Democrats enacted their black codes to oppress African-Americans

Grand Old Partisan denounce Democrat devilry. November 22nd 1865, the Democrat-controlled legislature of Mississippi passed the nation's first black codes. These were laws that Democrats of the post-Civil War South enacted to impose near-slavery on African-Americans.

According to these Democrat laws, African-Americans could not:

 • vote
 • serve on juries
 • testify against white people
 • own guns
 • travel without permission
 • assemble for political purposes
 • own farmland
 • be outdoors at night
 • change jobs without permission

Democrats decreed that all African-Americans had to:

 •sign annual labor contracts with white masters
 • be deferential to all white people
 • be apprenticed (in practice, enslaved) to white masters until adulthood
 • work only in agriculture and a few other occupations

Fortunately, after winning a two-thirds majority in Congress, Republicans swept away these black codes. They passed, over the veto of Democrat President Andrew Johnson, the 1866 Civil Rights Act and other Reconstruction legislation. These laws guaranteed full civil rights to African-Americans, many of whom then entered politics. Sadly, as Democrats regained control of the South in the 1870s, they again oppressed African-Americans with a new set of regulations known as Jim Crow laws.

Back to Basics for the Republican Party is my civil rights history of the GOP. To quote the book: "The more we Republicans know about the history of our party, the more Democrats will worry about the future of theirs. For more information, see www.grandoldpartisan.com

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Michael Zak is author of Back to Basics for the Republican Party, a history of GOP civil rights achievement.


Each day, his YouTube videos and TikTok videos and Rumble videos and Grand Old Partisan blog celebrate more than seventeen decades of Republican heroes and heroics. And, see Speech Raves for audience feedback from his presentations in thirty-one states.

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