THIS DAY IN HISTORY – Johnson calls for equal voting rights – 1965

Via History.com

On this day in 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson addressed a joint session of Congress to urge the passage of legislation guaranteeing voting rights for all.

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Using the phrase “we shall overcome,” borrowed from African-American leaders struggling for equal rights, Johnson declared that “every American citizen must have an equal right to vote.” Johnson reminded the nation that the Fifteenth Amendment, which was passed after the Civil War, gave all citizens the right to vote regardless of race or color. But states had defied the Constitution and erected barriers. Discrimination had taken the form of literacy, knowledge or character tests administered solely to African-Americans to keep them from registering to vote.

“Their cause must be our cause too,”Johnson said. “Because it is not just Negroes, but really it is all of us, who must overcome the crippling legacy of bigotry and injustice. And we shall overcome.”

The speech was delivered eight days after racial violence erupted in Selma, Alabama. Civil rights leader Rev. Martin Luther King and over 500 supporters were attacked while planning a march from Selma to Montgomery to register African-Americans to vote. The police violence that erupted resulted in the death of a King supporter, a white Unitarian Minister from Boston named James J. Reeb. Television news coverage of the event galvanized voting rights supporters in Congress.

A second attempt to march to Montgomery was also blocked by police. It took Federal intervention with the “federalizing” of the Alabama national guard and the addition of over 2,000 other guards to allow the march to begin.

The march to Montgomery finally began March 21 with over 3,000 participants under the glare of worldwide news publicity.

The violence, however, continued. Just after the march was successfully completed on March 25, four Klansman shot and killed Detroit homemaker Viola Liuzzo as she drove marchers back to Selma.

On August 6, 1965, Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act, which made it illegal to impose restrictions on federal, state and local elections that were designed to deny the vote to blacks.

While state and local enforcement of the act was initially weak, mainly in the South, the Voting Rights Act gave African-American voters the legal means to challenge voting restrictions and vastly improved voter turnout. In Mississippi alone, voter turnout among blacks increased from 6 percent in 1964 to 59 percent in 1969.

In 1970, President Richard Nixon extended the provisions of the Voting Rights Act and lowered the eligible voting age for all voters to 18.

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6 Comments
CCRider
CCRider
March 15, 2018 6:49 am

It was a milestone event where the final vestige of any attempt to keep assholes out of voting booths was erased. Now that’s all you find in voting booths (pretentious as hell, I know, but I couldn’t resist)

“Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard.”
H. L. Mencken

Dutchman
Dutchman
March 15, 2018 9:00 am

There it is folks, the beginning of the end.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Dutchman
March 15, 2018 10:41 am

The beginning of the end was when women got the vote.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
March 15, 2018 11:19 am

Property ownership, a test to confirm your level of education regarding the issues of the day and the foundational documents pretending to protect our freedom and liberty, and proof of residency in the district and citizenship should be required for all voters. If you don’t have a stake or a clue, you shouldn’t get to vote. Add to that a requirement that ONLY elections in which 75%+ of the eligible turn out to vote will be considered valid, and a requirement that ALL races will include None of the Above as an option – and that if NOTA wins, ALL other candidates are forbidden to run in the do-over, and we might have the foundation for reasonable elections.

CCRider
CCRider
  MrLiberty
March 15, 2018 11:43 am

I’d welcome those improvements (impossible to propose though they are) but I have moved past ever hoping democracy can be made to work under any circumstances. It’s foundation premise is a ruling class who uses force against a minority. How can that be sanitized? You’re a short hop to anarchy and the non-aggression principle.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
  CCRider
March 16, 2018 12:15 pm

Oh, I’m already there and would MUCH prefer anarchy. Just saying if voting and government are to remain……