00:00:00BOB SHORT: I'm Bob Short. This is Reflections on Georgia Politics sponsored
by Young Harris College, the Richard B. Russell Library, and the University of
Georgia. Our guest today is Bill Lee from Clayton County, Georgia. He served in
the Georgia House of Representatives for 42 years. Bill, welcome.
BILL LEE: Thank you, sir.
SHORT: Tell us about growing up in Clayton County.
LEE: Well, Robert, I grew up in a rural community, had two brothers and two
sisters, a fine mother and father and made it through school without too much
difficulty and went to work a little after--right after getting graduating I was
drafted into the Navy. Spent three years during World War II in the naval air
00:01:00station in Jacksonville. Had very good duty down there. Lucky, I gave some
calisthenics classes in the morning and run the golf pro shop in the afternoon.
So my tour of duty I was available--but I did what I was told to do. But I had a
good life growing up.
SHORT: When did you get interested in politics?
LEE: I think when I graduated 11th grade. I served as a page up in the
legislature and Wayman Wells was a representative and he asked me to help. I
stayed a whole week and I said, "I like this place here. I'm going to set my
little goal, I may want to come up here one of these days. That's why I went to
the legislature. That plus you got to love people. To be in politics you've
got to like people and I like people. I know a lot of people. I've helped a lot
00:02:00of people. I've served a lot of people and I had been very fortunate to do that.
SHORT: So when did you decide to run for the legislature?
LEE: Well, in 19--I was elected in 1956. I decided a couple years before that
that I was going to do this, made it my point to get there and I got successful
and I got elected.
SHORT: Well, back in those days politicking was a little different, wasn't it?
LEE: Oh, yeah. You'd go to the little stores, country stores and sit around and
the pot belly stoves and tell stories and I enjoyed meeting them kind of people.
If you get two or three people in one community you're all set. Thats the way
I started out.
SHORT: Well, you didn't have hired guns like James Carville or Mary Matalin
back then.
00:03:00
LEE: No, we didn't use them kind of people. We used our own little good
judgment, what integrity we had and our few friends to help us. Didn't need much
money then to run.
SHORT: What do you think about the expenses of running for public office today?
LEE: I think it's way out of reason. There's no semblance of fairness about
that. It just--it's terrible to raise that kind of money and that's just--the
system ought not to be working like that.
SHORT: So you were elected in '56 and went to the General Assembly in '57.
LEE: '57, yeah.
SHORT: What was it like to be a freshman?
LEE: Well, a strange world. I'll tell you, the first fellow that I met when I
walked in that chamber, and I was nave as all get-out, was Carl Sanders. He
was a member of the Senate and he came over there and he introduced himself to
me, and he said, "I want to welcome you. I've heard about you. I know about
you. And I remember that very vividly, but I was told that I should keep my
00:04:00mouth shut, listen and learn, and I did that for a while.
SHORT: Well, 42 years, that's quite a while. But I believe Marvin Griffin was
the governor when you went--
LEE: Yeah, Marvin was. I served two years during his administration and also
served in the House with his brother Cheney who was a piece of work.
SHORT: Do you remember the rural roads fight that Governor Griffin had with
Lieutenant Governor Vandiver?
LEE: Yes, sir. I remember that very vividly. It was a very bitter--I took the
Vandiver side of that issue and I'm glad I did, but I didn't make many friends
on the other side during that.
SHORT: Looking back over your political career, you had some opponents but
you've always come out victoriously on all of your races.
LEE: Yeah. Well, people enjoyed running against me. They got a lot of
00:05:00encouragement. I was kind of part of the leadership up there, close to some of
the people that they wanted to get me out. And they worked at it, but folks were
true blue to me and I survived a lot of elections. I voluntarily retired in '88.
SHORT: Did you ever consider running for another office?
LEE: No, sir. I never did. People tried to get me to run for Congress. I said,
"I don't want to run for Congress. People elected me to this office. I'm going
to do it as long as they'll let me do it.
SHORT: Now, I'd like to talk about some specific historical events while you
were there those 42 years. Going back now to 1966 when the legislature elected
Lester Maddox governor.
LEE: Yes. That was a very historical event. I guess the most historical of my
00:06:00tenure. We were faced with that challenge and we did that at night where the
world could see, and I voted for Lester, which my district went for him
overwhelmingly when he was on the ballot and running. And of course, he was
elected and I served four years with him as a governor.
SHORT: How did you find his administration?
LEE: Lester was--he kept the store pretty good. He didn't create any waves. He
had some good advice and he made some good appointments and Lester did a whole
lot better than I thought he was going to do to start with, to be honest with you.
