I started writing this article about the Senate resolution to apologize for slavery in the United States. The past tense is used since, while reading various articles on the topic, I came across a sentence that just stood out. In the Washington Post article “Senate Backs Apology for Slavery,” Carol M. Swain of Vanderbilt University said something that bothered me. To quote the article:

Even among proponents of a congressional apology, reaction to yesterday’s vote was mixed. Carol M. Swain, a professor of political science and law at Vanderbilt University who had pushed for the Bush administration to issue an apology, called the Democratic-controlled Senate’s resolution “meaningless” since the party and federal government are led by a black president and black voters are closely aligned with the Democratic party.

“The Republican Party needed to do it,” Swain said. “It would have shed that racist scab on the party.”

This is something that has bothered me for such a long time. Why is it that the Republicans get such a bad rap in regards to racism? A simple look into history shows roll the Democrats play in not only prolonging racism in the country, but also delaying the progression towards equal rights. Let us walk through the history real quick and see how things have evolved. From the establishment of our country through the Civil War, slavery was legal. It was even an integral part of our Constitution. The argument over slavery progressed from our founding fathers (who owned slaves but argued against the practice) up through the famous Lincoln-Douglas debates.

Stephen Douglas, a Democrat, was less a proponent on slavery as he was a proponent for allowing people to vote for or against slavery. This unique position was evident in the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854, where the residents of the territories could determine if their position as a free or slave state when they entered the union. This act (and slavery in general) became the core topic of debate between Lincoln and Douglas four years later. Even though the two men were campaigning for the same Senate seat (where Douglas, the incumbent, won), the debates were followed on the national level. The Whigs, and eventually the Republicans, were taking the position that slavery should not be allowed to expand across the nation. Becoming the face and voice for that position, Lincoln cemented his popular support in the Northern states as well as in the West, defeating Douglas by 500,000 votes in the Presidential election just two years later.

As we know, the nation fell into Civil War under Lincoln’s watch. Two years after becoming President and fighting the largest war in the nations’ history, Lincoln issued two executive orders that became to be known as the Emancipation Proclamation. These orders proclaimed that slaves in the Confederate states (starting in 1863) would be freed. In 1864, Lyman Trumbull (Republican, Senate Judiciary Committee), with co-authors Charles Sumner (Republican) and John Brooks Henderson (Democrat) submitted an amendment proposal to abolish slavery. This amendment was adopted in 1865, becoming the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution.

Following the passage of the Thirteenth Amendment and the death of Lincoln, the Republican Congress passed the Civil Rights Act of 1866 expanding and protecting the freedom of blacks in America. The freedoms and protection of blacks were later cemented into the Constitution when the Fourteenth Amendment was adopted in 1868. This Amendment, primarily written by John Bingham (Republican), declared that:

All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.

Fast forward 100 years, we find the nation debating racism in the South. Despite the passage of the Fourteenth Amendment, Jim Crow laws continued to spread in the South leading to the segregation of the black and white populations. For years both Republican and Democratic legislators worked to draft a civil rights package that would override the abuses by Southern Democrats in the core former Confederate states. In the early 1960, the Republicans introduced a handful of bills into committee that would later be incorporated into the Civil Rights Act of 1964. When the act reached the floor of the House and Senate, a higher percentage of Republican (80% in the House, 82% in the Senate) politicians voted for the passage of the Act than the Democrats (61% in the House, 69% in the Senate).

So why is racism the “scab” of the Republicans, especially after all that they have done on behalf of blacks within our country? Why isn’t it the “scab” of the Democrats fought against the rights of blacks, stemming from Douglas’s unwilling to stand up against the practice to Senator Robert Byrd’s marathon filibuster against the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Is it merely the fact that the Dixiecrats broke away from the national Democratic organization and joined with the “states’ rights” side of the Republicans in the second half of the 20th century? Or are people simply uneducated when it comes to racism in our nations’ history?

Whatever it may be, it is beyond time that people mature and accept people for who they are. People cannot choose what skin color they are born with, nor does skin color make you better or lesser than the person next to you. As the Declaration of Independence states, “all men are created equal.” Both political parties have much to apologize for over the years, as does the Federal government itself. It is my hope that this bill is the last chapter on the issue of racism in our nation, and that we can move forward as one.

Related articles:
BellaOnline – “Democrats and Racism”
World Socialist Web Site – “The Republican Party and racism: from the ‘southern strategy’ to Bush”
U.S. Constitution Online – “Constitutional Topic: Slavery”
Teaching American History – “The Constitution and Slavery”
New Visions Commentary – “Bill Bradley Fouls the Civil Rights Act”
The Dirksen Congressional Center – “Major Features of the Civil Rights Act of 1964″

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