civil rights long-term champions & opponents kevin t. brady, ph.d

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Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D.

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Page 1: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Civil Rights

Long-term Champions & Opponents

Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D.

Page 2: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Early Civil Rights Acts

• Civil Rights Act of 1866

• Reconstruction Act of 1867

• Reconstruction Amendments– 13th Natural Rights – 1865– 14th Civil Rights – 1868– 15th Political Rights – 1870

• Ku Klux Klan Act of 1871

Page 3: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

DEMOCRATS RETAKE SOUTHERN STATES

INSTITUTE JIM CROW LAWS

1877 End of Reconstruction

Page 4: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Early Twentieth Century

William McKinley

Theodore Roosevelt

William Howard Taft

Page 5: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Teddy Roosevelt

• My Dear Governor Durbin, (IN) ... permit me to thank you as an American citizen for the admirable way in which you have vindicated the majesty of the law by your recent action in reference to lynching... All thoughtful men... must feel the gravest alarm over the growth of lynching in this country, and especially over the peculiarly hideous forms so often taken by mob violence when colored men are the victims – on which occasions the mob seems to lay more weight, not on the crime but on the color of the criminal.... There are certain hideous sights which when once seen can never be wholly erased from the mental retina. The mere fact of having seen them implies degradation.... Whoever in any part of our country has ever taken part in lawlessly putting to death a criminal by the dreadful torture of fire must forever after have the awful spectacle of his own handiwork seared into his brain and soul. He can never again be the same man.

Page 6: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Eugenics

• 1916 The Passing of a Great Race, Madison Grant

• 1920 The Rising Tide of Color Against White World Supremacy, Lothard Stoddard

• "Birth control must lead ultimately to a cleaner race." Margaret Sanger Woman, Morality, and Birth Control. New York: New York Publishing Company, 1922. P. 12.

• "We should hire three or four colored ministers, preferably with social-service backgrounds, and with engaging personalities. The most successful educational approach to the Negro is through a religious appeal. We don't want the word to go out that we want to exterminate the Negro population. and the minister is the man who can straighten out that idea if it ever occurs to any of their more rebellious members.“December 19, 1939 Margaret Sanger letter to Dr. Clarence Gamble, 255 Adams Street, Milton, Massachusetts.

Page 7: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Woodrow Wilson

• Progressive Democrat

• Born in Virginia

• Historian & President of Princeton University

• Governor of New Jersey

Page 8: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

The film called The Birth of the Nation was released in 1915. It was based on a 1905 novel called The Clansman.

The success of the film at the box-office was uncertain until it was viewed at the White House, by Woodrow Wilson

During the film, Wilson had jumped to his feet and shouted that “It is like writing history with lightning. And my only regret is that it is all so terribly true.”

Page 9: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Papers reported that Wilsonloved the film and the money started to roll in.

William J. Simmons formed a new (the second) Ku Klux Klan in Georgia.

The 2nd Klan was by far the largest. It had a big presence in New Jersey and especially in the Midwest.

The prime focus of hatred went towards Catholic & Jewish immigrants and against any Catholics in America.

The Klan marched on Washington, DC in 1925.

Page 10: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Wilson’s Racial Attitudes

• He believed that giving African Americans the right to vote was “… the foundation of every evil in this country.”

• During his first term in office, the House passed a law making racial intermarriage a felony in the District of Columbia.

• His Postmaster General also ordered that his Washington offices be segregated, with the Treasury and Navy soon doing the same.

• Photographs were required of all applicants for federal jobs. When pressed by black leaders, Wilson replied, "The purpose of these measures was to reduce the friction. It is as far as possible from being a movement against the Negroes. I sincerely believe it to be in their interest."

Page 11: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Woodrow Wilson

• In 1913 Wilson reintroduced segregation to Washington DC and brought Jim Crow to the Federal Workforce

• He also dismissed Blacks from Federal jobs in the South and in DC

Page 12: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Woodrow WilsonTo an African American black delegation

in the White House he said:

• “Segregation is not a humiliation. . .but a benefit and ought to be so regarded by you gentlemen.”