SHORT: Another historical event during that period was the legislative
independence move that you fellows in the House created to get some power away
00:07:00from the governor.
LEE: Yeah, we talked to Governor Maddox about that and said it was time to do
that and he agreed, and we moved forward there. The governors ran everything
prior to that and that was the best move the legislature made during my tenure
was to get some independence up there and it's worked pretty good. Of course,
you still listen to the governor. He still makes recommendations, but we kind of
do our own thing, do our own budgets and all of that and we--independence worked
well for the people of Georgia.
SHORT: Back in those days, the governor actually chose the Speaker, appointed
the committees.
LEE: Yeah, Governor Sanders gave me my first committee appointment. I said,
"Thank you very much. It was the Industrial Relations Committee between labor
and management. I says, "I'm not sure about that committee, but I appreciate the
00:08:00chairmanship," and I didn't stay on that too long. But he actually did that. He
elected, as you said, he selected Speaker and all the committee chairman. But
those days are over. You have to earn those spots now.
SHORT: Seniority counts. Well, let's see, let's talk for a minute about the
Speaker. You're probably the closest person I've ever known outside of the
family to Speaker Murphy.
LEE: Yes.
SHORT: Y'all were good friends. Tell us about the Speaker.
LEE: Tom Murphy was my dear friend, a very capable individual, a good lawyer,
but his highest trait as far as I'm concerned was his honesty. I never doubted
his integrity. He'd tell you like it is every time. He wouldn't bat an eye. If
you'd ask him, he'd tell you. He worked hard at that. He loved his state. He was
a master at helping the underprivileged. Just that was his cup of tea. He wanted
00:09:00to help people who couldn't help themselves--and awfully good at that. And he
run the House with an iron first. Only way you can do it really with 179 people
out there wanting your job and he's tough in the trenches, but he was fair. And
I, I say Tom Murphy is as solid as stone iron grip. He's just solid as could be.
SHORT: He was also criticized by the media.
LEE: Oh, yeah.
SHORT: Did he deserve that criticism?
LEE: No, he didn't deserve that criticism, but he wouldn't cater to them. He
wouldn't suck up to them. He just kind of let them do their thing. He did his
thing, but prior speakers always met with the press and they would decide what
they ought to do and all that. But he wasn't into that kind of--he served the
House membership in the state of Georgia and he wasn't interested in the news
media telling him what to do.
00:10:00
SHORT: Tell us how he became Speaker.
LEE: Well, he--George Busby was running fr Speaker and several others], and as
I recall George Smith was Speaker and died. And then Busby decided he was going
to run for governor and that left the opening for Murphy to get in the race and
get elected. And the caucuses elect the speakers then and now, Democratic caucus
and Republican caucus. They make the judgments whose going to--but the full
House has to approve, but the caucuses control that. That's why when Tom got
elected and he was awfully good for Georgia over the years.
SHORT: He had opposition as I recall only on two occasions.
00:11:00
LEE: Yeah--
SHORT: Al Burruss.
LEE: Al Burruss run against him one time and he beat Al pretty bad and whose
was the other one, Bob?
SHORT: Dubose Porter.
LEE: Did Dubose run against him? I guess you're right, yes. He--he cleaned both
their plows pretty good. SHORT: You actually came to the legislature before Murphy.
LEE: Yes, sir. Yeah.
SHORT: How did you meet him? How did you get friends with him?
LEE: Well, when he came there he was kind of a--he's a strong willed individual
and he came there. He was very active as a freshman and all of that. And I just
took a liking to him. He liked me and we joined forces in a lot of things and
did that for a long, long time. I remember he was--he was chairman of the bank,
00:12:00the banking committee and had a front row seat and Carl Sanders was governor.
And Carl had put him in the banking seat and he crossed Carl on some bill he was
interested in and Carl removed him as chairman and moved him on the back row.
Thats when we had 205 members way back under the upstairs balcony, but we've
just got 180 now. We don't have those seats anymore. But he busted him.
SHORT: Well, Murphy was certainly the watchdog of the treasury.
LEE: No question about it. Very conservative. He's liberal with some views when
helping people. Was very conservative with money and the budget and that kind of
stuff and he won every battle that he sought to take on up there in connection
00:13:00with protecting the interest of this state and conservativism. He was good at that.
SHORT: Well, also though he spearheaded legislations for a lot of worthwhile
projects like the World Congress Centers and Marta, the Georgia Dome, the Olympics.
LEE: Yeah, he was a master of picking issues that were important to the state
and he didn't lose. He wouldn't take an issue he didn't think he could win, but
he batted 100%, I tell you that. And I appreciate that because he had good
vision for our state and we all wanted to do good by out state. He was one of
the--he'd go down in history as one of the finest public servants we ever had in
this state in my opinion.
