Since the end of the Civil War in 1865, when African Americans
were granted the right to vote, through the 15th Amendment in 1868,
electoral politics has played a dominant role in the African American
Community. African
Americans have been participating in electoral politics for 138
years.
With the North winning the Civil War and chattel slavery being
abolished, under the Emancipation Proclamation, and as we were given
the right to vote, through the 15th Amendment, many Black leaders
began to feel that maybe conditions would change in America. Therefore, most leaders started urging
Black people to join the Republication Party, the Party of Lincoln.
This period in history from 1863 to 1876 is called “Reconstruction”
and the first time Black people began to participate vigorously
in electoral politics.
During the late 1860s and early 1870s, many African Americans were
elected to Congress and an African American Senator, Hiram Revels,
was elected from Mississippi.
The Political Abolition Party and the Equal Rights Party ran Frederick
Douglass for Vice President of the United
States in 1856 and 1872.
Many Black colleges were established during this period through
the land grant act that called for public education at the college
level. Because of these responses on the part of the government,
many African American leaders felt that Black people’s situation
could be resolved in America
through governmental intervention and effective voting.
The presidential election of 1876 brought into focus the real agendas
of the white ruled Republican and Democratic Parties. Rutherford
B. Hayes was the Republican candidate who was supposed to be representing
the vital interests of the North and Samuel Tilden was the Democratic
candidate alleging to represent the real interests of the South.
In
a very close election, the South actually won the popular vote;
however, during the Electoral College proceedings, neither candidate
received a majority of electoral votes. The Southern representatives
made it clear that their interests did not include winning the presidency
of the United
States, but reclaiming full autonomy for the
South. Through much wrangling, a decision was made by those present
that later became known as the “Great Compromise.”
The Compromise of 1876 resulted in the Republican Hayes being announced
the winner of the presidential election and both sides received
what they basically wanted in the first place. Obviously neither
side was interested in the liberation of Black people. The emerging
northern industrialists wanted entry and new markets into the South
and the southern plantation owners wanted their land back.
The net result for African Americans was the repealing of some
of the voting rights laws that immediately began to wipe out Black
elected officials and made it virtually impossible for Black people
to vote in the South again until the passage of the Voting Rights
Act of 1964.
Through all of this, Black leaders, and those African Americans
who voted, remained loyal to the Republican Party even though their
voting rights had been sold down the drain.
As pointed out, after Reconstruction, many Black people still remained
loyal to the Republican Party and tried to fight for change within
it just as some Black people are still fighting for changes within
the Democratic Party today. This loyalty lasted until the 1930s
when African Americans began to switch their allegiance to the Democratic
Party and the so-called “New Deal Era” of the Roosevelt Administration.
Essentially, since the 1930s to the present, African Americans have
voted for Democratic Party candidates in large measure.
There have been a small group of African Americans who have historically
called for a Black Political Party in response to the domination
of the white ruled Republication and Democratic Parties. In fact,
in 1972 in Gary, Indiana 10,000 Black people participated
in the National Black Political Convention in which the call for
the development of a Black Independent Political Party was a prominent
discussion at this meeting. However, the
allegiance of Black elected officials to the Democratic Party prevented
any real movement toward the development of a Black Political Party
or independent Black Political Organization. Instead,
a strategy of the third force inside the Democratic Party was developed.
In Chicago, for example,
since the death of the late Mayor Harold Washington, African American
leaders are very much divided over strategy and tactics to continue
the movement for Black political empowerment. This trend can be
observed around the country.
There
is no question that we need our own political party, or at best,
our own political organization. But this must occur in a manner
that truly represents the best interests of the African American
Community.
BlackCommentator.com Columnist, Conrad W. Worrill, PhD, is the National
Chairman of the National Black United Front (NBUF). Click here
to contact Dr. Worrill.
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