Sunday, March 13, 2011

KLAN John Paul Rogers

EW CITY COMMISSIONER IN LAKE WALES

Rogers' Klan Past Raises Some Eyebrows

He refuses to discuss it, and there has been no uproar on possible racial divide.

Published: Saturday, April 19, 2008 at 7:34 a.m.
Last Modified: Saturday, April 19, 2008 at 7:47 a.m.
( page 3 of 5 )
In his campaign, Rogers opposed a proposal to levy a fire fee on every property, rather than using property taxes to pay for the operation of the Fire Department. The proposal would hurt residents who now pay little or no property tax because of the $25,000 homestead exemption.
But the Klan background is the issue that still comes up.
'I don't know if the vote is a result of his being forgiven or forgotten,'' said Darryl Paulson, a political scientist from the University of South Florida's St. Petersburg campus.
'Years ago I actually had him speak to my Southern Politics class. 'He was very slick and disarming. They expected a flame thrower, but he didn't talk any of that. He just quietly gave his reasons for why he felt the races should be separated.'
Paulson said he doesn't know if Rogers has had a transformation, but he added that from Rogers' work in the Klan, he had mastered the skills of organization, such as his success with the absentee ballots in Lake Wales.
'But he is not the first former Klan member to seek political office,'' the professor said. The best-known is (U.S. Sen.) Robert Byrd of West Virginia. And the leading civil liberties advocate on the U.S. Supreme Court at the time, Hugo Black, had also been a member of the Klan.
'But that was during a period when that particular Klan wrapped itself more in patriotism and law and order. The United Klans was one of the more violent,' Paulson said.
David Smith, president of the Lake Wales branch of the NAACP, said he personally has no argument with Rogers.
'Believe it or not, John and I have never had any problems,' the retired Polk County sheriff's deputy said. 'He came up around Lake Wales, and I did, too.
'It doesn't bother me as long as he makes a fair decision. That's all I ask for.'
However, Smith noted the NAACP had nothing to do with Young's drive to assist a former Klan leader.

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