SHORT: Well, you were a very close advisor. What did y'all talk about?
00:14:00
LEE: Talked about a lot of things, a lot of things. I used to tell him, "That
dog's not going to hunt, Mr. Speaker, we ought not to do that. "Well, what do
you say that for? I said, "Well--" and he'd listen and then two or three days
later he said, "You know you're right, we ain't going to do that. I had that
kind of dialogue with him. He'd ask me and frankly I'd tell him, I'd tell him
like it is and he appreciated that. He'd tell me like it is. He'd get on my
case. He'd call me up in a rules committee time and say, "Look, put this bill
on. I said, "I ain't going to put that bill on. It's not ripe yet, Mr.
Speaker. "What do you mean, it's not ripe? I said, "It's not ripe yet.
So we had that kind of dialogue.
SHORT: Good. Let's talk then for a minute about that period when Tom Murphy was
Speaker and Zell Miller was Lieutenant Governor.
LEE: Yep.
SHORT: A lot of fireworks.
LEE: Yeah, news media fireworks primarily, you know, but at nighttime they'd
00:15:00get along pretty good. The speaker would get along with Shirley Miller, but the
press kept saying, "Well we got a big friction up here between the Lieutenant
Governor and Speaker. And they did fuss a lot, but the final product was good
for Georgia and good for both of them. And a little dissention is good for the
soul around up there, keep your attention span high.
SHORT: Well, some people think that the conflicts they had often resulted in
better legislation because members paid more attention to what they were doing.
LEE: Absolutely. Absolutely. We--you know, Zell, he's very sharp, served in a
lot of places in this state before he got elected governor and he had a feel for
what's good for Georgia. And he and Murphy were strong willed, but they worked
their differences out and it's good for the state.
00:16:00
SHORT: They were a lot alike.
LEE: Oh, yes. Stubborn and tough, tough in the trenches, yeah, tough.
SHORT: Well, let's back now to Bill Lee. You went to the legislature in 1957.
What committees did you serve on early?
LEE: I was on the Industrial Relations Committee, I think Parks and Recreation
maybe and Transportation, but I moved up the ladder pretty good and wound
up--when I retired I was chairman of the House Rules Committee.
SHORT: How long were you Chairman of the Rules?
LEE: About 14 years I think.
SHORT: That's the most important--
LEE: Long enough to learn how to do it.
SHORT: How do you do it?
LEE: You say no. Make them laugh. We had fun every day. People could come to
00:17:00the rules committee. I wouldn't believe how many would come. You couldn't get
them in there coming there to see what was going to happen and we got the job
done, but we were at ease, made people feel good about themselves and I never
did--nothing routine about the way I did--that's the only way I could survive.
I'd surprise them every day at what we were going to do, but in that job, you
don't need to send some of that stuff to the floor and we didn't do it. And I
led that effort and they told me I was pretty good. I don't know, but people
come in there to see what I was going to clown up every day.
SHORT: Did you get much pressure as Chairman?
LEE: Oh, yeah. A lot of pressure. You just had to let that roll, roll right
off the top of your head. Get it from the Senate. A lot of people. A lot of people
00:18:00to influence. You get so many pieces of legislation. Everybody, you know, is so
proud of their bill and they--but some of that stuff didn't need to pass and we
didn't do it. So we have a whole lot more left over we put on.
SHORT: Yeah, let's tell the folks just for a minute what the Rules Committee's
main responsibility is. That's the calendars.
LEE: That's setting the daily calendar and what the House is going to take up
that day, and we'd meet every morning and set the calendar and that's how the
House operated. Do the same thing in the Senate, but of course we got a lot of
legislation referred up there. Speaker would put a lot of legislation up there
that he didn't think was good. We were a pretty good gatekeeper, had drawers full of stuff.
00:19:00
SHORT: Bill, if you will, let's go back to 1962, another very historic period
when the county unit system was abolished and the University of Georgia had been
integrated, but we had that segregation issue. What was it like being in the
legislature at that time?
LEE: A lot of tension. I recall when I went there that blacks wasn't allowed
even in the balcony in the Georgia House. But we worked through that. Most of us
were bigger than the issue and wanted to do what was right and it was tough at
home dealing with that with your constituents, but a majority of us felt like we
ought to move on and we did. And we got rid of that county unit system and the
00:20:00state's better off about it. We've got one man, one vote now, but it wasnt
easy around the legislature. A lot of tension about segregation and the
University of Georgia and those type things, but we survived, moved forward and
Georgia came out way ahead of some of these states that handled it differently.
