They were working for the same company and doing the same job however, it wasn’t considered to be “right” for a black man or woman to be earning the same amount as a white man or woman.Some suffragists refused to endorse the amendment because women were not included; however, argued that once the black man was enfranchised, women too would achieve their goal, and gain voting rights.To avoid allowing black voters to vote in the primary’s, the democrats promoted their political party as a private organization.Black men were also granted the right to hold political office.They were put in place to protect the voting rights of blacks and to try and suppress the Ku Klux Klan.
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The right that provoked the greatest controversy, especially in the North, concerned black male suffrage.They also charged the Republicans with breaking their promise of allowing the states, outside the South, to decide for themselves whether to grant black male suffrage.Following the Civil War, Radical Republicans in Congress introduced a series of laws and constitutional amendments to try to secure civil and political rights for black people.Republicans assumed the new black voters would vote Republican just as their brothers were doing in the South.They feared that ratification of the 15th Amendment would automatically create some 170,000 loyal black Republican voters in the North and West.
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Black people may have thought that there was no use of voting as a white person was guaranteed to be elected, they would not get any extra benefit from the voting.There were new set ups to protect black people like the E. E. O. C. (protected black people against discrimination).So the Civil rights movement was moderately successful by 1970, it had made much progress and in the years to follow white people views changed and now black people are treated well in America.In 1960 only 66,000 black people voted in Alabama later after the Voting rights had been passed 250,000 black people voted which was a massive increase.Black people could now become famous, have a chance in politics and higher class professions.
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But even though they have registered to vote, we don’t know how many black people actually did vote.So this means that the civil rights movement has not done enough for the black people.So in my opinion this shows that the civil rights movement has still not achieved enough as the black people want more rights and they do not want to wait for years to achieve it.Although we do know that black voters could change elections as president Kennedy was elected president thanks to a large number of black people voting for him.In the film we see several black people beaten up and one black person was nearly hung.
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Document E states that blacks are not only allowed to vote but also they are prohibited from purchasing land.They lynch many African-Americans in order to scare off the others to prevent them from voting.Lincoln’s Plan was to re-admit States into the Union but they had to have at least 10% of the population take a pledge of allegiance to the U.S. and ratify a constitutional amendment which gave all Black males the right to vote.There were numerous events during the civil war like black land rights or hate crimes and many others that contributed to the major changes throughout the country.Majority of the Congressmen wanted to abolish slavery but according to Document D, the government isn’t allowed to go through the issue of civil rights....
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Rebellion for the black community was not to conform to the racist south, but to consciously do the opposite.Discrimination to voting applies nationwide to any voting standard, practice, or procedure that results in the denial of the right of any citizen to vote.By coming together, the black community showed America that the rebellion would not end until equal rights and the ability to vote was achieved.In order for the Voting Rights Act of 1965 to be ratified by Congress, the black community needed to rebel against the “Jim Crow” laws of the South, the violence invoked by hate organizations, as well as (with assistance from white college students) the hypocrisies of the United States government.To achieve the voting rights for the segre...
2557 words (6.4 pages)
The inability to vote was only one of many problems blacks encountered in the racist society around them, but the civil-rights officials who decided to zero in on voter registration understood its crucial significance as well the white supremacists did.The Freedom Summer also instilled among African Americans a new consciousness and a new confidence in political action.Mississippi’s black schools were invariably poorly funded.Although black men had won the right to vote in 1870, thanks to the Fifteenth Amendment, for the next 100 years many were unable to exercise that right.Freedom Summer was a highly publicized campaign in the Deep South to register blacks to vote during the summer of 1964. .
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For my part, if there would be equal number of black and white lawyers and judges in the United States, issues in racial minorities would be lessen since there are those who can voice out for their rights and are in positions to protect other minority rights.They reduced black voting power and decreased the number of blacks being elected in state positions.Obama also said that the statement will just lead everything into conflict or trouble wherein the statement came from a certain Official who was given the privilege of his voting right protection (Greg Simmons, October 20, 2007, p. 1).In his letter, he also included questions he asked the Attorney General-Designate to answer; most questions were about his level of commitment to protect...
