News

News George Wallace stood in schoolhouse door 52 years ago today Published: Jun. 11, 2015, 10:02 a.m.
60 years after George Wallace pushed segregation, Dems block the schoolhouse door By Stephen Moore and Michelle Crumpton-Harvey ...
In 1963, Democrat Governor George Wallace led a “stand-in-the-school-house-door protest” at the University of Alabama to prevent two Black students from enrolling in contravention of the Brown v.
George Corley Wallace Jr., a Clio, Ala. native, first sought nomination for governor on the Democratic ticket in 1958.
No DEI forever!” - Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey is channeling George Wallace by her stand in the schoolhouse door, blocking diversity, equity and inclusion programs. DEI ain’t the devil, y’all.
Wallace, in addition to his infamous stand in the schoolhouse door, promised Alabamians “segregation today, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever” in his 1963 inaugural address.
In 2023, a new generation of George Wallace Democrats is again blocking schoolhouse doors, opposing popular school choice programs," the ad says.
That hot summer day began with then-Gov. George C. Wallace’s “Stand in the Schoolhouse Door,” a symbolic protest of the admittance of Black students at the University of Alabama.
Vivek Ramaswamy’s comparison of Gavin Newsom to George Wallace is ludicrous. Like his lionization of Richard Nixon, it betrays an ignorance of history, and some moral blindness as well.
Alabama Gov. George Wallace is shown making his "stand in the schoolhouse door" on June 11, 1963, to prevent two black students, Vivian Malone Jones and James Hood, from registering at the ...
When George Wallace “stood in the schoolhouse door” to block the enrollment of two Black students at the University of Alabama, he was defying a nine-year-old Supreme Court decision, an untold ...