Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsJim Crow Killed Voting Rights for Generations. Now the GOP Is Repeating History.
More than a century later, another generation of Black lawmakers is battling a familiar enemy.On September 3, 1868, Henry McNeal Turner rose to speak in the Georgia House of Representatives to fight for his political survival. He was one of 33 new Black state legislators elected that year in Georgia, a revolutionary change in the South after 250 years of slavery. Eight hundred thousand new Black voters had been registered across the region, and the share of Black male Southerners who were eligible to vote skyrocketed from 0.5 percent in 1866 to 80.5 percent two years later.
These Black legislators had helped to write a new state constitution guaranteeing voting rights for former slaves and leading Georgia back into the Union. Yet just two months after the 14th Amendment granted full citizenship rights to Black Americans, Georgias white-dominated legislature introduced a bill to expel the Black lawmakers, arguing that the states constitution protected their right to vote but not to hold office. You bring both Congress and the Republican Party into odium in this state, said Joseph E. Brown, who had served as governor during the Confederacy years, when you confer upon the Negroes the right to hold office in their present condition.
Turner was shocked. Born free in South Carolina, hed been appointed by Abraham Lincoln as the first Black chaplain in the Union Army. After the war, he settled in Macon, Georgias fifth-largest city, where he was elected to the legislature. As a gesture of goodwill, hed pushed to restore voting rights to ex-Confederates. But now white members of the legislatureboth Democrats and Republicanswere turning on their Black colleagues.
Turners passionate speech would become a rallying cry for the civil rights movement 100 years later. Am I a man? he asked. If I am such, I claim the rights of a man. Am I not a man because I happen to be of a darker hue than honorable gentlemen around me?
But his pleas went unheeded. The legislature voted to expel the Black lawmakers, who werent even allowed to participate in the vote. The sacred rights of my race, said Turner, were destroyed at one blow. Soon he was getting death threats from the Ku Klux Klan. We should neither be seized with astonishment or regret if he were to be lynched, editorialized the Weekly Sun of Columbus, Georgia. Two weeks later, one of the ousted Black legislators, Philip Joiner, led a march to the small town of Camilla in southwest Georgia, where white residents opened fire, killing a dozen or more of the mostly Black marchers.
And so Reconstruction all but ended in Georgia almost as soon as it began. ...
https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2021/06/jim-crow-killed-voting-rights-for-generations-now-the-gop-is-repeating-history/
Link to tweet
1 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Jim Crow Killed Voting Rights for Generations. Now the GOP Is Repeating History. (Original Post)
StrictlyRockers
Jun 2021
OP
uponit7771
(93,532 posts)1. K&R, I think we should call it apartheid lite MAGA's think Jim Crow is OK