2015 words (5.0 pages)
It was passed by a number of southern states and stated that if your grandfather was a citizen and alowed to vote, you had the right to do so also.But because of a few citizens, black and white, protested these inequalities and demanded justice.The black community still did not ride the buses.While these citizens had to pay taxes and abide by the local laws, they were denyed the priviledge of the right to vote.The black community decided to walk, get cabs, or carpool instead of riding the cities buses.
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Malcolm X and Martin Luther King were popular amongst black America.Most young black Americans felt that Malcolm X was the man to succeed but others liked the ideas of Martin Luther King who had already been an icon before X was exposed.This was due to their consistent efforts to get equal black Civil Rights.If it wasn’t for television emphasising the cruelty and unfairness to the black community in South America , then the profile of the CRM wouldn’t have been noticed by people all around the world, including North America.After the 1965 Voting Rights Act which was meant to stop racial discrimination with respect to the right to vote, but failed, and the 1964 Civil Rights Act which outlawed most aspects of racial discrimination, a commi...
1166 words (2.9 pages)
The lawyer for the NAACP, Thurgood Marshall, said that segregation like this denied these black children their rights and that separate schools caused psychological damage.King delivered his famous “I have a dream…” speech at the Lincoln memorial in Washington DC, in front of over 200,000 black and white civil right supporters.There were three parts to the deal: Bus drivers must treat black passengers with courtesy; Segregation must end on the buses; Black drivers must be employed.The governor and local police still tried to prevent black voters registering and the KKK burned down several black churches.Voting for black people was very difficult and involved a lot of obstacles.
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The New York Times published an article that interviewed the store superintendent and the students, the article also told of how white teenagers and Ku Klux Klan (KKK) members tried to bar the way on the fifth day of the Greensboro “sit-in.” It was the well spoken black student Ezall Blair who told the newspaper on the second day that the students had been “complacent and fearful” the previous day and that they decided that morning that is was time for black students to “wake up and change the situation.” .The great depression which devastated the United States in the late 1920s caused a migration of black Americans from the South to other parts of the country, this migration exposed many of them to different views on segregation and d...
3052 words (7.6 pages)
You began to see black civil rights emerge in the 1940’s and 50’s.Civil Rights Act of 1960 denied the right to vote by practices of discrimination.109) Barely any states gave equal access to the ballot box of black citizens after the civil war.119) The Civil Rights Act of 1957 made it a federal crime to attempt to prevent a person from voting.Laws such as the white primary which would allow only whites to vote in primary elections, and literacy test which were almost impossible to pass discouraged African Americans from voting.
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oAlso made advances in prohibiting gender discrimination •The Great Society oLBJ ran for election in 1964 campaigning on a war against poverty oAs part of his campaign, he immediately began pursuing a number of anti-poverty programs, which came to be known as the Great Society oWinning in a massive landslide, continued to enact social legislation, such as Medicare •Voting Rights Act of 1965 oSaw civil rights, and Black voting in particular, as a key part of these programs oAgain, televised violence was key – police brutality against marchers in Selma led LBJ to call for comprehensive voting rights oCongress quickly passed the Voting Rights Act .•Civil Rights Act of 1964 oLBJ passed this legislation with votes from Northern Democrats an...
1051 words (2.6 pages)
In 1968, Nixon lost a majority of southern electoral votes while capturing 36% of the black vote; his 1972 victory, both Reagan victories, and the victory of George H. W. Bush in 1988 could have been won without their carrying any Southern state.With a much more explicit attack on integration and black civil rights, Wallace won all of Goldwater’s states (except South Carolina), as well as Arkansas and one of North Carolina’s electoral votes.Under segregation, a separate black economy created a black middle class of shopkeepers and service professionals.Nixon won 36% of the black vote nationwide.When black shoppers were allowed to shop at Woolworths, the small black-owned mom and pop stores lost their customers.