Page 13: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Warren G. Harding

• Spoke in Birmingham Alabama and advocated civil rights for African Americans on October 26, 1921.

• Hired Federal Workers in the South• Spoke out against lynching• Supported Rep. Leonidas Dyer’s anti-lynching

bill. It passes House• Defeated in the Senate after a Democratic

Filibuster

Page 14: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Calvin Coolidge

• Coolidge often spoke out the rights of African-Americans.– Most African-Americans voted for the GOP back

then.– The white south was solidly Democratic

• Formed a committee of blacks & whites to promote mutual understanding of the northern migration of blacks since WWI.

• Sent $1 million dollars to Howard University• He publically spoke out against lynching

Page 15: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Calvin Coolidge and Lynching

• Numbered among our population are some twelve million colored people. Under our Constitution their rights are just as sacred as those of any other citizen. It is both a public and private duty to protect those rights. The Congress ought to exercise all its powers of prevention and punishment against the hideous crime of lynching, of which the negroes are by no means the sole suffers, but for which they furnish a majority of the victims.

Page 16: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Anti-lynching Bills

• All could not be enacted because of Democratic Filibusters

• FDR did not want to promote anti-lynching bills. He feared southern Democratic voters.

• Eleanor wanted him to support ant lynching and would bug him when she was home.

• He made sure he was not alone with her at breakfast, so he could change the topic.

Page 17: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Legislators Introduce Anti-lynching and Anti-poll Tax

Bills • Bill to protect black voters in 1890

• Anti-lynching 1922, 1935, & 1938

• Anti-poll tax bills 1942, 1944, & 1946

• All defeated by Democratic Filibusters

Page 18: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Fair Employment Practices Committee

• In June 1941, FDR issued Executive Order 8802 and created the Fair Employment Practices Committee. The order required the Federal government to not use race, color, creed, or national origin as a consideration when hiring any person.

Page 19: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Eisenhower

• Eisenhower runs against Adlai Stevenson

• Stevenson, personally, had a hard time with African Americans--- He was known to “experience personal discomfort around Negroes.”

• Stevenson chose a segregationist, John Sparkman from Alabama to run as Vice President.

Page 20: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Eisenhower Breaks the Solid South

• 1952- He wins Tennessee, Virginia, and Florida.

• Comes close in Kentucky, West Virginia, and North Carolina

• Deep south who had voted for staunch segregationist & Dixiecrat, Strom Thurman in 1948 voted for Stevenson. In 1952.

Page 21: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Integrating the Military

• Harry Truman had issed an executive order to integrate the military in 1948; however, it was never implemented.

• Eisenhower integrates the military in 1953.

• He also appoints African Americans to higher federal posts.

Page 22: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

November 25, 1955

The Eisenhower administration bans racial segregation on interstate bus

travel

Page 23: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

G.O.P. Platform 1956

• The Republicans endorsed the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court decision on their party platform

• The Democrats do not.

Page 24: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

October 19, 1956

• While campaigning, Vice President Richard Nixon vows: “American boys and girls shall sit, side by side, at any school – public or private – with no regard paid to the color of their skin. Segregation, discrimination, and prejudice have no place in America”

Page 25: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Orval Eugene Faubus

• Progressive, New Dealer, the Democratic Governor of Arkansas blocked the school doors rather than let African American students enter white schools in Little Rock.

• Faubas and his family were great admirers of American socialist presidential candidates, Eugene Debs and Norman Thomas.

• He was named after Debs.

Page 26: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Eisenhower sends troops

• Ike took a chance and federalized Arkansas national guard.

• Arkansas guardsmen had to decide to follow Ike’s orders or to stay loyal to their governor and to Arkansas.

• Ike weigh as former Allied Commander during World War II wins out and they obey.

• There is a chance of a new civil war.• Ike send in the 101st Airborne of the

regular army in also, just in case.

Page 27: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Faubus • Faubus stayed on as governor until he

was defeated by Republican, Winthrop Rockefeller in 1966.

• Rockefeller wins desite only having 11% of Arkansas' population registered Republicans.

• He segregates Arkansas schools.• He integrates Arkansas’ draft board.