SHORT: I recall Governor Vandiver appointed the Sibley Commission. Do you
recall that?
LEE: Yes, sir. It was a very effective commission. Good, solid people on it and
they did their job real well and the legislature followed their blueprint.
SHORT: That was George Busby I believe sponsored that legislation for the governor.
LEE: That's correct.
SHORT: And he later became gvernor himself.
LEE: Right.
SHORT: Let's talk a minute now about the abolishment of the county unit system.
00:21:00For the first time, and I was alive then, for the first time within my memory it
sort of altered who would run. You had the country. You had the Talmadge people
who always had a candidate and in '62 it was Marvin Griffin. And then you had
Carl Sanders who was from an urban area and that county unit system, I would
think probably contributed more to his election than anything.
LEE: I think you're absolutely right, Bob. The whole system, Gene Talmadge used
to say he didn't want to run much anyway where they had a streetcar, anything
like that. He was a rural Georgia boy and they prevailed for years and rural
Georgia still has a good bit of clout in the legislature, to be honest with you,
to this day. And that's okay. I mean, that part of Georgia--needs people
00:22:00looking after their interests, but the county unit system wasn't fair, wasn't
right and we saw fit to get rid of it. It was the urging of the courts and
others, you know, they filed a lot of suits and all that stuff.
SHORT: That led to the creation of a confederation of legislators that became
the urban caucus. Were you a member of the urban caucus?
LEE: Yes, I never did join. Well, I went to some of their meetings, but I
wasn't an active member as--Joe Mack Wilson started that in Marietta. I was in a
position I didn't need to be many more caucuses. I needed to be looking after my
business. So I wasn't active in that, but I did go to a couple of their meetings
and they did some good, but that divided the house a little bit more than it
00:23:00should have. But there again, we overcame that.
SHORT: Yeah. Now, I understand they've got a rural caucus.
LEE: Yeah.
SHORT: Black caucus.
LEE: Yeah, they got all kind of--women's caucus. They've got a caucus for
everything. Need them like we need a hole in the head.
SHORT: You mentioned Joe Mack Wilson. As I recall, we was chairman of Ways and
Means for a long team, which is a tax type committee.
LEE: Joe Mack was a good member, but he wanted more than his share, to put it
that way. But I remember the legislature.
SHORT: Let's talk for a minute about some of the other legislators with whom
you served. Tell us some of them.
LEE: Bobby Hills is from Augusta, I believe it's Augusta or Atlanta, one or the
00:24:00other. One of the smartest individuals I served with. He was a minority member
of the legislature. Very good--had to be--self destructive with drugs and that
kind of thing. Smart boy. George Busby. I served with him. Good guy. He
served--he got the constitution changed where a governor could serve two terms
and he served two terms. Joe Frank Harris, served with him. He was quiet, but a
good humble servant. Larry Walker, strong. Denmark Groover, don't come any
better than Denmark. Bless his heart, he's gone on to his reward, but greatest
orator we ever had in the legislature, and there have just been so many, many
good folks that I served with, both sides of the Senate and the House. Not very
many places in Georgia I can't go and find somebody I've served with. Some of
00:25:00them gone on, but some still living.
SHORT: When you first ran for office in 1956, did you think you would serve 42 years?
LEE: Didn't have any idea I could serve two, to be honest with you, but I was
so nave about all that stuff. But it just fell in place and Clayton County
where I lived then kept growing. I'd make one mad, I'd go find two to take up
for them. And I had one little piece of philosophy during my life and I
literally did this--tomorrow I would meet somebody I didn't know today. I did
that all my tenure and I found somebody tomorrow that I didn't know today. And
that helped me tremendously. I'd look them up, see then in a restaurant or
something I'd just tell them who I was and that worked for me. But my tenure, I
don't claim to be any expert. I don't claim to be a wonderful record. I do claim
00:26:00that I worked hard and I tried to serve my people. They approved because they
let me serve 42 years.
SHORT: Well, I have observed, and I know you know this, that all of Georgia's
governors since 1948 have been from the legislature. Is it a benefit to have
that experience?
LEE: Absolutely. Absolutely. Legislative experience is--you can't beat it. It's
very, very helpful anybody wants to run not even governor, attorney general or
anything. That experience is tough to come by. It's good and we've had some good
governors during here and we'll have some more.
00:27:00
SHORT: Well, come to think of it, one of those legislators became President of
the United States.
