Roy Vincent Harris (October 2, 1895 – January 21, 1985) was an American politician and newspaper publisher in the U.S. state of Georgia during the mid-1900s. From the 1920s until the 1940s, Harris served several terms in both the Georgia House of Representatives and the Georgia State Senate, and he served as the speaker of the house from 1937 to 1940 and again from 1943 to 1946. Historian Harold Paulk Henderson has called Harris "one of Georgia's most capable behind-the-scenes politicians".[1]
During his time in politics, Harris acquired a great deal of political power and was regarded as a "kingmaker" when it came to the governorship of Georgia, primarily using the state's unique county unit electoral system to help several individuals get elected to that position. Additionally, Harris was a supporter of public education in the state, serving as a regent for the University System of Georgia from the 1950s to the 1970s. However, he is arguably best remembered as an ardent supporter of racial segregation and white supremacy, and as both an elected official and prominent citizen, Harris fought against school integration and opposed the larger civil rights movement.
During his later tenure in the House, Harris acquired significant political power and became a noted kingmaker in Georgia politics, aiding in the gubernatorial election victories of Georgia GovernorsEllis Arnall, Eugene Talmadge, Herman Talmadge, and Ernest Vandiver.[2] Harris was adept at using Georgia's unique electoral system known as the county unit system to help ensure these candidates' victories.[2][3][4] Between 1946 and 1947, Harris worked behind the scenes on behalf of Herman Talmadge during the three governors controversy,[2][5] and he would again support Talmadge during the 1950 Georgia gubernatorial election.[3][6] During Harris's time as a kingmaker, a popular saying among politicians in Georgia was, "What do you need to be elected governor in Georgia? Fifty thousand dollars and Roy Harris".[2] Between 1936 and 1950, only one candidate for governor had been elected without Roy's support,[3] and he had never backed a losing candidate for that position.[7] In addition to helping gubernatorial candidates, Haris also used his power to pass certain pieces of legislation through the Georgia General Assembly.[2]
Public education
Harris was also an advocate for improving public education in the state.[2] In 1933, Harris used his connections with Governor Eugene Talmadge to keep the Georgia Medical College open, overturning a vote from the Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia (USG) to close it.[2] Harris also supported his alma mater of UGA, which was also the state's flagship university, pushing the General Assembly to allocate more funds to the university to allow it to expand its campus and improve its educational standards, and he also secured funds for a new building at the Georgia Institute of Technology.[2] In 1951, Governor Herman Talmadge appointed Harris to the USG Board of Regents, and he would serve on the board from 1951 to 1958 and again from 1960 to 1974.[2] In 1965, he was placed on an advisory committee to oversee the University of Georgia School of Law.[8]
In 1957, during the Little Rock Crisis regarding the integration of a high school in Little Rock, Arkansas, Harris and Georgia Governor Marvin Griffin traveled to Little Rock to meet with the governor of Arkansas in an effort to convince him to oppose the integration efforts.[20][21][22] During their trip, they spoke to the local Citizens' Council organization and gave speeches promoting school segregation,[23] helping to galvanize the segregationists in the state.[24][25] During this same time, Harris fought efforts to integrate schools in Georgia. During the 1950s, along with several other noted conservative politicians, he was a member of the Georgia Commission on Education,[26][27] a state-appointed commission to determine how to maintain the status quo of "separate but equal" schooling in the state.[28] In 1961, following the University of Georgia desegregation riot, he applauded the students who had conducted the riot in an effort to stop the school from integrating.[2] After the two African American students who had attempted to join the university (Hamilton E. Holmes and Charlayne Hunter) had been removed from the campus, Harris demanded a list containing the names of the 340 members of the UGA faculty who had signed a petition calling on the two students to be reinstated.[2] He campaigned on behalf of segregationist Lester Maddox in the 1966 Georgia gubernatorial election,[29] and in both the 1964 and 1968 presidential elections, he broke ranks with the Democratic Party, supporting conservative RepublicanBarry Goldwater in 1964[30] and former Alabama GovernorGeorge Wallace in 1968, serving on the latter's Georgia campaign committee.[2] During the 1970s, Harris's views on race began to mellow, and in 1982, he became the city attorney for Ed McIntyre, the first African American mayor of Augusta, whom Harris had supported over a white opponent.[2]