Grand Old Party's grand old contributions to freedom

Brick Top

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continued here:

[h=1]Republican Roots of the 1964 Civil Rights Act[/h] by Michael Zak Rand Paul’s controversial remarks about the 1964 Civil Rights Act illustrate what I have been saying for years, that Republicans would benefit tremendously from knowing and appreciating the heritage of our Grand Old Party. That landmark legislation was the culmination of a century of efforts by Republicans to protect African-Americans from their Democrat oppressors. Let’s look at the facts.
On his deathbed in 1874, Senator Charles Sumner (R-MA) told a Republican colleague: “You must take care of the civil rights bill – my bill, the civil rights bill. Don’t let it fail.” In March 1875, the Republican-controlled 43rd Congress followed up the GOP’s 1866 Civil Rights Act and 1871 Civil Rights Act with the most comprehensive civil rights legislation ever. A Republican president, Ulysses Grant, signed the bill into law that same day.
Among its provisions, the 1875 Civil Rights Act banned racial discrimination in public accommodations. Sound familiar? Though struck down by the Supreme Court eight years later, the 1875 Civil Rights Act would be reborn as the 1964 Civil Rights Act.
During the twenty years of the FDR and Truman administrations, the Democrats had refused to enact any civil rights legislation. In contrast, President Dwight Eisenhower signed the 1957 Civil Rights Act, which had been written by his Attorney General, a former Chairman of the Republican National Committee. The original draft would have permitted the federal government to sue anyone violating another person’s constitutional rights, but this powerful provision would have to wait until the 1964 Civil Rights Act. The bill had to be weakened considerably to secure enough Democrat votes to pass, so violations would be civil, not criminal offenses, and penalties were light. Vice President Richard Nixon helped overcome a Democrat filibuster in the Senate. The GOP then strengthened enforcement with its 1960 Civil Rights Act.
Clever strategizing had won him the support of most African-American voters, but it took President John Kennedy (D-MA) nearly two years to make good on even one of his promises to them. He refused to attend a dinner commemorating the 100[SUP]th[/SUP] anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation and turned down Martin Luther King’s invitation to speak at the March on Washington. He did name Thurgood Marshall to the federal bench, but that was to an appeals court in New York, far from the fray in southern states. Kennedy did not honor his campaign promise to submit to Congress a new civil rights bill soon after taking office.
While the Kennedy administration was ignoring its campaign pledges, the Republican minority in Congress introduced several bills to protect the constitutional rights of African-Americans. In January 1963, congressional Republicans introduced a sweeping civil rights bill to enact what Democrat opposition had prevented from being included in the 1957 and 1960 laws. Threatened by this initiative, the president finally acted. Hastily drafted in a single one-nighter, the Kennedy bill fell well short of what the GOP had introduced the month before. Many Democrats were preparing a protracted Senate filibuster of this civil rights bill, which was in a committee of the House of Representatives when John Kennedy was murdered in November 1963.
The 1964 Civil Rights Act was an update of Charles Sumner’s 1875 Civil Rights Act. In striking down that law in 1883, the Supreme Court had ruled that the 14[SUP]th[/SUP] Amendment was insufficient constitutional authorization, so the 1964 Civil Rights Act had to be written in such a way as to rely on the interstate commerce clause for its constitutional underpinning. The 1964 Act guaranteed equal access to public facilities and banned racial discrimination by any entity receiving federal funding, thereby extending coverage to most every hospital, school and government contractor. Also banned was racial discrimination in unions and in companies with more than twenty-five employees. Enforcement provisions were much more rigorous than those of the 1957 and 1960 Acts.
Republicans supported the 1964 Civil Rights Act much more than did the Democrats. Contrary to Democrat myth, Everett Dirksen (R-IL), the Senate Minority Leader – not President Lyndon Johnson – was the person most responsible for its passage. Mindful of how Democrat opposition had forced Republicans to weaken their 1957 and 1960 Civil Rights Acts, President Johnson promised Republicans that he would publicly credit the GOP for its strong support. Johnson played no role in the legislative fight. In the House of Representatives, the 1964 Civil Rights Act passed with 80% support from Republicans but only 63% support from Democrats.
In the Senate, Dirksen had no trouble rounding up the votes of most Republicans, and former presidential candidate Richard Nixon lobbied hard for passage. On the Democrat side, the Senate leadership did support the bill, while the chief opponents were Senators Sam Ervin (D-NC), Al Gore (D-TN) and Robert Byrd (D-WV). Senator Byrd, whom Democrats still call “the conscience of the Senate,” filibustered against the 1964 Civil Rights Act for fourteen straight hours. At a meeting held in his office, Dirksen modified the bill so it could be passed despite Democrat opposition. He strongly condemned the Democrat-led 57-day filibuster: “The time has come for equality of opportunity in sharing of government, in education, and in employment. It must not be stayed or denied. It is here!”
Along with most other political leaders at the time, Johnson, credited Dirksen for getting the bill passed: “The Attorney General said that you were very helpful and did an excellent job… I’ll see that you get proper attention and credit.” At the time, for instance, The Chicago Defender, a renowned African-American newspaper, praised Senator Dirksen for leading passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act.
The struggle for civil rights was not finished, however, as most southern states remained under the control of segregationist Democrat governors, such as George Wallace (D-AL), Orval Faubus (D-AR) and Lester Maddox (D-GA). Full enforcement of the 1964 Civil Rights Act would not arrive until the Republican political ascendancy in the South during the 1980s.

