Charles Clifton Finch: Fifty-seventh Governor of Mississippi: 1976-1980
By David G. Sansing
Cliff Finch campaigned for governor in 1975 on the promise of more and
better-paying jobs for Mississippi’s working men and women. To dramatize
his concern for the hardships of Mississippi’s working people, Finch
spent one day a week during the late stages of his campaign sacking groceries
at supermarkets, driving bulldozers, or working at other jobs that were
associated with the ordinary working man and woman. He took a sack lunch
with him on those special work days. His campaign tactics were very popular
and he was elected governor in his first try for the office.
Finch, the oldest of five children, was born at Pope in Panola County,
Mississippi, on April 4, 1927. When he was eighteen years old, he enlisted
in the United States Army. After serving in the Italian campaign during
World War II with the 88th Infantry Division, Finch signed on with a construction
company and spent a year doing heavy construction work in Guam. Finch
then worked his way through the University of Mississippi. After graduating
from the University of Mississippi Law School in 1958, he opened a law
office in Batesville.
In 1960, Finch entered politics and was elected to the state House of
Representatives. He was elected district attorney for the seventeenth
judicial district in 1964 and re-elected in 1968. His first statewide
campaign was an unsuccessful race for lieutenant governor in 1971.
In 1975, Finch organized a very strong coalition of blacks and working-class
whites and conducted a populist campaign for governor. He won the Democratic
nomination and in the general election, narrowly defeated Gil Carmichael,
the Republican candidate, and Henry Kirksey, a black independent.
During his administration, Finch succeeded in saving the state’s
savings and loan industry from collapse and worked with lawmakers to provide
flood relief after spring floods in 1979.
In 1978, Senator James Eastland retired from his U.S. Senate post, a
position he had held since 1941. Although he still had two years remaining
on his four-year gubernatorial term, Governor Finch ran for the Senate
seat in 1978. He was eliminated in the Democratic primary. The Senate
post was won in the general election by Republican Thad Cochran, who defeated
Maurice Dantin, the Democratic candidate, and Henry Kirksey, an independent.
Shortly before his term expired, Governor Finch entered the presidential
election of 1980. He ran in the New Hampshire primary but did not gain
much support and withdrew from the campaign soon after that primary.
After leaving office, Governor Finch returned to his law practice in Batesville
which he continued until his death on April 22, 1986.
David Sansing, Ph.D., is history professor emeritus, University of
Mississippi.
Posted January 2004
Sources:
Mississippi Official and Statistical Register (1976-1980), 35.
Cliff Finch Subject File, Mississippi Department of Archives and History.
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