LEE: Yeah, Mr. Carter. He was a reorganizer of state government and we did some
of the stuff he wanted, but not nearly all of it. He was a little over ambitious
about that, but he was at the right place at the right time and he took some
mighty good advice from people that knew what they were doing and he prevailed.
And he wasn't a very popular president. Times were tough then, the interest
rates and all that, but he--and he got beat after one term, but he made it,
Plains, Georgia.
SHORT: There was quite a bit of feuding going on during that period between
Governor Carter and Lieutenant Governor Maddox. Did that have any effect on the legislature?
00:28:00
LEE: Not really. Not really. I think generally members of the legislature
understood both personalities of both people and worked around that. Wasn't
paying much attention to it.
SHORT: Let's talk for a minute about George Busby. You served with him. He was
on the Appropriations Committee, chairman, for a long time and he made that
decision as you said to run for governor instead of speaker. Did you think at
that point he could win?
LEE: Well, I knew he had capabilities. I knew he had a good mind, but he was
kind of--I had my doubts, to be honest with you, but he ran a good campaign. "A
workhorse not a show horse, " and the slogan worked well for him. And he had a
00:29:00lot of good help out of the legislature, and if you get a lot of good help out
of the legislature you can win races. Those people are grassroots. But I wasn't
sure he was going to win, but he did and I did all I could for him and then of
course he served two terms.
SHORT: He had a very successful administration.
LEE: Sir?
SHORT: He had a very successful--
LEE: Oh, yeah. Very successful. He knew what he was doing.
SHORT: He was able to change the constitution, which hadn't been done in years.
LEE: Yeah, we did that. I was on the conference committee that adopted that new
constitution, one of the most time consuming things I was involved in during my
tenure, but tough to write a constitution. Finally got it ratified.
SHORT: He was also very effective in bringing trade to Georgia.
LEE: Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
SHORT: Well, the Far East really- Japan, that area.
LEE: Brought a lot of stuff to Georgia, a lot of good [indiscernible].
00:30:00
SHORT: Improved the banking system by making it possible for overseas owners of
businesses in America to do their banking here. And so to me the Georgia House
of Representatives has been the heart of the Democratic Party in Georgia for
many, many years and I think that, you know, I can look back at Speaker Murphy
and you as being responsible for perhaps the election of George Busby and the
election of Joe Frank Harris. And what has happened to the Democratic Party in Georgia?
LEE: Well, it's not what happened to the Democratic Party. It's what the
Republicans, they took the issues and run with them and the Democrats, when I
was there we were the conservatives and the Republicans were the liberals. And
they reversed that on us and the diversity up there, the caliber of the people
00:31:00running. Republicans had better candidates and to be quite candid, we had--we
lost that leadership capacity and--going to get it back though. It's moving in
that direction pretty fast and I don't know how long it's going to take. This
year's election for governor might help that.
SHORT: Is there any individual in the Democratic Party that stands out to you
as a leader that can bring the party back?
LEE: Well, Roy Barnes can and he's rnning for governor.
SHORT: You knew Roy. You served with Roy. What do you remember about him?
LEE: Intelligent, too impatient or didn't take a lot of advice at times when he
00:32:00should have and that kind of stuff. But Roy had a plan and he got involved in
way too many things that he could still have his way and get somebody else to do
it. But he was--he just wanted to work at it and be heard. And he got heard a
little too much and it kind of hurt him politically. But he might make a
comeback. I predict he might.
SHORT: Let's talk about reapportionment. Your district was reapportioned
several times and I'm sure that brought a hardship on your campaigning.
LEE: Yeah, well we used to run countywide and we had Clayton and Fayette in one
district and we had four members, and then the courts said we couldn't have
multi-member districts. I wound up in the last district, I had a little small
district, which I didn't like. I felt like I was a state representative, not a
00:33:00little district where they got ward politics. But that's the way it finally
worked out to get one man, one vote. Reapportionment is tough, nasty. It's not a
friendly atmosphere. It's not a winner. It's a loser, but necessary. I went
through about four of those, five. But a lot of hard feelings. Some never got
over the way they--a fellow had been there ten years, you cut his seat out, he
don't like you.
SHORT: Most of the decisions regarding reapportionment in the early years were
made by the federal courts. There's been a suggestion that perhaps it would be
00:34:00wise to have a reapportionment commission to do that every ten years instead of
having to go to the courts and having to take it to the legislature. Is there
any merit in that?
LEE: The courts have been too active in it, I think. That's people's business
and people ought to do it in commission, the legislature would be better. I
don't have any hard feelings, strong feelings either way. But the--it's one of
those necessary evils and I--a commission might work. Might ought to try, see
what they'll do. But the legislature's going to have the final say so and I
don't know whether you need another layer to mess with that or not.