http://biggovernment.com/mzak/2010/05/31/republican-roots-of-the-1964-civil-rights-act/
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
lol.

"we did good stuff a while ago!"

you forgot to mention that all the people in the republican party who did those things are now democrats. you like to brag about your age, brick, don't you recall how the GOP catered to the bigoted fears of voters to flip the south? it all happened in your lifetime, i would think you would be more aware of history and all.

besides, we already mentioned the 2 or 3 contributions of the GOP.
 

Brick Top

New Member
And some more...

1864

Republicans Freed the Slaves

At the suggestion of President Abraham Lincoln, RNC Chairman Edwin Morgan opened the 1864 Republican National Convention with a brief statement:
“The party of which you, gentlemen, are the delegated and honored representatives, will fall far short of accomplishing its great mission, unless among its other resolves it shall declare for such an amendment of the Constitution as will positively prohibit African slavery in the United States.”
Abolishing slavery became part of the platform. Congressional Republicans passed the 13th Amendment unanimously – against nearly unanimous Democrat opposition – and it was ratified within the year.




1866

Republicans Passed the 14th Amendment

The 14[SUP]th[/SUP] Amendment guarantees due process and equal protection of the laws to all citizens. It enshrines in the Constitution provisions of the GOP’s 1866 Civil Rights Act. The original purpose of the 14th Amendment was to defend African-Americans from their Democrat oppressors in the post-Civil War South.
The principal author of the 14[SUP]th[/SUP] Amendment was U.S. Rep. John Bingham (R-OH). In Congress, all votes in favor of the 14[SUP]th[/SUP] Amendment were from Republicans, and all votes against it were from Democrats.
In 1868, the Republican Governor of New Jersey vetoed an attempt by the Democrat-controlled legislature to rescind the state's ratification of the 14th Amendment.



http://www.gop.com/index.php/issues/accomplishment/
 

Brick Top

New Member

1867

[h=2]Republicans Established Howard University[/h] In 1867, with the purpose of establishing an institution of higher learning for emancipated slaves and other African-Americans, Senator Samuel Pomeroy (R-KS) and Representative Burton Cook (R-IL) wrote the charter for Howard University, in Washington, D.C. Senator Henry Wilson (R-MA) introduced a bill to grant the charter, and the Republican-controlled 39[SUP]th[/SUP] Congress soon passed it.
The trustees named their university for General Oliver Howard, who had championed it in Congress and served as its first president. He had served as commissioner of the Freedmen's Bureau, the federal agency tasked with assisting emancipated slaves in the post-war South. General Howard would be president of Howard University from 1869 to 1874.




