The Black Vote: A New Era (October/November 1984 | Volume: 35, Issue: 6)

The Black Vote: A New Era

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Authors: Steven F. Lawson

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October/November 1984 | Volume 35, Issue 6

JESSE JACKSON’S impressive performance during the long primary season of 1984 has made one thing absolutely clear: If the Democratic candidate hopes to unseat Ronald Reagan in November, he will have to count heavily on black votes. The political arithmetic underscores the point. In 1982 the number of unregistered blacks of voting age exceeded Reagan’s 1980 margin of victory in nine states—Alabama, Arkansas, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, Kentucky, Massachusetts, and New York. For the past two years, voter registration drives have raced to sign up as many of these unenrolled citizens as possible in time for the 1984 presidential election. And black voter turnout—which in 1982 rose at a faster rate than the white vote did—has shown how successful those registration drives have been. The new clout of blacks at the polls also has been demonstrated by the recent victories of black mayors in Chicago, Philadelphia, and Charlotte to go along with those already scored in Atlanta, New Orleans, Birmingham, Detroit, and Los Angeles.

When civil rights protesters began the trek from Selma to Montgomery in March 1965 to dramatize the plight of disfranchised blacks, Alabama state troopers dispersed them by cracking demonstrators over the head with billy clubs. Witnessing this bloody spectacle on the television news, the President, Congress, and the public recoiled in outrage. On March 15 President Lyndon B. Johnson delivered a special address to a joint session of Congress calling upon lawmakers to remove the barriers to black voting rights. “It is not just Negroes,” the Chief Executive from Texas eloquently told his audience, “but really it is all of us, who must overcome. … And we shall overcome.”

Following these words, Congress moved swiftly to enact a strong measure to treat voting ills in the South. The bill President Johnson signed into law on August 6, 1965, suspended for five years the operation of literacy tests in states and counties where less than 50 percent of the adult population were registered or had voted in the 1964 presidential election. This formula covered the areas with the most flagrant suffrage abuses—Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, Virginia, and parts of North Carolina. (Texas and sections of Florida were added in 1975.) The law also empowered the attorney general of the United States to dispatch federal examiners to act as registrars in these jurisdictions. Furthermore, local officials now had to submit all changes in electoral procedures to the Justice Department or the federal district court in Washington, D.C., before they could go into effect. Until a monitored state proved that it had not allowed racial discrimination in voting for five years, the act would remain in force. In addition Congress instructed the Justice Department to bring litigation challenging the constitutionality of the poll tax, and within a year this levy had been voided by the courts.

The ink had hardly dried on Johnson’s signature when the Justice Department sprang into motion. One of the first places selected