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Both women are remembered for being key reasons why women achieved the right to vote, but less remembered is their work to exclude black women and other minority women from both the vote and suffrage votes.Even in the US, there are women much more concerned with feeding themselves or their children than reproductive rights or social equality.This struggle is rooted in the willingness of the prominent first wave groups to project racist and classist views as a compromise to both other suffragists and men in power.The popular, white feminist movement had yet again failed to relate to all women, simply because they had few black or other minority women among their ranks.Even now we struggle to include every women in feminism.
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Women’s Suffrage is the right of women to vote and to run for office.Being able to vote was an honor and so many people don’t even both to go vote during the elections today.Black riders had to pay their bus far on the front of the bus and get off to walk to the back of the bus to ride.African Americans faced many hardships during the civil rights movement, some of those hardships were segregation, voting rights, and assassination of prominent African American leaders.Echoing the language of the 15th Amendment, the Act prohibits states from imposing any “voting qualification or prerequisite to voting, or standard, practice, or procedure to deny or abridge the right of any citizen of the United States to vote on account of race or color.<...
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Both the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and the Voting Rights Act of 1965, were legislated with the aim of ending the legal sanctions to the so-called “Jim Crow Laws” (“Jim Crow Laws”).“In the months which preceded the Senate’s taking up the Civil Rights Act of 1964, speculation was rife that the battle might produce a major crisis over the institution’s capacity to respond effectively to the needs of the black minority as spelled out by presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson” (Humphrey, Rauh, and Stewart 275).The downside top the Voting Rights Act seems to have been the development of so-called gerrymandering, where districting of voting constituencies is manipulated for political and economic purposes.“Ugly: An Inquiry into the Probl...
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“The cost of social (permanent racial minority) status based upon an imperfect social contract for Blacks is that rarely has it been possible to participate in crucial decisions such as the selection of national leadership in a manner which reflects the “interests” of Black (interests defined here as both racial preference and race-related issue preference) through what is called “sincere” or “straightforward” voting (Walters, 3).Walters, Ronald W. Black Presidential Politics in America: A Strategic Approach.Works Cited Crowley, C. & Johnson, S. Is Black America ready to embrace Obama?Is America Ready for a Black President?America is Ready for a Black President if We Look to our Civil Rights Roots.
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The 15th Amendment forbids the states from denying the right to vote to any person on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude.Even if there was a crowd of people that saw what happened, unless they were black, the people sided with the white man.The KKK would destroy any black polling booth and shoot, intimidate, and kill any black person trying to vote; especially in Mississippi.The Reconstruction Act guaranteed freedmen the right to vote under new state constitutions and required the Southern states to approve the 14th A With the addition of African American votes in the southern elections and the help of “Carpet Baggers” and “Scalawags,” the Republican Party gained almost complete control over the South.However, whe...
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The white man who appears to be the official monitoring the voting.They become even more interesting in light of the 98 years from the passage of the Civil Rights Act depicted in the engravings until the Civil Rights Act of 1964, that successfully brought universal suffrage in the United States.Outside of the Galleries of the House of Representatives During the Passage of The Civil Rights Bill .One wonders where this voting is supposed to have taken place.During this time dozens of illegal strategies and tactics were used to prevent blacks from voting: literacy tests, property ownership: poll tax, and both the threat of violence and actual violence among them.
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Violence was also used as a means to control the black population in the South.Gideon Wells said, “The Federal government has no right…to dictate the matter of suffrage (Doc D).” To resolve these conservatives would require literacy tests to vote, and reinstate property requirements.The Klu Klux Klan and White League would use terrorist acts on blacks and lynch many innocent blacks to discourage them from voting as illustrated in (Doc I).The north believed that with the vote the blacks could take care of themselves and they also had their eyes focused on the West.The constitutional changes that occurred not only to the state governments but to the national governments as well were the thirteenth amendment that ended slavery, the fourteen...