Page 28: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

1957—Ike Pushes for a New Civil

Rights Act• Republicans introduce a new Civil Rights

Act.

• Ike’s Attorney General, Herbert Brownell writes the bill.

• The bill guarantees black voting rights and would be guaranteed by the Department of Justice.

Page 29: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Lyndon Baines Johnson• As majority leader, Johnson dominates the

Senate. He reacted to the bill and he warns: “Be ready to take up the G– D---ed N-word bill again.”

• To fellow segregationists, North Carolina Senator (from Watergate fame) Sam Ervin, reassures: “I’m on your side, not theirs. We’ve got to give the G– D---ed N-word something.”

Page 30: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Vice PresidentRichard Millhouse Nixon

• He comes down strongly on the side of civil rights.

• He tries to get the Senate rules changed so a simple 51% majority, instead of a 60% super majority, could end a filibuster.

Page 31: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

LBJ• LBJ guts the enforcement provision

from the 1957 bill.• Anyone accused of violating the Civil Rights

Acts will not be dealt with by the Justice Department. Now they will appear in local court.

• All white, local courts have notoriously issued Jury Nullification verdicts to protect white neighbors for any prosecution.

Page 32: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Strom Thurmond

• The longest filibuster in speech in the history of the Senate was made by Strom Thurmond, Democrat from South Carolina. Thurmond, spoke for twenty-four hours and eighteen minutes during a filibuster against passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1957

Page 33: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

GOP Senator Charles Potter

• I fought besides Negroes in the war. I saw them die for us. For the Senate of the United States to repay these valiant men by a watered down version of this legislation would make a mockery of the democratic concepts we hold so dear.

Page 34: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Ike’s 1960 MandateNear the end of his presidency, President Eisenhower again pushed for a civil rights

act. He asked Congress for seven recommendations on how to best protect civil rights:

• Strengthen laws against the obstruction of court orders in school desegregation cases.• Give investigative authority to the FBI to crimes involving the destruction of

schools/churches.• Give the Attorney General the authority to investigate Federal election records.• Provide temporary program for aid to agencies to assist changes necessary for

school desegregation decisions.• Authorize provision of education for children of the armed forces.• Consider establishing a statutory Commission on Equal Job Opportunity Under

Government Contracts (later mandated in the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to create the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission).

• Extend the Civil Rights Commission an additional 2 years.

Page 35: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

1960 Ike Introduces a Civil Rights Commission Bill

• To reintroduce the provisions that LBJ had cut out.

• Democrats stage the longest filibuster in history, 125 hours to stop any vote on the bill.

• The bill finally passed and was signed by Eisenhower on May 6, 1960.

Page 36: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Voting NO on the Bill

• Richard Russel • Mendell Rivers • William Fulbright • Robert Byrd • Fritz Hollings • Al Gore, Sr.• Strom Thurmond

• Rep. George McGovern voted present

Page 37: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

JFK and MLK• Harris Wofford talked Jack Kennedy into calling

Coretta Scot King when Rev. King was in Reidsville jail.

• He also got the Democratic authorities to give him a two-minute call with King.

• Nixon has no comment.• Kennedy’s Campaign jumped into action.• “No comment Nixon versus a candidate with a

heart, Senator Kennedy.”

Page 38: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Election of 1960

• MLK had thanked Nixon for all of his efforts in 1957 and as a Republican, he was going to vote for Nixon.

• Nixon belonged to the NAACP

• Kennedy did not

Page 39: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

MLK Neutrality

• MLK said, “I expected to vote against Kennedy because of his religion, but now Kennedy can be my President, Catholic or whatever he is. It took courage to call my daughter-in-law in a time like this.”

• MLK stayed neutral in the election. Most black Baptist ministers still voted Republican.

Page 40: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

1964

• More African Americans can now vote because of the 1957 Act.

• Former segregations now courted African American voters.

• LBJ had voted against every civil rights bill, during his tenure in the Senate.

• He needs to make a 180o flip.

Page 41: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Robert Byrd’s Filibuster

• Segregationist Democrats led by Robert Byrd Filibustered to not allow a vote on the Civil Rights Act.