SHORT: All right. Now, let's talk a little bit about how the legislature spends
the state's money. The budget is always the number one agenda when the
00:35:00legislature meets.
LEE: Absolutely.
SHORT: Explain some of that to us and tell us about the green door.
LEE: Well, the budget is very vital and all budgets have to originate in the
House. That's in the constitution and it is--up to the last couple, three years
we've had good growth, been able to spend money pretty freely and do a lot of
things we ought to be doing for the people, using their money. But got tight
lately, but it's saying this budget starts out the first week and it's one of
the last things you do each 40 day session. It just takes that long to work
through this process. A lot of people got different agendas about that. The
lobbyists out there worrying about the budget and their little pet projects and
all of that. But it's amazing you get through that, it really is. But the
00:36:00conservative approach that we used when I was there, we'd take the low estimate
of the budget analysts every year--they'd give us a low figure of what your
budget was going to be--a low figure, a middle figure, and a high figure. We'd
take the low, being safe and didn't overspend didn't know it was--sometimes that
had happened the last three or four years. It's got us in a bind, but that's the
way we did it. We negotiated with the Senate and the House, a lot of that was
newspaper stuff. We can work that stuff out, but just take a little time. We're
in no hurry and we got plenty of time. But the green door, I guess, was one of
the most effective groups you could ever imagine. Very few on it, they made hard
00:37:00decisions and that's what prevailed in the budget. A lot of members didn't like
that. I mean, because they wasn't in there. Did it behind closed doors primarily
and press. We'd let one in there once in a while, tell jokes, and then meet in
another room. But budget's tough. It's hard to manage people's money and I think
we did pretty good with it really.
SHORT: How did you get to be a member of the green door committee?
LEE: Speaker, the speaker's selected those. He selected people willing to work
later, stay at night, midnight, all weekends. It wasn't easy. I think, you know,
I lived close to the Capitol when I was there and I didn't worry about hotel
rooms. I had one there once in a while. We'd get a time maybe we was going to be
00:38:00there a lot at night, but I'd come home every night and I was willing to work,
do my thing, do my job and that's helped me personally do a lot of things I did.
But I feel sorry for a fellow that lives way, way off and has to come to Atlanta
and don't get to go home much on the weekends during some of the legislative
sessions. Because that budget takes a lot of time and you learn a lot about
state government.
SHORT: Tell us about conference, the budget conference committee. Did you ever
serve on the conference committee with the budget?
LEE: One time. One time. It was next to the last year I was there, I believe it
was. Tom Buck got sick and I served. But the green door was the budget
00:39:00committee. They would meet--conference committee would be meeting in this room,
green door was in this room and then the conferee would come in there and say,
"Well, we got this proposition. What do you all want us to do with it? That's
how that was, the way that worked.
SHORT: Let's talk some more about some of the controversies that the
legislature faced when you were there. One that comes to mind is Governor Zell
Miller's flag controversy.
LEE: Yeah, Zell wanted to change the flag and he gave it an all American
effort. In his State of the State that year, that that was his speech, changing
the flag, time to do it. Prior to that, he called a bunch, I guess it's probably
15 up to the Capitol, Senate and the House. I guess he thought we were the
00:40:00leaders. He sat on the back of his desk with his boots hanging off. We didn't
know why we was going there. He called me, said, "The governor wants you to be
there at ten o'clock. I said, "Fine, I'll be there," and said, "What's it
about? "Well, we don't know. But we got there and he had the Chairman of
the Republican Party and the Chairman of the Democratic Party in there. Said,
"One thing we got to do in this state is change the flag. He was flipping his
heels. He's hitting the back of that desk. I said, "Governor, what if you don't
prevail? "Well, we can't afford to fail. I says, "Pretty chancy. Going to
be tough. "Well, we got to try, got to try. And that's how that's done. He
introduced that bill. I had it up in House rules and I had it up there when the
session ended when he wrote me a letter, said he'd count as good as I could and
00:41:00didn't have the votes. But he was sincere in that. He really was. And after
that, Roy got into it, you know, and got it changed and one thing that hurt him
politically running for governor, but I--his second term. But that issue's put
to rest now, I think, know it is.
SHORT: To get back for a minute to something I failed to mention was about
reapportionment was the addition of black members to the legislature. After that
first reapportionment I guess in 1962, Senator Johnson was elected and was the
first black member since God knows when. You served with him.
LEE: Yeah, I served with him and Grace Hamilton over in the House. Fine lady.
Good member of the House and we've had some very, very good black members of the
00:42:00Georgia Legislature, some not as good as others. But they've had their place.
