Heather Cox Richardson newsletter: Georgia's new voter suppression law...
https://heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/p/march-26-2021
Georgia Governor Brian Kemp signed his states new voter suppression law last night in a carefully staged photo op. As journalist Will Bunch of the Philadelphia Inquirer pointed out, Kemp sat at a polished table, with six white men around him, under a painting of the Callaway Plantation on which more than 100 Black people had been enslaved. As the men bore witness to the signing, Representative Park Cannon, a Black female lawmaker, was arrested and dragged away from the governors office.
It was a scene that conjured up a lot of history.
Voting was on the table in March 1858, too. Then, the U.S. Senate fought over how the new territory of Kansas would be admitted to the Union. The majority of voters in the territory wanted it to be free, but a minority of proslavery Democrats had taken control of the territorys government and written a constitution that would make human enslavement the fundamental law in the state. The fight over whether this minority, or the majority that wanted the territory free, would control Kansas burned back east, to Congress.
In the Senate, South Carolina Senator James Henry Hammond, who rejected as ridiculously absurd the idea that all men are born equal, rose to speak on the subject. He defended the rule of the proslavery minority in Kansas, and told anti-slavery northerners how the world really worked. Hammond laid out a new vision for the United States of America.
He explained to his Senate colleagues just how wealthy the Souths system of human enslavement had made the region, then explained that the harmonious
and prosperous system worked precisely because a few wealthy men ruled over a larger class with a low order of intellect and but little skill. Hammond explained that in the South, those workers were Black slaves, but the North had such a class, too: they were your whole hireling class of manual laborers.
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