1869

[h=2]Republicans Passed the 15th Amendment[/h] In 1869, the Republican-controlled 40th Congress passed the 15th Amendment, extending to African-Americans the right to vote. Nearly all Republicans in Congress voted in favor, though a few abstained, saying it did not go far enough. Nearly all Democrats in Congress voted against the 15th Amendment.
The 15[SUP]th[/SUP] Amendment was ratified the following year, but using intimidation, poll taxes, registration fraud, and literacy tests Democrats prevented most African-Americans from voting for nearly a century.


 

Brick Top

New Member
1869

[h=2]Republican Opposition to Plessy v. Ferguson[/h] Dissenting from the infamous Plessy v. Ferguson decision in 1896 – which declared “separate but equal” to be constitutional – Justice John Marshall Harlan wrote:
“Our Constitution is color-blind, and neither knows nor tolerates classes among citizens.”
A former Attorney General of Kentucky, Harlan was a two-time Republican nominee for governor before Republican President Rutherford Hayes appointed him to the U.S. Supreme Court.




1870

[h=2]The First African-American Senator was a Republican[/h] Born a free man in North Carolina, Hiram Revels moved to Baltimore, where he became a minister in the African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church. He served as a military chaplain during the Civil War. The end of the war found him in Mississippi, where he settled.
Hiram Revels began his political career, as a Republican, on the Natchez City Council. He then won a seat in the state senate. When the state was re-admitted to the Union in 1870, the legislature elected Revels to the U.S. Senate.

 

Brick Top

New Member
:clap:

anything else in the last 150 years?

1871

[h=2]Republicans Outlawed the Ku Klux Klan[/h] In 1871, the Republican-controlled 42[SUP]nd[/SUP] Congress passed a Civil Rights Act aimed at the Ku Klux Klan. Guilty of murdering hundreds of African-Americans, this terrorist organization had also eradicated the Republican Party throughout most of the South. The law empowered the Republican administration of Ulysses Grant to protect the civil rights of the former slaves in federal court, bypassing the Democrat-controlled state courts.
The 1871 Civil Rights Act, along with the GOP’s 1870 Civil Rights Act, effectively banned the Klan and enabled Republican officials to arrest hundreds of Klansmen. Though the U.S. Supreme Court would eventually strike down most of the 1871 Civil Rights Act, the Ku Klux Klan was crushed. The KKK did not rise again until the Democratic administration of President Woodrow Wilson.




1875

[h=2]Republicans Passed the 1875 Civil Rights Act[/h] On his deathbed in 1874, Senator Charles Sumner (R-MA) told a Republican colleague: “You must take care of the civil rights bill – my bill, the civil rights bill. Don’t let it fail.” In March 1875, the Republican-controlled 43rd Congress passed the most comprehensive civil rights legislation ever. President Ulysses Grant signed the bill into law that same day.
Among its provisions, the 1875 Civil Rights Act banned racial discrimination in public accommodations. Sound familiar? Though struck down by the Supreme Court eight years later, the 1875 Civil Rights Act would be reborn as the 1964 Civil Rights Act.


 

Brick Top

New Member
I have some additional contributions I think are worth mentioning. I am appalled that the OP didn't mention them, I have listed them in detail below:.

1884

[h=2]A Former Slave Chaired the 1884 Republican National Convention[/h] An African-American former congressman, John Lynch, chaired the 1884 Republican National Convention. A speech seconding his nomination for the post marked the entrance onto the national stage of a 25-year old delegate named Theodore Roosevelt.
Lynch was born into slavery in 1847. After emancipation, he joined the Republican Party. At the age of 22, Lynch was elected to the Mississippi legislature. Within three years, Lynch became speaker of the state House of Representatives. In 1872, at the age of 25, Lynch was elected to the first of three terms in the U.S. House of Representatives, making him one of the youngest persons ever to serve in Congress.
John Lynch was a delegate to five Republican National Conventions. He chaired the Mississippi Republican Party from 1881 to 1889 and was the Republican National Committeeman for Mississippi from 1884 to 1889. He later served in the Benjamin Harrison and William McKinley administrations.




1940

[h=2]The Republican Party First Called for Ending Racial Segregation in the Military[/h] In 1940, the Republican National Convention approved a plank in its platform calling for racial integration of the armed forces: “Discrimination in the civil service, the army, navy, and all other branches of the Government must cease.”
For the next eight years, Democratic presidents Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Harry Truman refused to integrate. Not until 1948 did President Truman finally comply with the Republicans' demands for racial justice in the U.S. military.


