Political Factors And Negro Voter Registration In The South
- 1 June 1963
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Political Science Review
- Vol. 57 (2) , 355-367
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1952827
Abstract
A recent Herblock cartoon in the Washington Post depicts three bare-footed backwoodsmen. The oldest and most tattered of them (labeled “poll tax”) lies wounded, his head propped against a boulder, his rifle abandoned near his side. As the other rifle-bearing rustics-identified as “literacy tests” and “scare tactics”- bend sorrowfully over him the older man says, “I think them Feds got me, boys, but I know you'll carry on.” Perhaps it is premature to anticipate the ratification of the anti-poll tax amendment proposed by the 87th Congress as the newest addition to the federal constitution. No doubt the cartoonist is correct, however, in picturing both “literacy tests” and “scare tactics” as less vulnerable to federal government attack. These presumed barriers to equal participation by Negroes in the politics of the South may “carry on” for some time to come.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Political LifeThe Western Political Quarterly, 1960
- The Poll Tax in the SouthThe Western Political Quarterly, 1960
- Some Correlates of Voter Participation: The Case of IndianaThe Journal of Politics, 1960
- The Mind of the SouthThe American Historical Review, 1942