Juan Williams: What Obama's Victory Means for Racial Politics
[Mr. Williams, a political analyst for National Public Radio and Fox News, is author of several books, including "Eyes on the Prize: America's Civil Rights Years, 1954-1965" (Penguin, 1988).]
Barack Obama's election is both an astounding political victory -- and the end of an era for black politics.
It is not even 50 years since a group of civil-rights workers challenged racial segregation on interstate bus travel. In 1961, a scared group of young Freedom Riders got on a Greyhound bus in Washington, D.C., to take a trip through Virginia and into the South. In Alabama the bus was bombed, its riders beaten so badly that some suffered brain damage. Attorney General Robert Kennedy worried that racial tensions could spark a second Civil War.
What happened next was the starting point for a uniquely American political movement that led directly to Mr. Obama's success. Bobby Kennedy proposed to his brother, President John F. Kennedy, that the civil-rights movement be redirected from violent confrontations with segregationists to voter-registration drives. The Kennedys feared sending voting-rights legislation to Congress, given opposition from Southern Democrats. But the Kennedys reasoned more blacks registered to vote would force Southern Democrats to change their segregationist attitudes.
Kennedy got foundations to support a group called the Voter Education Project. That effort put money into civil-rights groups that worked on voter registration. Young people such as James Chaney, Michael Schwerner and Andrew Goodman went into small black towns in the South and challenged the white segregationist political structure by encouraging blacks to defy intimidation by racist sheriffs, employers and banks and fill out a voter registration card.
Those three young men were killed by segregationists. Others, such as Medgar Evers of the NAACP and Fannie Lou Hamer, a Mississippi sharecropper, carried on. Evers was killed. Hamer was beaten so badly that she "couldn't feel my arms." But she became a voice for a group of black Mississippians who challenged the seating of an all-white, segregationist delegation at the 1964 Democratic Convention.
Hamer's efforts led to more voter registration drives to register blacks in the South, including in Selma, Ala. It was in Selma that Nobel Peace Prize winner Martin Luther King Jr. was arrested; he'd defied court orders by staging protests calling for federal laws protecting blacks trying to register.
In a letter he wrote in 1963 from a Birmingham jail, King had stated: "Give us the ballot." Now in a Selma jail he wrote: "Why are we in jail? Have you ever been required to answer 100 questions on government, some abstruse even to a political science specialist, merely to vote . . . this is Selma, Alabama, where there are more Negroes in jail with me than there are on the voting rolls."...
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Barack Obama's election is both an astounding political victory -- and the end of an era for black politics.
It is not even 50 years since a group of civil-rights workers challenged racial segregation on interstate bus travel. In 1961, a scared group of young Freedom Riders got on a Greyhound bus in Washington, D.C., to take a trip through Virginia and into the South. In Alabama the bus was bombed, its riders beaten so badly that some suffered brain damage. Attorney General Robert Kennedy worried that racial tensions could spark a second Civil War.
What happened next was the starting point for a uniquely American political movement that led directly to Mr. Obama's success. Bobby Kennedy proposed to his brother, President John F. Kennedy, that the civil-rights movement be redirected from violent confrontations with segregationists to voter-registration drives. The Kennedys feared sending voting-rights legislation to Congress, given opposition from Southern Democrats. But the Kennedys reasoned more blacks registered to vote would force Southern Democrats to change their segregationist attitudes.
Kennedy got foundations to support a group called the Voter Education Project. That effort put money into civil-rights groups that worked on voter registration. Young people such as James Chaney, Michael Schwerner and Andrew Goodman went into small black towns in the South and challenged the white segregationist political structure by encouraging blacks to defy intimidation by racist sheriffs, employers and banks and fill out a voter registration card.
Those three young men were killed by segregationists. Others, such as Medgar Evers of the NAACP and Fannie Lou Hamer, a Mississippi sharecropper, carried on. Evers was killed. Hamer was beaten so badly that she "couldn't feel my arms." But she became a voice for a group of black Mississippians who challenged the seating of an all-white, segregationist delegation at the 1964 Democratic Convention.
Hamer's efforts led to more voter registration drives to register blacks in the South, including in Selma, Ala. It was in Selma that Nobel Peace Prize winner Martin Luther King Jr. was arrested; he'd defied court orders by staging protests calling for federal laws protecting blacks trying to register.
In a letter he wrote in 1963 from a Birmingham jail, King had stated: "Give us the ballot." Now in a Selma jail he wrote: "Why are we in jail? Have you ever been required to answer 100 questions on government, some abstruse even to a political science specialist, merely to vote . . . this is Selma, Alabama, where there are more Negroes in jail with me than there are on the voting rolls."...