As recently as 1956, nearly 39 percent of blacks voted Republican in that year’s presidential election. After the Civil War, Abe Lincoln’s Republican Party easily carried the black vote — where blacks were allowed to vote. Unwelcome in the Democratic Party, most blacks voted Republican and continued to do so through the early part of the 20th century. It wasn’t until 1948, when 77 percent of the black vote went to Harry Truman, who had desegregated the military, that a majority of blacks identified themselves as Democrats.
Yet, as a percentage of the party, more Republicans voted for the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 than did Democrats. For his key role breaking the Democrats’ filibuster and getting the act to pass the stalled Senate, Republican Sen. Everett Dirksen, a conservative from Illinois, landed on the cover of Time magazine. President Lyndon Johnson called Dirksen “the hero of the nation.” The Chicago Defender, then the country’s largest black daily newspaper, applauded Dirksen’s “generalship” for helping to successfully push through the bill.
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5 comments:
I absolutely love how some people are trying to rewrite history and then think blacks are then going to fall for it.
Forget about Lincoln, Johnson and the others. Talk about now.
lol, Romney aired the GOP dirty laundry that we already could see based off the Rush Limbaughs and Tea Partiers; conservatives see people of color as unpatriotic lazy dum dums looking for handouts. That is unless we tow the GOP line. Now tell me again why would minorities want to line up for a party that hoots and hollers with support every time this narrative is spouted at a campaign event.
"Stupid is as stupid does".
Forest Gump
Ask any southern bigoted white Republican what party his grandfather belonged to and 100% will tell you the Democratic.
After LBJ they left in droves and became Republican.
neither one of you makes any sense
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