Tuesday, September 12, 2017

America's Real Civil Rights History

 America's Real Civil Rights History



America's Real Civil Rights History

Democrats
claim that they have always supported equal rights for black Americans
and that Republicans are racists who always oppose them.




Both claims are flat-out lies. From its founding in 1854,
the Republican Party led the fight to end slavery and then eradicate
the racist Jim Crow system that held blacks down right up to securing
the passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Democrats opposed the
Republicans at every turn.




The
spectacularly untruthful statement below was featured on Democrats.org
until 2009. This actual screenshot is, to our knowledge, the only one in
existence.




So,
let’s take an honest look at the history of civil rights in America. On
the legislative level, congressional Republicans proposed, and
Democrats opposed, a series of Reconstruction-era laws intended to
elevate blacks, in particular to force Southern states to enforce the
Constitutional amendments extending full civil rights and voting rights
to blacks. These included the Civil Rights Act of 1866, the Reconstruction Act of 1867, the Enforcement Act of 1870, the Ku Klux Klan Act of 1871, and the Civil Rights Act of 1875.




In
fact, Democrats consistently opposed legislative efforts to confer
voting rights and other civil rights on blacks, including the 13th, 14th
and 15th Amendments to the Constitution, and even the 19th Amendment,
which granted women the right to vote.




Here are the facts:



April 8, 1864

The 13th Amendment banning slavery passed the U.S. Senate 38 to 6, with 100% Republican support amid Democratic opposition.




January 31, 1865

The 13th Amendment banning slavery passed the U.S. House by a vote of
119 to 56 (with eight abstentions), with all 103 Republicans voting yes,
along with 16 Democrats. Republican President Abraham Lincoln signed
it, sent it on to the states, with final ratification on Dec. 18, 1865.




March 27, 1866

Democrat President Andrew Johnson vetoed a bill granting citizenship to blacks.




June 8, 1866

The U.S. Senate passed the Republicans' 14th Amendment
guaranteeing due process and equal protection of the law to all
citizens. Nearly all Republicans voted yes and 100% of Democrats voted
no.




June 13, 1866

The U.S. House passed the U.S. Senate’s version of the
Republican-sponsored 14th Amendment by a vote of 120 to 32. All
Republicans voted yes.




January 10, 1878

U.S. Senator Aaron Sargent (R-CA) introduced the Susan B. Anthony amendment
for women's suffrage. The Democrat-controlled Senate defeated it
repeatedly before the election of a Republican House and Senate that
guaranteed its approval in 1919.




February 8, 1894

The Democratic Congress and Democratic President Grover Cleveland joined to repeal the Republicans' Enforcement Act, which had enabled blacks to vote.




May 6, 1960

Republican President Eisenhower signed the Civil Rights Act of 1960,
expanding protections for blacks in voting. In the House, the measure was approved by 89% of Republicans and 52% of Democrats. After a Democrat filibuster, the Senate approved it 71-18. No Republicans opposed. All 18 “no” votes were from Democrats.




A History of Shame



The Democratic Party’s militant arm following the Civil War was the Ku Klux Klan, of which prominent Democratic West Virginia Sen. Robert Byrd was a high official, as was Hugo Black, a Democrat who became a U.S. Supreme Court justice.



For 88 years, Democrats in the South enforced a vicious Jim Crow system
of outright discrimination against blacks, particularly measures aimed
at preventing them from voting. They opposed Republican-sponsored civil
rights legislation at the state and federal levels.




In
1964, a Republican U.S. Senate majority introduced and passed the Civil
Rights Act despite a filibuster by Democratic senators.




Similarly, Republicans led the fight for the Voting Rights Act of 1965, when 94 % of GOP lawmakers in the House voted for it, while 27% of Democrat House members opposed it.



Today,
Democrats would like us to forget that they were the party of Jim Crow,
the Klan and racists such as Woodrow Wilson, the globally-thinking
progressive who, upon taking office as president, promptly segregated
the U.S. Civil Service and instituted policies designed to discriminate
against blacks and other minorities.




Democrats
defended, tooth and nail, a plantation-style racial spoils system right
up until 1964, and then converted it into a federal version, with
welfare policies that destroyed the black family and institutionalized
dependence on government. To this day, the party promotes destructive,
addictive welfare policies that keep its constituents dependent.




For a more extensive, documented history of the Democratic Party’s historic opposition to civil rights for blacks, see "The Truth about Jim Crow."