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About Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 23, 1978)
Portland Observer freedom and economic opportu nity. These immigrants flocked to the Northern urban centers: Irish, Italians, Jews, Eastern Europeans. They came and started not quite at the bottom of the economic and political ladder, but rather on the backs of other Americans already here - Black Americans. These immigrants were not denied the right to vote, rather they were encouraged to do so. The big city machines gathered them up as they got off the boats, provided them with much needed immediate services (find ing jobs for them, providing pushcart licenses, helping them become naturalized citizens) and mobilized them politically. They learned the political skills of precinct and ward organization, how to register voters and turn to the voters at election time, how to understand the compli cated rules of the election ma chinery. And all the time Blacks were being systematically and deliberately excluded from the political process. What followed was of extreme importance for anyone trying to understand the Black citizen s struggle for political equality for Black Americans, who had start ed to learn the political process of mobilization, bargaining, voting and accountability; Black people who had used their votes to obtain badly needed schools and other social legislation now had to turn their attention to a seventy year (roughly from 1890 1985) struggle to re-establish the legal right merely to register and to vote. Blacks Used The Courts Thus. Blacks turned to the courts. They had to interrupt the legitimate work of men like Lewis Adams and Hiram Revels and others, the work of using the ballot as a means of protecting their interests. Instead ot, like the European unmigrants, learn ing the skills of the precinct captain. Blacks now had to be come astute legal plaintiffs. In stead of developing heritage of ward leaders, Blacks had to become protesters. And so they went to the courts. Black people read the language of the 15th Amendment to the U.8. Constitution: "The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or r ! Section II Thursday, February 23. 1978 Page 7 >- ''B E X ! Picture: Library of Congress abridged by the United States or by any State on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude. The Congress shall have power to enforce this article by ap p ro p riate le g is la tio n ." (1970) The Beech and the Ballet In 1915, the U.S. Supreme Court, in Guinn vs. U.S., de clared the "grandfather clause" in Oklahoma unconstitutional. The state of Oklahoma had amended its constitution in 1910 to provide that all persons could vote in the state who were able to read and w rite any section of the state constitution. This requirement was to apply to “no person who was, on J a n u a ry i t 1886, or at any time prior there-’ to. entitled to vote under any form of government, or who at that time resided in some foreign nation, and no lineal descendant of such person shall be denied the right to register and vote be cause of his inability to so read and write sections of such consti tion.” Because the court could find no “discernible reason” in setting up the 1866 standard other than to get around the 15th Amendment, the state provision was declared unconstitutional. Had the grandfather clause been upheld, it would have been a foolproof method for disfran chisement of the Blacks. Then the Southern states turn ed to another method: exclusive white primaries. Primary elec tions in the South were vitally important, because the South was dominated by one party...the fucu/UTiatiiian^iaice Parr Lomber Company 6250 N.E. Union Ave. JRMARTINLUTHER KING Nate Hartley Oil Co. 2330 N.E. Alberta 282-5539 NOT EMBRACE NON- VIOLENCE OUT OF FEAR OR COWARDICE. HE CHALLENGED INJUSTICE WITHOUT A GUN!' Ot.UtMAMHfHAYS 695-0681