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In reply to the discussion: Was anyone else as late as we were in learning that... [View all]Celerity
(55,556 posts)2. Multiple parts of the New Deal discriminated against blacks as well
https://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/disp_textbook.cfm?smtID=2&psid=3447
Until the New Deal, blacks had shown their traditional loyalty to the party of Abraham Lincoln by voting overwhelmingly Republican. By the end of Roosevelt's first administration, however, one of the most dramatic voter shifts in American history had occurred. In 1936, some 75 percent of black voters supported the Democrats. Blacks turned to Roosevelt, in part, because his spending programs gave them a measure of relief from the Depression and, in part, because the GOP had done little to repay their earlier support.
Still, Roosevelt's record on civil rights was modest at best. Instead of using New Deal programs to promote civil rights, the administration consistently bowed to discrimination. In order to pass major New Deal legislation, Roosevelt needed the support of southern Democrats. Time and time again, he backed away from equal rights to avoid antagonizing southern whites; although, his wife, Eleanor, did take a public stand in support of civil rights.
Most New Deal programs discriminated against blacks. The NRA, for example, not only offered whites the first crack at jobs, but authorized separate and lower pay scales for blacks. The Federal Housing Authority (FHA) refused to guarantee mortgages for blacks who tried to buy in white neighborhoods, and the CCC maintained segregated camps. Furthermore, the Social Security Act excluded those job categories blacks traditionally filled.
The story in agriculture was particularly grim. Since 40 percent of all black workers made their living as sharecroppers and tenant farmers, the Agricultural Adjustment Administration (AAA) acreage reduction hit blacks hard. White landlords could make more money by leaving land untilled than by putting land back into production. As a result, the AAA's policies forced more than 100,000 blacks off the land in 1933 and 1934. Even more galling to black leaders, the president failed to support an anti-lynching bill and a bill to abolish the poll tax. Roosevelt feared that conservative southern Democrats, who had seniority in Congress and controlled many committee chairmanships, would block his bills if he tried to fight them on the race question.
snip
Until the New Deal, blacks had shown their traditional loyalty to the party of Abraham Lincoln by voting overwhelmingly Republican. By the end of Roosevelt's first administration, however, one of the most dramatic voter shifts in American history had occurred. In 1936, some 75 percent of black voters supported the Democrats. Blacks turned to Roosevelt, in part, because his spending programs gave them a measure of relief from the Depression and, in part, because the GOP had done little to repay their earlier support.
Still, Roosevelt's record on civil rights was modest at best. Instead of using New Deal programs to promote civil rights, the administration consistently bowed to discrimination. In order to pass major New Deal legislation, Roosevelt needed the support of southern Democrats. Time and time again, he backed away from equal rights to avoid antagonizing southern whites; although, his wife, Eleanor, did take a public stand in support of civil rights.
Most New Deal programs discriminated against blacks. The NRA, for example, not only offered whites the first crack at jobs, but authorized separate and lower pay scales for blacks. The Federal Housing Authority (FHA) refused to guarantee mortgages for blacks who tried to buy in white neighborhoods, and the CCC maintained segregated camps. Furthermore, the Social Security Act excluded those job categories blacks traditionally filled.
The story in agriculture was particularly grim. Since 40 percent of all black workers made their living as sharecroppers and tenant farmers, the Agricultural Adjustment Administration (AAA) acreage reduction hit blacks hard. White landlords could make more money by leaving land untilled than by putting land back into production. As a result, the AAA's policies forced more than 100,000 blacks off the land in 1933 and 1934. Even more galling to black leaders, the president failed to support an anti-lynching bill and a bill to abolish the poll tax. Roosevelt feared that conservative southern Democrats, who had seniority in Congress and controlled many committee chairmanships, would block his bills if he tried to fight them on the race question.
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Over these years more than a few of them have promoted the view that slaves were happy singing folks
malaise
Mar 2023
#38
Here's a discussion in Snopes. It was not the GI Bill, itself, it was racism,
Silent Type
Mar 2023
#6
IINM Blacks got the GI but not the benefit from it like houses and education
uponit7771
Mar 2023
#11
To Herr DeSantis, gov. of FL, this is WOKE and must be eliminated in all schools and
RKP5637
Mar 2023
#12
Parts of the Government DID wilfully racially discriminate as official policy (at your own link) in
Celerity
Mar 2023
#14
The GI bill was effectively neutral but was applied under existing discriminatory laws and practices
Ford_Prefect
Mar 2023
#22
Only after civil rights days, during my time teaching in 98% Black high schools, did I learn this.
ancianita
Mar 2023
#26
I thought everyone knew this. Did you also know that Social Security originally excluded
LoisB
Mar 2023
#29
Please forgive my poorly worded statement. I should have said that the majority of Black people
LoisB
Mar 2023
#31
Thank you. Sometimes I tend to think others always know what I mean. Thank you for pointing
LoisB
Mar 2023
#36
Another example of historic racism. I did not know that. Really sucks after you served.
Evolve Dammit
Mar 2023
#32
I only learned about it because I did a course on urban planning and policy ethics.
meadowlander
Mar 2023
#33
My Dad was in a specialized training program in world war 2 for African Americans who scored
kimbutgar
Mar 2023
#37