• Byrd filibustered for 14 hours and 13 minutes himself.

Page 42: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

LBJ Needed Help

• Still LBJ need the a large Republican majority to get the Civil Rights and Voting Rights Acts through.– 82% of Republicans Senators voted yeah– 66% of Democratic Senators voted yeah– 80% of Republican House members – 63% of Democratic House members

Page 43: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Barry Goldwater

• Goldwater rejects two points of bil.– He believed that the Senate had the power

to stop the government from discriminating, but not private actor.

– But, he would go further than JFK and withhold funding from anyone getting Federal funds, not just discretionary funds.

Page 44: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Goldwater

• Fought against segregation all his life.• He was a Founder of the NAACP in Arizona.• Donated thousands of today’s dollars to help.• As head of the Arizona National Guard, he

integrated the Guard before Truman’s executive order.

• He had desegregated his family’s department store.

Page 45: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Government Jim CrowGovernment Jim Crow

• He believed powerful government had imposed segregation and Jim Crow.

• Powerful government routinely violates civil rights and liberties.

• Bus companies in the South did not want separate sections-- government imposed segregation.

Page 46: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Nixon in 1966

• 1966 Nixon comeback: He said that the GOP stood for small government and strong national defense. He would leave it to the Democrats “to squeeze the last juice out of the rotting fruit of racial injustice”.

• He call the Democrats, the party of (Lester) Maddox, GA; Mahoney, (George) Wallace, AL.

Page 47: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Voting Rights Act

• Reinforce the 15th Amendment

• Reinforce Eisenhower's Civil Rights Acts

• Outlaw literacy tests

• Our law poll taxes

Page 48: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Civil Rights Act 1968

• Fair Housing Act

• Reintroduces provision of the Civil Rights Act of 1866.

Page 49: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

1968 Segregationists Vote for Humphrey

• Michael Barone: Nixon’s status as a longtime supporter of civil rights in the Eisenhower administration and at the 1960 Republican Convention made it hard to steal votes from Wallace.

Page 50: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

1968 Campaign

• At the beginning of the campaign– Nixon 42%– Humphrey 29%– Wallace 22%

• At the end of the campaign:– Nixon 43,5%– Humphrey surged to 42.7%– Wallace 13.5%

Page 51: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Nixon Desegregates Schools

• January 1969— No man can fully be free while his neighbor is not. To go forward at all is to go forward together. This means black and white together, as one nation, not two. The laws have caught up with our conscience. What remains is to give life to what is law—

• To ensure at last that as all are born equal in dignity before God, all are born in dignity before man.

Page 52: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Nixon Desegregated the Schools

• 1954Brown v. Board of Education• 1957Little Rock• Nothing under Kennedy or under

Johnson• More schools were desegregated during

Nixon’s first term, 1969 to 1973, than at any time before, or at any time after.

Page 53: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Attorney General John Mitchell

• “Watch what we DO, not what we SAY.”

• Nixon ordered that no boasting come from the Cabinet. They needed to just do this and not make a big deal about it. They did not want to awake strong, violent opposition.

Page 54: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Schools

1968 African-American students attending all-black schools 68%

1970 African-American students attending all-black schools 18.4%

1968 African-American students attending majority white schools 18.4%

1970 African-American students attending majority white schools 38.1%

Page 55: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Affirmative Action

• Broke the back of discriminatory building trades.

• Nixon imposed formal racial quotas and timelines.

• In response to aggressive racial discrimination by construction unions.

• Nixon had recommended this back in the Eisenhower administration.

Page 56: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Philadelphia Plan

• Run by George Schultz

• Nixon: People in the ghetto have to have more than an equal chance. They should be given a dividend.

• LBJ had abandoned a similar Philadelphia plan when his comptroller nixed it.

• Nixon vetoed his comptrollers’ objections

Page 57: Civil Rights Long-term Champions & Opponents Kevin T. Brady, Ph.D

Southern Strategy???

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1852

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1856

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1960

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1964

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1968

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1972

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1976

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1980

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1984

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1988

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1992

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1996

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2000

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2004

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2008

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2012