Council of Conservative Citizens Founded by Former White Citizens' Councils Members to Continue Segregationist Agenda

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The Council of Conservative Citizens (CofCC) is founded in 1985 by former White Citizens’ Council members to continue the agendas of the earlier Councils, which had steadily lost members throughout the 1970s and 1980s as white Southerners’ attitudes towards desegregation began to change following passage of federal civil rights legislation and enforcement of integration and voting rights in the 1960s.

The Citizens’ Councils’ mailing lists and some of their board members transition to the St. Louis-based Council of Conservative Citizens. One of the initial leaders is Robert B. Patterson, the original founder of the White Citizens’ Councils in 1954, who joins the CofCC having previously been active in Citizens’ Councils some three decades previously. Lester Maddox, former governor of Georgia known for his segregationist views, is a charter member.

The CofCC is formed by white supremacists, including some former members of the Citizens’ Councils of America (also called the White Citizens’ Councils), the segregationist organization that was prominent from the 1950s through 1970. The organization continues to promote white nationalist and neo-Confederate views while adapting the messaging to contemporary political language, focusing on opposition to immigration, interracial marriage, and what it frames as threats to “European-American” culture.

The councils demonstrate that appeals to racial division can resonate powerfully in the political arena, serving as forerunners to later neo-Confederate organizations. The CofCC gains some mainstream political acceptance in the 1990s, with various elected officials speaking at CofCC functions. U.S. Senate majority leader Trent Lott is revealed to have been a member of the CofCC. Representative Bob Barr gives the keynote speech at the CofCC’s 1998 national convention, though he later rejects the group in 1999, saying he found the group’s racial views to be “repugnant.”

The organizational continuity from the White Citizens’ Councils (1954) to the Council of Conservative Citizens (1985) demonstrates how segregationist infrastructure adapts and persists across decades. The same organizational model—business and political elites coordinating to resist racial equality through economic pressure, political influence, and ideological messaging—continues operating under new branding. The mailing lists, personal networks, and tactical approaches developed during massive resistance provide ongoing infrastructure for white nationalist organizing within the broader conservative movement.

This pattern of organizational persistence and adaptation—where infrastructure created for one purpose is repurposed for related goals under new branding—becomes a defining feature of conservative movement organizations. The ability to maintain continuity of personnel, funding sources, and tactical approaches while adjusting messaging to changing political circumstances allows segregationist infrastructure to survive and influence mainstream conservative politics for decades after explicit segregation becomes socially unacceptable.

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