Some of them acted ugly, but few--very few. And, but they were accepted there
and it's--they work in a viable part of it, got good numbers in there now.
SHORT: Yeah, and there was no tension back then?
LEE: Well, a little. Not much. Everybody knew that was going to happen. We
ought to go ahead and live with it, not create any turmoil. No turmoil happened.
SHORT: I recall one instance, the refusal of the legislature to seat Julian ond.
LEE: Yeah, I was on the House Rules Committee when that happened. He was making
bad remarks, whatever, his temperament, conversations, his press releases, all
anti-governor, all anti-Georgia and we made a martyr out of him, but didnt
00:43:00seat him. The courts finally seated him.
SHORT: Let's talk about the passage of Zell Miller's lottery legislation. That
came through your rules committee.
LEE: Yeah, there again I told Zell when he wanted to vote in the House, I'd
give it to him and I did and it passed by one vote in the House. And I think
that was my vote. These preachers had me locked down in Clayton County and I met
with them and I kind of got--told them I felt like I was denying the people the
right to vote. And I probably ought to vote for it. And I got away with that
pretty good and I went up there and voted for it, and my vote was probably the
00:44:00one that carried it. So he got it and it's a good thing for Georgia. It really is.
SHORT: The Hope Scholarship program has been very successful.
LEE: Wonderful. Wonderful. Helped a lot of kids. Helped educate many, many people.
SHORT: You know, we spend a lot of money in Georgia on education.
LEE: A lot of it.
SHORT: Are we getting our money's worth?
LEE: No, sir. We're not. We can do better. We can do better, and we've tried
over the years, but the quality of teaching is not as good as it ought to be, to
be honest with you. I think that's a weak point, weak link. We don't have the
educators talented enough to teach our kids.
SHORT: The lottery money also went for technical things such as computers and
there's some question as to whether or not that's beneficial to education. But
00:45:00it's there and it comes from the lottery fund. I want to go back, Bill, if you
will, and ask you this question. What changes, beneficial changes have you
observed in state government over the 42 years you served there?
LEE: Beneficial changes--as far as I was concerned is technology. We created
some good technology techniques around there. They created a press area, a press
agent and telling people what's happening. Those kind of changes, progressive
changes and our state is--well, we got a--we don't have many Georgians left. We
00:46:00got a lot of--Georgia is outnumbered in this state and that's not all bad, but
changes in Georgia have been unique. Not too great or many changes, but we're
trying to keep up with the times and if we need to change something or we need
to change our thinking like segregation, you know, we come along, got on the
bus. But Georgia's still a great state. It'll remain a great state and I just
hope we continue to have adequate leadership.
SHORT: Back in 1962, or '63 when Carl Sanders was governor, he changed the
structure of the highway department.
00:47:00
LEE: Right.
SHORT: And now in modern times they're changing it again. Do you think we'll
ever get it right?
LEE: No, sir. You can't get politics out of the DOT. You can't get politics out
of it and it's into everything, education, whatever, politics is part of it. The
DOT board has been doing mighty well, I think. Now, of course Perdue got mad
with them and he wants to change it, but he didn't get what he wanted. He got a
small little move, some planner over there that he can name, but it just
compounds the cost of government. That's just agitating to me. It aggravates me.
SHORT: Bill, how did your constituents feel about school integration?
LEE: Well, it was a mixed bag. We had some rabble-rousers that were upset and I
00:48:00kind of new where most of them were at that time from my district. Could get a
good feel and the clear thinking people were okay with that. They thought it was
the right thing to do and that was a real joy to me to be able to get through that.
SHORT: How did you campaign? What were the issues, you know, your early part of
your career besides racial matters?
LEE: Well, do what you can to help my county and my area. And look after, be
responsible and--I worked at it like an all-American. You've got to love people
who fool with politics and I was availed to them and if they knew they had a
00:49:00meeting somewhere, Bill, he was there doing his part in the community and
whatever and answering their question. I never failed to answer a letter I got
or return a phone call. How bad they may have been, I'd do that, but--and one
letter I recall writing, some fellow blistered me bad and I wound up the letter,
I said, "It's nice people like you that make public service worthwhile. I
remember that one.
SHORT: I'd like to ask you as you look back over your career, is there anything
you would have done differently?
LEE: Well, you know, I'm not sure there was. I missed some votes that I
probably ought to have voted the other way, but I--at the time, when you're
00:50:00called on sometimes it's--you don't have much time to do research or find out
how some of your folks might feel. But by and large, I'm sort of happy with my
public service. It's a long tenure and I was able to meet my responsibilities
knowing what I was doing and how to get there to do it. And it wasn't no spring
training with me. We were hard at work and I could come home and tell my people
either, "We did this, we did that, we didn't do this," and be kind of
acceptable. And I don't know, I don't know a whole lot that I would want to change.
