Watching
political history unfold and sanitized in
the Black community
E. Ablorh-Odjidja,
Ghanadot
September 20, 2014
Just when you think
you have heard it all about why Blacks vote
Democrat a new theory turns up: Republicans
opposition to the Voter Registration Act of
1965 and matters emanating from it!
Before this, the
justification was that Blacks turneded
against the Republicans party because Barry Goldwater,
their presidential candidate for 1964, had voted
against the Civil Rights Bill of that year,
together with the Southern Democrats.
Now,
in the lexicon of the revisionists these
days, Southern
Democrats have become Southern Conservatives
since 1965;
a perfect hook to pull the conservative Republican
party into the
racism void and blame.
But note that there
never was "Southern Republicans" in
the political arrangement of the South back
in the 60s because the South was solidly
Democrat party controlled.
But gradually, racism has
become
the traditional taint and propaganda tool for Democrats to use on
Republicans.
As a result, Blacks have
been voting overwhelmingly for the Democrats
for the past 50 years and more.
On the basis of the
Black vote alone, Democrats have managed tobe
highly viable political power over the years, as
Malcolm X once noted.
In 1965, Malcolm X
asked Blacks, “The fact that you threw 80%
of your votes behind the Democrats that put
the Democrats in the White House…. but ….
what do you get out of it?”
As recent as the last
presidential election of 2012, the Black
vote increased to 95% for the Democrat
presidential candidate, Barack Obama.
This
one-way trend in voting for Democrats has not changed
for years.
And the rationale remains the same: Republicans
were the villains who opposed the Civil
Rights Bills. Not true.
The accusation is
just so brazenly a contradictory analysis of
what actually happened in the Civil Rights
march of the 60s through the halls of Congress.,
But worse, this
analysis creates
derogatory perception for Blacks in its assumptions and
assertions.
To think that Black
loyalty can shift on a dime, on a perception
gained over a mere three months of
legislative debate in Congress, is to imply a fickle
minded constituency that was willing to go
blind in one political eye for nothing!
Possibly so, only if
by this view Blacks are willing to sanitize
history so as to prevent Democrats from ever
being called racists, even though they have
had a far richer history of racism than
Republicans.
So now, Democrats,
with white power structure and the party
of Jim Crow, are no longer racist!
As contended now,
Republicans are the racists!
The 1964 Civil Rights
Act, the more historic Bill, could not have
passed without the majority Republican
support vote. But don’t wait to hear this
today.
This is a historical
fact that has been twisted.
Accordingly, Blacks hardly give Republicans
credit for passing it.
The 1964 bill was
passed under President Lyndon B. Johnson, a
Democrat, who admitted at the signing that
it wouldn’t have been possible without the
Republican majority vote.
Eighteen Democrats
senators and a lone Republican filibustered
the 1964 legislation. But only Strom
Thurmond, the Republican in the filibuster,
would turn up as the villain on the roster
of Black politics.
Same roster list had
many illustrious Democrats. Senator
Robert C. Byrd (Democrat) led the filibuster
attack on the 1964 bill. Senator Richard
Russell of Georgia (Democrat) closed the
argument in opposition.
The opposition for
both the 64 Civil Rights and 65 Voting
Rights Acts was dominated by Democrat names,
whose progenies are prominent in the party’s
affairs of today – Albert Gore, Richard
Russell, William Fulbright, Robert Byrd and
more.
None of these
Democrats changed polital parties after
1965.
But learn today that
in Black politics only Republicans can be
racists. And even if some Democrats
were, they are all imagined to have moved en mass to the
Republican side. Not true!
In 1965, there were
both bi-partisan support and opposition for
the Voting Registration Act. it was first
and jointly proposed in Congress by then
Senate majority leader Mike Mansfield
(Democrat) and Minority Leader Everett
Dirksen (Republican).
In the House, two
committee leaders, William McCulloch
(Republican) and Howard W. Smith (Democrat)
opposed it and sought to delay or dilute the
bill.
