°®°®Ö±²„

Pickerings champion bipartisanship, civility during dedication of papers at °®°®Ö±²„

Pickerings champion bipartisanship, civility during dedication of papers at °®°®Ö±²„

Contact: Carl Smith

°®°®Ö±²„ President Mark E. Keenum speaks during a dedication and opening of the political papers of Judge Charles W. Pickering Sr. and Congressman Charles W. ā€œChipā€ Pickering Jr.
°®°®Ö±²„ President Mark E. Keenum speaks during a dedication and opening of the political papers of Judge Charles W. Pickering Sr. and Congressman Charles W. ā€œChipā€ Pickering Jr. (Photo by Megan Bean)

STARKVILLE, Miss.ā€”Two exalted figures in Mississippi politics called for Americans to sit down with each other, have difficult-but-civil conversations and work to better the nation as Mississippi State officials formally celebrated the dedication and opening of their political papers now housed at the university.

The father-and-son duoā€”Judge Charles W. Pickering Sr. and Congressman Charles W. ā€œChipā€ Pickering Jr.ā€”were part of a Friday [March 31] panel discussion held at Mitchell Memorial Library, where the Mississippi Political Collections unit now hosts documents from the public service of the former federal judge and the former representative of Mississippiā€™s 3rd Congressional District. The panel, which included former °®°®Ö±²„ President Malcolm Portera and longtime Mississippi Republican Party strategist Henry Barbour, discussed various past and present political topics affecting both the state and nation, from the Republican schism of 1976 that led to President Gerald Ford securing his partyā€™s nomination but failing to win the yearā€™s general election to the Pickering familyā€™s relationship with former U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice Antonin Scalia.

When asked about the current state of Washington, D.C., both Pickerings, who were noted throughout their careers for being able to reach across the aisle and work with people of various political leanings, urged current leaders to find common ground so they can deliver the best results for the country.

Former °®°®Ö±²„ President Malcolm Portera, Mississippi Republican Party strategist Henry Barbour, Congressman Charles W. ā€œChipā€ Pickering Jr. and Judge Charles W. Pickering Sr. during a March 31 panel discussion.
Former °®°®Ö±²„ President Malcolm Portera, Mississippi Republican Party strategist Henry Barbour, Congressman Charles W. ā€œChipā€ Pickering Jr. and Judge Charles W. Pickering Sr. during a March 31 panel discussion. (Photo by Megan Bean)

Congressman Pickering said his experience as a staffer for former Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott during former President Bill Clintonā€™s administration helped him and others learn how to make deals in ā€œthe last tremendous burst of bipartisan achievement.ā€

ā€œIf we can ever restore a common purpose, common mission, common language, common value systemā€”at least in the best degree we canā€”thatā€™s our only hope to restore civility,ā€ the junior Pickering said. ā€œWhat I hope is we can go back to what we know works: sitting in the room with people that are different than yourself, from different places and with different beliefs, and sitting there until we find common ground. I got to live it, and I am so grateful that I got to live that experience.ā€

Building on his sonā€™s call for restoring bipartisan efforts, Judge Pickering called on Americans to restore respect for law and order, strengthen the countryā€™s morals and work in education to ensure children know right from wrong.

ā€œWeā€™ve lost our moral moorings,ā€ the elder Pickering said. ā€œPeople say faith didnā€™t make a difference [in the founding and subsequent success of America], but it did.ā€

David Nolen, associate dean for °®°®Ö±²„ Librariesā€™ Archives and Special Collections, which houses the MPC, said the addition of the Pickeringsā€™ papers enrich °®°®Ö±²„ā€™s ā€œalready-strong holdingsā€ and make the university a ā€œvital resource in the study of the Mississippi political landscape.ā€

The collection adds valuable records to the national and state political history reflected in the MPCā€™s archives. Judge Pickeringā€™s papers add to a robust network of collections that explore the rise of the modern Mississippi Republican Party, including the official papers of the stateā€™s GOP and several other 20th century figures. His papers also help expand the MPCā€™s quickly growing holding of judicial papers and collections, an essential element of Mississippiā€™s justice system history and public service.

Congressman Pickeringā€™s papers continue the story of Mississippiā€™s 3rd Congressional District as Pickering succeeded Congressman G.V. ā€œSonnyā€ Montgomeryā€™s legendary 30-year career in Congress. Congressman Pickeringā€™s own 12-year career spotlights a part of early 21st century politics not yet explored in other open collections at the MPC, covering such crucial subjects as the 9/11 attacks, early days of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, 2000 presidential election, George W. Bush administration, Hurricane Katrina and much more. Congressman Pickeringā€™s committee work and his contributions to telecommunications policy reflect a career focused on ensuring rural areas of the nation, including Mississippi, have access to broadband and other high-speed information technology needed to bolster the state's educational goals and workforce.

ā€œThe MPC can now trace the history of the 3rd Congressional District from Sonny Montgomery to the 21st century, thanks to donations by Congressman Pickering and former Congressman Gregg Harper,ā€ Nolen said.

All finding aids for MPC collections and those of the remaining units of Archives and Special Collections, as well as the Ulysses S. Grant Presidential Library and the Frank and Virginia Williams Collection of Lincolniana, can be searched at .

For more information about °®°®Ö±²„ Libraries, visit .

°®°®Ö±²„ is Mississippiā€™s leading university, available online at .