 

Brick Top

New Member
Sorry I left them out, here they are again:

1952

[h=2]A Republican Integrated the University of Mississippi[/h] Elbert Tuttle became a leader of the Georgia Republican Party in the 1940s. In 1952, Tuttle was instrumental in securing the Republican presidential nomination for Dwight Eisenhower.
After first appointing him general counsel of the U.S. Treasury Department, President Eisenhower appointed Tuttle to U.S. Court of Appeals in 1954. Recognizing that Brown v. Board of Education was a “broad mandate for racial justice,” Tuttle ruled in favor of civil rights activists in a number of important cases. It was Judge Tuttle who, in 1962, ordered the University of Mississippi to admit its first African-American student, James Meredith.





1954

[h=2]A Republican Wrote the Brown v. Board of Education decision[/h] In 1954, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that racial segregation in public schools is unconstitutional. The author of Brown v. Board of Education was a Republican, Chief Justice Earl Warren.
Warren entered Republican politics in 1938 with his election as Attorney General of California. Four years later, he was elected Governor. Earl Warren delivered the keynote address at the 1944 Republican National Convention and was the GOP’s 1948 vice presidential nominee. President Eisenhower appointed him Chief Justice in September 1953. Instrumental in the appointment was Warren's friend, Attorney General Herbert Brownell, a former chairman of the RNC.


http://www.gop.com/index.php/issues/accomplishment/
 

Brick Top

New Member
1957

[h=2]Republicans Passed the 1957 Civil Rights Act[/h] During the five terms of the FDR and Truman presidencies, the Democrats did not propose any civil rights legislation. President Eisenhower, in contrast, asked his Attorney General to write the first federal civil rights legislation since the Republican Party’s 1875 Civil Rights Act.
Many Democrats in the Senate filibustered the bill, but strong Republican support ensured passage. The new law established a Civil Rights Division within the Justice Department and authorized the Attorney General to request injunctions against any attempt to deny someone’s right to vote. The GOP improved upon this landmark legislation with the 1960 Civil Rights Act.




1957

[h=2]Republicans Ended Racial Segregation in Little Rock[/h] Just a few days after passage of the GOP’s 1957 Civil Rights Act, the Democrat governor of Arkansas ordered the National Guard to prevent the court-ordered racial integration of a public high school in Little Rock. Republican President Dwight Eisenhower refused to tolerate defiance of the federal judiciary. Under a plan suggested by his attorney general, the President placed the governor’s soldiers under federal control and ordered federal troops to the state, where they escorted African-American children to school.
Republicans were unfazed by the many Democrats, including John Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson, who criticized President Eisenhower for the action he took to uphold civil rights.


http://www.gop.com/index.php/issues/accomplishment/
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
bricktop is on a copy and paste mission.

completely ignoring that the map has switched. the GOP courted the southern democrats and turned them into republicans.

and he is feverishly ignoring that all these things were done by liberals. i only know of one self-describing liberal republican nowadays, my cousin.
 

Brick Top

New Member
let's look at who got lincoln elected:



i would say liberals freed the slaves, not republicans, and the GOP no longer has the support of those liberals.

So, you want to make an attempt at revisionist history writing and claim that it was not actually the politicians and the president that freed the slaves, but instead those most responsible for electing the president?

That's weak, even for you.
 

Canna Sylvan

Well-Known Member
bricktop is on a copy and paste mission.

completely ignoring that the map has switched. the GOP courted the southern democrats and turned them into republicans.

and he is feverishly ignoring that all these things were done by liberals. i only know of one self-describing liberal republican nowadays, my cousin.
What's the definition of a liberal republican?
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
So, you want to make an attempt at revisionist history writing and claim that it was not actually the politicians and the president that freed the slaves, but instead those most responsible for electing the president?

That's weak, even for you.
i give full credit to lincoln for freeing the slaves.

but pointing out that the people who elected lincoln would vote for democrats nowadays is not revisionist history, it is historical fact.
 

