WHY WE NEED THE VOTING RIGHT ACT
After the Compromise of 1877, African American men retained voting rights,
but held little
political power in their states. Beginning in the 1890’s, a full-scale
attack on African American
civil rights began in the South that led to the legal segregation of all
aspects of everyday life,
including public transportation, education and the workplace. African
American voting rights
also came under attack through legislation and organized violence,
including the horrible act of
lynching, which was used to enforce white supremacy.
The laws to prevent African Americans from voting were complex because they
could not
directly violate the Fifteenth Amendment. Among these restrictions was the
poll tax, which
required voters to pay an additional tax to vote. It was designed primarily
to exclude African
Americans, who were usually too poor to pay the tax, but also excluded many
poor whites.
The literacy test was also a common tactic used to prevent African
Americans from voting.
During the early 1960’s, African Americans in the South formed groups like
the Southern
Christian Leadership Conference, Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee
and the
Congress of Racial Equality to demand equality and register African
Americans to vote. The
people who participated in this project routinely risked their jobs and
were often thrown off
their land if they attempted to vote. Moreover, they risked their lives
against the violence of
groups of white supremacist groups like the Ku Klux Klan, which often
worked hand in hand
with local police, politicians and the White Citizens’ Councils.
AND TODAY, FUNDED BY PEOPLE LIKE THE KOCH BROTHERS, REPUBLICAN MAJORITIES
IN STATE LEGISLATURES CONTINUE PASSING LAWS TO LIMIT VOTING RIGHTS. THE NEED FOR
THE VOTING RIGHTS ACT IS AS URGENT TODAY AS IT WAS IN 1965. THING IS, NOW IT NEEDS
TO BE APPLIED NATIONALLY, NOT JUST TO THE OLD SOUTH!
3 comments:
Tragic, indeed. I never thought I'd live to see the day. And now, as of this writing, I have three tense hours to sit here waiting for the gay marriage decisions to be announced.
Because nothing has changed since 1965. There's no way blacks can be elected to high office (oops, forgot about Obama) or have a chance to vote in elections (oops, they have a higher voting rate than whites).
Which is why Republican controlled state legislatures keep trying to restrict voting by minorities. Oops is right.
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