887 words (2.2 pages)
So After eight years of being held captive behind the pregnant voting chads somehow they have arrived, arrived to the day that the highest man in power in the United States is a Black man.(Davidson, et al., 2008) There were internal issues that begin to occur within the Black communities, issues so deep it makes you wonder if the Willie Lynch speech as unreal as some say it is could have been used, the speech made a promise to slave owners it said “I guarantee every one of you that if installed correctly it would control slaves for at least 300 years” (Lynch, Willie 1712) Even though Blacks were fighting for their rights, internally they were fighting one another it seemed just as the speech stated the old against the young, light agains...
2671 words (6.7 pages)
The enactment of voting rights gave the blacks and women an opportunity to exercise politics like their white counterparts which in turn brought a better service provision to all citizens.1990, Black Origins and Lady Liberty, Daily Challenge.In the current America, being a woman or black has no restriction in exercising ones right.This movement helped the blacks to have most of the rights that were initially enjoyed by the whites only including right to education, right to vote, and right to participate in politics.The voting right was initiated by the blacks and began protesting in court houses in Selma, when they were unsuccessful, they proceeded to Montgomery where they faced police beating and were tear-gassed, the scene was televise...
2885 words (7.2 pages)
Black codes were not being followed, white men always managed to find a way to obtain what they wanted.The right of voting allowed Southerners to vote for someone that would still want slavery.Democrats were taking all the power and black men could not do anything anymore.When the black codes were established, black men became freedmen, but even though these men could start living as freedmen, many decided to stay as slaves.If black men wanted work being freedmen, then they would have to stay out of the political power.
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That summer 30 black homes and 37 black churches were firebombed.The 1965 Voting Rights Act was a follow on to the 1964 Civil Rights Act.Segregation was now illegal; the civil rights act had enshrined black civil rights in law; black people in the south now held real political power.But many black volunteers realized that because two of the victims were white, these murders were attracting much more attention than previous attacks in which the victims had been all black, and this added to the growing resentment they had already begun to feel towards the white volunteers.In the 20 months that followed the Civil Rights Act, 430, 000 black Americans registered to vote.
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This could mean that some blacks did not participate in voting due to unnecessary queues.The 2006 law provides that states must avail enough voting machines in all voting centers.The council intended to amend its policies in order to move voting from a private home to a public school.It stated that regions with repressive voting practices could not execute any change that would affect voting without seeking approval from the state authority in charge of elections.The states provided few voting machines forcing Africans to queue for long.
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They felt that it was their duty to fight for equal rights for all Black Americans.The older generation of black people did not participate in the civil rights movement not because they were not “uninterested”, but because they were afraid of what might have happened to them if they achieved equal rights.The civil rights movement proved successful in achieving equal rights for Black Americans, despite strong opposition.Anne Moody was a strong believer of black rights and felt that it was important for her to help black people fight for equal rights.Black Americans got equal rights because of the untiring efforts young people, like Anne Moody, had.
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Established by Nelson Mandela, the country's first black president, this date commemorates the country's first multiracial national elections since the abolition of apartheid and the entry into force of the new interim constitution, negotiated during 3 years within CODESA between the government of Klerk, the African National Congress (ANC), the national party and 19 other political parties of more or less great importance as well as the representatives of the Bantustans.The ANC won 252 out of 400 seats in the new assembly and a majority of votes in seven of the nine new provinces.Out of a total of 22.7 million voters, more than 16 million blacks were voting for the first time to elect their representatives to parliament and to the new pr...
460 words (1.2 pages)
Black people living in Chicago lived in racial inequality, majority of black people in Chicago were living in slums.Selma was a key to improving lives for black Americans since it was publicly televised around the world showing the treatment of innocence people making a stand for equality.Along with the Civil Rights Bill, the Voting Rights Act was one of the most significance pieces of civil rights legislation.Segregation of schools was claimed to be fair and equal, however, the black children attending black schools had poor funding compared to white children attending white schools.NAACP had a great impact in changing the civil rights for black Americans because they gave them the chance of being educated in schools that would be for w...
1536 words (3.8 pages)