- by foxnews
- 10 Jan 2025
President Biden appeared to attempt to rehabilitate the image of notorious late pro-segregation Sen. Strom Thurmond on Monday during one of the final speeches of his presidency.
"In my career I have been asked to do the eulogy of the most incredibly different people. Strom Thurmond, 100 years old. On his deathbed, I get a phone call from the hospital. From the hospital, from out of Walter Reed and his wife, Nancy said. Joe, I'm here with the doctors at the nurses station. Strom asked me to ask you whether or not you'd do his eulogy," Biden said, adding that he accepted the offer.
"Strom Thurmond decided that separate but equal was not right, not that Blacks and Whites should be together. But if you do separate equal, you had to spend as much money on Black schools as White schools. By the time Strom Thurmond left the United States Senate, he had. And I'm making the case for him," Biden continued.
"But he had more African-Americans in his staff than any United States senator had, more. Strom Thurmond had an illegitimate child with a Black woman [and he] never denied it. Never stopped paying for his upbringing. There's a lot of strange people, a lot of different people. And I mean, well, I bet I can look at you and I can find some strange things too," Biden added.
"And I thought, 'well, maybe there's real progress,'" he added. "But hate never dies, it just hides. It hides under the rocks."
Biden was born on Nov. 20, 1942. The Civil Rights Act passed the Senate on June 19, 1964.
While Thurmond and Biden were contemporaries in the Senate, the president would have been 21 at the time of the landmark legislation's passing - and nowhere near the Senate seat he won at 29 years old.
Fox News' Houston Keene contributed to this report.
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