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Suffrage & Civil Rights

Suffrage & Civil Rights. Suffrage & Civil Rights. Civil Rights. In the 1960’s civil rights workers suffered beatings, arrests, shocks and death all so that every American can vote. The Fifteenth Amendment. Ratified in 1870. Allowed Free Blacks the right to vote.

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Suffrage & Civil Rights

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  1. Suffrage & Civil Rights

  2. Suffrage & Civil Rights

  3. Civil Rights • In the 1960’s civil rights workers suffered beatings, arrests, shocks and death all so that every American can vote.

  4. The Fifteenth Amendment • Ratified in 1870. • Allowed Free Blacks the right to vote. • No one in the United States can be denied the vote based on race, color or previous conditions of servitude. • For 90 years this amendment was ignored by the federal government. • Many Blacks were denied their rights to vote during this time frame.

  5. The Fifteenth Amendment • Literacy tests were used to keep Blacks from voting in the South. • Poll taxes, white primaries and gerrymandering were also tactics used to keep Blacks from voting. • White primaries were generally in the South run by the Democratic party. • Democrats refused to allow Blacks into the party.

  6. The Fifteenth Amendment • 1944 – Smith vAllwright, the SCOTUS outlawed the white primary. • 1960 – Gomillionv Lightfoot, SCOTUS outlawed gerrymandering strictly for race . • The SCOTUS outlawed these due to violation of the 15th Amendment. • Finally through the Civil Rights Mvmt led by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr were the sections intended to protect Black voting rights enforced.

  7. Early Civil Rights Legislation • Civil Rights Act of 1957 established the US Civil Rights Commission. • Looked into claims of discrimination. • Reported to the POTUS, Congress and to the public. • Gave power to the US Atty . General the right through court order to protect a person’s right to vote in any general election.

  8. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 • Outlawed discrimination in regards to job related matters. • Forbid the literacy test in voting and voter registration. • Relied on injunctions which compels or restrains the actions of a public or private individual in regards to voting. • A violation of this results in a fine or imprisonment.

  9. Civil Rights Act of 1964 • The March in Selma was an attempt to register Blacks to vote. • Some of the marchers were beat, jailed and killed. • Brought the focus on the injustice of Blacks to the nation.

  10. Voting Rights Act of 1965. • Finally made the 15th amendment part of the Constitution. • Originally to be in effect for 5 years. Has been extended 3 times. • Extended again in 2007. • Law ended the poll tax, literacy test. Appointed voting examiners in states where less than 50% of voters in 1964 voted. • Gave federal authorities power to register voters in these areas.

  11. Voting Rights Act of 1965 • No laws or changing of election laws could go in effect in any of the States without the preclearance of the Dept. of Justice. • Only laws that do not weaken the voting rights of minorities did not require preclearance. • No State under the VRA can do the following w/o preclearance: • Location of polling places • Boundaries of election districts • Deadlines in the election process • From ward or district election to at-large • Qualifications needed to run for office.

  12. Amendments to the VRA • In 1975 the literacy tests ban was made permanent. • Voter examiner & preclearance were made in States that had a 5 % or more minority in voting age population. • Law also applied to language minorities.

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