SHORT: For a number of years, Clayton County had two of the most powerful
members of the general assembly, you as Chairman of the Rules Committee, and
00:51:00Senator Starr, who as I recall was Chairman of the Appropriations.
LEE: Yeah.
SHORT: Did you two work well together?
LEE: Very well together. Terrell and I, people tell you that we were strong and
did more than we probably ought to have done for Clayton County, but we did it
in good spirit and we worked awfully good together. It was good to have him in
the Senate. He was good to have me in the House and when I left--I left the
House with Terrell in the Senate and he struggled with that a little bit, and we
lost him last week, the week before last.
SHORT: What are some of the projects in your district that you're most proud
of? I know that you were very active in Clayton College?
LEE: Yeah, Terrell and I both. They gave us credit for getting that here and
getting it four-year status. And I was involved. A lot of good people involved
00:52:00in that, but we were at the right place at the right time and put the right
heat. George Simpson was the Chancellor when that college was created. And we
talked him into agreeing to putting it in Clayton County and he and his group
wanted to put it where South Lake Mall is today. But we had a piece of property
up there in Morrow across the railroad, beautiful piece of property and I had a
little Mustang automobile and I put old George in my Mustang and rode him across
the pretty dam and that pretty property over there. He said, "We'll put this
over here," and this was--that's where it was. And then we had a hard time
getting a four-year status, but we had enough clout to get that done and Clayton
College has grown. It's huge and week before last, the day of graduation they
00:53:00gave Terrell and I an honorary doctorate's degree in public service for our part
in creating that thing. Of course, Terrell had passed away. They planned it a
long time, but I went and got that and real proud of that. It's hard for me to
brag on myself, Bob. I let other people do that.
SHORT: Well, it's like Dizzy Dean says, "You ain't bragging if you've done it."
LEE: Yeah, but I've had a fruitful, good career.
SHORT: So there's nothing you can look back on that you failed to do, that you
wished you'd done?
LEE: Well, there's probably some things, but I just, off the top of my head I
can't come up with anything that I think ought to have been done, but I just
can't think of anything.
SHORT: How would you like for Bill Lee to be remembered?
00:54:00
LEE: As an old country boy trying to get along with his fellow man.
SHORT: Do you have any advice for youngsters today who are looking for careers
as elected officials?
LEE: Like people, work hard, convince them that you can do the job better than
anybody else, and be successful. Do't let them down. The only thing you've got
in public life is integrity and I think I wound up with some.
SHORT: Well, Bill, it's been a pleasure having you. I'm sure we missed a lot of
political history today in talking to you today about that illustrious 42 years
you served in the General Assembly. Can you think of anything else that we
should talk about?
LEE: No, I really can't. I say, at my age and status in life, I'm glad to be
00:55:00anywhere. I went to a meeting--when you get out of office, you're not much and I
went to a meeting the other day and pretty good meeting, pretty important
meeting. Got invited and they introduced the notaries before they did me, so you
know I was way down. So it's all over for the old man.
SHORT: Why did you decide not to run again?
LEE: My wife--I bought a lot from J.T. Williams, Eagle's Landing, right after
he started this facility and I said, "I like to play golf and if we ever have to
move I'd want to move down here. And she decided that she was going to build
a house and we--and she built it. And I gave her an unlimited budget and she
exceeded that, but we got our house down there. And that's out of my district.
00:56:00
SHORT: Oh, you moved out of your district.
LEE: Yeah, I moved out of my district. I think I could have got elected one
more time maybe and I don't regret that. It was time for me to get out. I'd
been--Tom Murphy and I were going to quit at the same time and we kind of
pledged that to each other and I told him--he didn't believe I would. I said,
"Yeah, I'm going, " and he said, "Well let me serve another term. I'm glad he
did, but I--
SHORT: You know, just to set the record straight, Murphy's two years past you
tied you all for the--
LEE: Four years.
SHORT: Four years tied you all for the--
LEE: Yeah, we both have continuous 42 years served in the House.
SHORT: Continuous service. That's amazing.
LEE: It is.
SHORT: Well, Bill, you've been a great public servant and I want to thank you
on behalf--
LEE: Well, you're very charitable.
SHORT:--on behalf of Young Harris College, and the Richard Russell Library, and
the University of Georgia for sharing your experiences with us.
LEE: I appreciate y'all for coming down here and doing this. Maybe my
00:57:00grandchildren will look at it.