Brick Top

New Member
you like to brag about your age, brick,
There you go again, attempting to create a false reality so you can create an opening you want and need so you can then move on to say what you want to say rather than remain topical.


I do not; "brag about" my; "age." Getting old is nothing to brag about. But I will mention it when doing so proves that I have more knowledge and experience about something than some puppy or some ignorant liberal who lives by revisionist history.





don't you recall how the GOP catered to the bigoted fears of voters to flip the south?
Don't you recall how during the 2000 election Al Gore and Democrats made the claim that Black voters were being disenfranchised, but later that claim was irrefutably proven to be a blatant lie? Al Gore and his fellow Democratic political pirates attempted to steal the election by creating a false reality to stir up the fears of Black voters.



Frankly, I am appalled by the unimaginable heights of sheer ignorance of many here who do not have even the slightest clue about the truth, the proven historical past, of the GOP. What is even worse is the willingness of others who must know at least a little of the truth to blatantly lie for pure political reasons and hope of political gain for the political party with the proven historical record of being hardcore racists, the party of Democrats.
 

Brick Top

New Member
i give full credit to lincoln for freeing the slaves.

but pointing out that the people who elected lincoln would vote for democrats nowadays is not revisionist history, it is historical fact.
You cannot run and hide from your own words. You said; "i would say liberals freed the slaves, not republicans." That is revisionist history, that was you attempting to credit voters for doing what the GOP actually did.

You really are a pitiful pathetic human being, Uncle Buck. You are ignorant of the facts and your are willfully intellectually dishonest.
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
I do not; "brag about" my; "age." ...I will mention it when doing so proves that I have more knowledge and experience...
"i don't brag about my age, but my age makes me smarter than you!"

i know some really dumb old people. nothing about growing older makes you more knowledgeable, gaining knowledge makes one more knowledgeable.

and i'll just repeat my "revisionist" history once again so you can try to dispute it: the same states that got lincoln elected back then would elect obama today.
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
You cannot run and hide from your own words. You said; "i would say liberals freed the slaves, not republicans." That is revisionist history, that was you attempting to credit voters for doing what the GOP actually did.

You really are a pitiful pathetic human being, Uncle Buck. You are ignorant of the facts and your are willfully intellectually dishonest.
lincoln would not have had any chance to free the slaves if not for the liberals that put him in office.

i give full credit to lincoln for freeing the slaves, and full credit to liberals for giving him the chance to do so.

nothing revisionist there.

insert insults here about how you have to pay hookers to fuck you.
 

Canna Sylvan

Well-Known Member
...

I have more knowledge and experience about something than some puppy ...
I may not be anywhere near your age, but that doesn't mean I haven't been around the block.

Frankly, I am appalled by the unimaginable heights of sheer ignorance of many here who do not have even the slightest clue about the truth, the proven historical past, of the GOP. What is even worse is the willingness of others who must know at least a little of the truth to blatantly lie for pure political reasons and hope of political gain for the political party with the proven historical record of being hardcore racists, the party of Democrats.
The Democrats and Republicans do the same thing. But, Democrats lie about the lies. So that makes them way worse. Their collective bullshit and trying to convince you taxes get taken from you, but there's always someone who pays more, therefore we give you their surplus, is a pathetic ponzi scheme.

The problem with Republicans is their intolerance. You prove it with your garbage comments towards vegetarians, vegans and environmentalists. Those people, like me, just want a world our children can live in too. I at least am an animal activist because humans have no right to take liberty from any living animal, human animals too. It's no different than liberals stepping into your life and forcing tons of regulations and taxes for your own good.

Where I differ is with the actual impact. Paying a fee in case your new car pollutes for the first six years, then $50 for a smog check afterwards, solves nothing. Our air is still dirty. Chlorine, chloralamines and fluoride aren't natural and aren't protecting us. A monitor/tv disposal fee isn't doing anything, people just throw it in a dumpster anyway. CA redemption value is a joke. People throw it out without "redeeming" because you need to go to a special place and get a fraction of the deposit back.

Does that mean those are bad ideas? No. But democrats are liars. They exploit good natured people like myself. All they want is money. That's why I HATE democrats.They say they're the party of the people but are several magnitudes more self indulging assholes than those like Romney could ever be.
 
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