Note the bi-partisan
nature in oppositions and support for the
Bill.
In the end, the Bill
was passed in the Senate by a 79-18 vote
(Democrats 49-17), (Republicans 30-1) on
August 4, 1965.
The support rate for
the Bill was a 97% on the Republicans side
versus 65% on the Democrat side. Seventeen
Democrats opposed the Bill while only one
Republican was against it
.
Surprisingly, the
moral victory for this historic Bill now
belongs to Democrats after 1965.
And this seemingly
moral victory is what is used by revisionists
to justify the seismic shift in Black votes to the
Democrat party.
In the process, all
the good works on the Republican side, from
the Civil War years to the signing of the
Civil Rights Bill of 1964, would be spun to
nothing.
The Democrats are the
heroes.
Conveniently, the
part played by Senator Sam Irvin (Democrat)
in opposing the 1964 Act would be forgotten.
Sam Irvin is lionized
today. He had been an ardent supporter of
the pro Jim Crow document,
the Southern Manifesto, signed in
Congress in 1956 by 96 Democrats and Four
Republicans.
Sam Irvin became an
instant hero during the Watergate trials of
President Richard Nixon.
Nixon, together with
Martin Luther King Jr, was one of the
architects of the 1957 Civil Rights Act,
after a trip to Ghana to Celebrate the
country's independence.
"The Civil Rights Act of 1957 was the act
that kick-started the
civil rights
legislative programme that was to include
the
1964 Civil Rights Act
and the
1965 Voting Rights Act,"
wrote The History Learning Site.
There was serious
opposition to all the acts proposed in the
bill by key Democrats.
"Committed to the
filibuster (1965) effort were the powerful
Senators Richard Russell, Thurmond, Robert
Byrd, William Fulbright and Sam Ervin,"
wrote the Constitution Daily.
Twenty years later,
Sam Irvin became the Civil Rights hero and
Nixon, the villain!
Richard Russell
(Democrat) was on the Southern Manifesto
roster too but but about a decade later, he
had the Senate office Building
named after him.
Strom Thurmond had
only Trent Lott to speak for him on his
100-year birthday. For this, Lott
(Republican} was driven from his Senate
leadership office mostly by Black outcry.
The myth about racist
Republicans persists. Mention any electoral
reform proposed by them and you would hear
the refrain “Republicans want to suppress
the Black vote”!
The controversy
surrounding the law requiring voters to show
photo identification before casting ballot
in an election is an example.
And true enough;
opposition to the “photo id” law had since
scored some legal victories in a number of
states.
But whose rights are
the litigants seeking to protect, the
illegal alien from across the border, and
the fraudster within state or the law
abiding Black citizen at home?
And how much of the
Black vote can be suppressed, since
Democrats already own 90% of that vote!
Meanwhile, the Black
vote is being suppressed or diluted to make
room for a Hispanic majority.
Each year thousands
of undocumented “immigrants, “mostly
Hispanic whites, walk across the Southern
border to live and work in America.
Unsurprisingly,
Hispanic now forms the lead minority group;
with growing, exclusive economic and
political clout in America. And thanks to
the opposition to photo identification, many
more non-citizens can vote.
Blacks were the
dominant minority group. The decline to
second place happened while all attention
was on racist Republicans!
This one way voting
pattern has produced little gains for Blacks
but a lot more for others. A
discerning person might think that the whole
racist scheme was designed to keep Blacks
down and under.
Now consider the case
of the frog in a boiling pot. Even
though the frog didn’t volunteer for service
in the ever more boiling pot, its problem
now becomes how long it will choose to stay
to be cooked.
But just in case you
are offended by this frog imagery, please
remember Malcolm X called us "A
POLITICAL CHUMP!" in 1965 just because
we had stayed too long in the Democrat camp.
E. Ablorh-Odjidja,
Publisher www.ghanadot.com, Washington, DC,
September 20, 2014
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