It started with Roosevelt. Why do you suppose that was?FlashDangerpants wrote:It ended when the Democratic party started turfing out their racists in the late 50s and 60s, culminating with Lyndon Johnson signing the Civil Rights Acts of 64 and 68 as well as the Voting Rights Act of 65.Walker wrote: The Republican Party ended slavery.
The Democratic Party is the party of slavery and the KKK.
Today, black Americans are a solid Democratic voting block.
Have you completed your research to find the facts on how, why and when this happened?
Or, is moronic, simplistic, and childish party-line propaganda more comfortable.
The Republicans responded by nominating Barry Goldwater for the 64 presidential campaign (he was annihilated outside the deep south) and then adopting the Southern Strategy for the next few elections, which brought them white racist votes in the areas where the Dems had discarded their racists.
Both sides of the civil war were racists and both parties were racist after it. Futhermore all political parties contain a coalition of interests. In the case of Dems and Reps, each had a rump of racists in the deep south contending with more moderate interests from the north east and the west coasts. In the Dems' case, those southern racists lost the argument and wandered off. The Republicans sadly saw this as an opportunity and recruited those disaffected southern democrats.
I donate these facts willingly to artisticsolution.
“Blacks mostly voted Republican from after the Civil War and through the early part of the 20th century. That’s not surprising when one considers that Abraham Lincoln was the first Republican president, and the white, segregationist politicians who governed Southern states in those days were Democrats. The Democratic Party didn’t welcome blacks then, and it wasn’t until 1924 that blacks were even permitted to attend Democratic conventions in any official capacity. Most blacks lived in the South, where they were mostly prevented from voting at all.
“The election of Roosevelt in 1932 marked the beginning of a change. He got 71 percent of the black vote for president in 1936 and did nearly that well in the next two elections, according to historical figures kept by the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies. But even then, the number of blacks identifying themselves as Republicans was about the same as the number who thought of themselves as Democrats.”
http://www.factcheck.org/2008/04/blacks ... tic-party/