles Robb. A years-long rivalry between the two Democrats culminated in allegations by Wilder of phone tapping, and a criminal investigation was initiated. Commenting that the Wilder-Robb dissension may have “irreparably hurt” Robb’s career and “[raised] new questions about the Democrats’ image,” Newsweek correspondent Bill Turque noted in 1991, “For Wilder, the feud is likely to burn much of the historic luster from his national reputation.”
Wilder has, however, received praise from financial analysts as well as his constituents for maintaining his firm views on fiscal matters, trimming Virginia’s budget and cutting government staff during the recession of the early 1990s. “My vision is of a government that is prioritizing the spending of the taxpayer’s money,” he explained to Range. “We should spend for needed services, not for nonsense.” Virginia, an especially hard-hit state during the economic downturn, was faced with a budget deficit of $2.2 billion upon Wilder’s inauguration. “Instead of raising taxes,” observed Time correspondent Laurence I. Barrett, “[Wilder] deftly shaved expenses without cutting major arteries. He also created a $200 million contingency fund as a buffer against a 1992 deficit.”
After only two years in the governor’s mansion, Wilder announced on September 13,1991, his intentions to seek the 1992 Democratic presidential nomination. Taking his moderate credo to the national arena, Wilder rose as a viable candidate who offered black voters an alternative to the more liberal aspirant of past elections, Jesse Jackson. The governor drew criticism early in his underfunded campaign, though, for such vague policy proposals as his Put America First Initiative, which entailed a “$50 billion spending cut, $35 billion in breaks for middle-class families and $15 billion in ’reduce bureaucracy grants’ to states,” according to Time’s Barrett. “How this game of musical dollars would lessen the deficit is murky,” the reporter remarked.
Pointing to the financial straits of the state of Virginia, Wilder withdrew his candidacy in January of 1992. “I said that if it became too difficult for me to govern the Commonwealth and conduct a presidential campaign, I would terminate one endeavor,” Wilder announced in his State of the Commonwealth address to the Virginia General Assembly, as quoted by B. Drummond Ayres in the New York Times. “I was left with a choice: either to devote all of my energies to delivering the message or to guiding Virginia through these difficult times. I have chosen the latter.” Ayres also cited lack of voter confidence and Wilder’s less than one million-dollar store of campaign funds as reasons for his withdrawal. With his term as governor ending in 1994, Wilder, a man who, according to Barrett, “is in love with public life,” will no doubt remain an influential figure in American politics. “I am concerned about the direction this country is headed,” he declared, according to Ayres. “I have the vision, experience and fortitude that is necessary to help reverse this dangerous trend and put this great nation of ours on the right track again.”
Atlanta Constitution, November 5, 1989.
Black Enterprise, January 1985; February 1986; January 1989; January 1990; June 1991; January 1992.
Business Week, November 20, 1989; December 9, 1991.
Detroit News and Free Press, September 14,1991.
Ebony, April 1986; November 1989; February 1990; February 1991.
Jet, May 6, 1985; November 25, 1985; February 3, 1986; June 26, 1989; November 6, 1989; November 27, 1989; April 9,1990; December 30,1990; February 25, 1991; September 23, 1991.
Maclean’s, November 20, 1989; December 9, 1991; January 20, 1992.
Newark Star-Ledger, November 8, 1989.
Newsweek, February 18, 1985; November 18, 1985; November 6, 1989; November 20, 1989; May 14, 1990; November 12, 1990; March 4, 1991; June 24, 1991; October 14, 1991; November 25, 1991.
New York Times, November 8, 1991; December 9, 1991; December 23, 1991; January 9, 1992; January 10, 1992; January 11, 1992.
New York Times Magazine, January 12, 1992.
People, December 9, 1985; November 6, 1989; July 23, 1990.
Philadelphia Inquirer, November 5, 1989.
Playboy, September 1991.
Richmond News Leader, April 10, 1989; October 21, 1989; January 13, 1990.
Richmond Times-Dispatch, October 8, 1989; January 14, 1990.
Sacramento Bee, October 29, 1989.
Time, April 17, 1989; November 20, 1989; September 17, 1990; November 26, 1990; March 4, 1991; November 11, 1991; November 25, 1991; January 20, 1992.
U.S. News & World Report, November 18, 1985; December 26, 1988; November 20, 1989; January 22, 1990; May 13, 1991; December 30, 1991.
Wall Street Journal, November 26,1991; December 23, 1991; January 6, 1992; January 9, 1992.
Washington Post, October 22, 1989; November 8, 1989; January 7, 1990.
—Glen Macnow
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