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NGE >> Government and Politics >> Politics >> Parties, Interest Groups, and Movements >> Black Suffrage in the Twentieth Century |
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Black Suffrage in the Twentieth Century The twentieth-century effort
Historical Overview During the 1930s Atlanta University Center professors began to organize "citizenship schools" designed to prepare African Americans to participate in the political process. Because Georgia had a whites-only primary at the time, blacks did not have any influence in determining the Democratic nominees, who usually ran unopposed or with only token opposition in the general election. Therefore African Americans had little interest in registering to vote or in voting on election day. Such white politicians as Governor Eugene Talmadge ignored the black electorate and pledged to maintain segregation in Georgia forever. Even the liberal Atlanta mayor William B. Hartsfield told black political leaders that more African Americans would have to register as voters before
Several black plaintiffs filed suits in federal court against the whites-only primary, and in the 1946 King v. Chapman et al. decision, the Fifth District Court of Appeals upheld a 1945 ruling that declared the white primary in Georgia unconstitutional, saying that the primary was an integral part of the election process and thus could not exclude blacks. Historically, the Atlanta Negro Voters League, comprising religious, business, civic, political, and university leaders, would interview white candidates, recommend the best candidates for the black community, and disseminate their choices at churches and on the black-owned radio station, WERD. More than 90 percent of blacks usually voted for the recommended slate. In 1946 the Atlanta Urban League spearheaded a coalition of groups—including black Republicans,
The next major mobilization effort occurred in 1973, when the University Movement for Black Unity, organized primarily by professors and students in the Atlanta University Center, worked to elect Atlanta vice mayor Maynard Jackson the first black mayor of Atlanta. The African American voter turnout was more than 10 percent higher than the white turnout in this historic election. The 1991 redistricting/reapportionment legislative session provided an opportunity to elect three blacks
Recent Organizational Activities Since 1997 the Georgia Coalition for the People's Agenda (GCPA), headed by Joseph Lowery, former president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), has developed the most comprehensive political mobilization program in the past fifty years. A detailed agenda was developed on a dozen public policy issues. Four major components in its strategy were •creating a statewide 2002 "Voter Empowerment Crusade" and holding meetings at churches and community sites to discuss candidates, political issues, and voting; •compiling demographic data in the counties, including information about African American population percentage, black voting-age population, black active voters, number and percentage not registered, and monthly voter-registration goals; •distributing to voters survey results on candidates for statewide congressional offices; and •mounting continuous voter-registration and get-out-the-vote efforts for all elections. Periodic "Voter Empowerment Sundays" are held to encourage churches to organize voter registration drives, distribute election information important for black Georgians, host political forums to discuss issues, and coordinate demonstrations of the new computerized touch-screen voting machines. The GCPA includes the Baptist Ministers Union, Concerned Black Clergy, Georgia AFL-CIO, Georgia Association of Black Elected Officials, Georgia Coalition of Black Women, Georgia NAACP, Georgia Summit of African American Business Organizations, Juvenile Justice Task Force, National Council of Negro Women,
The GCPA pledges to maintain its activities on a year-round basis so that it can maximize African American political involvement in elections at all levels of government. The goal is to monitor elected officials, secure their support of the GCPA's agenda, inform their constituencies of elected officials' votes on key issues, increase black voter registration, and maximize voter turnout at every election. This comprehensive effort at perpetual mobilization is unique in Georgia. However, it will take two or three election cycles before an evaluation of its relative success is possible. Suggested Reading Michael Binford, Tom Baxter, and David Sturrock, "Georgia: Democratic Bastion No Longer," in Southern Politics in the 1990s, ed. Alexander P. Lamis (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1999). Robert A. Holmes, "The University and Politics in Atlanta," Atlanta Historical Journal 25, no. 1 (1981). Larry Keating, Atlanta: Race, Class and Urban Expansion (Philadelphia, Pa.: Temple University Press, 2001). Laughlin McDonald, A Voting Rights Odyssey: Black Enfranchisement in Georgia (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2003). Robert A. Holmes, Clark Atlanta University Published 2/11/2005 |
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