The Black Republican Party

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Black Republican

In this essay I will discuss the history of the Republican Party and explore the reasons why African Americans should support the Republican Party. The Republican Party is a political party that supports and believes in a republican form of government. This means that a Republican supports issues that are in the best interest of the republic, as a whole. A republic is a state in which the supreme power rests in the body of citizens entitled to vote and is exercised by representatives chosen directly or indirectly by them ("Dictionary.com"). This means that, in essence, the Republican Party is built on a moral, if not legal, foundation that it represents unity of the people.

“The black Republicans quandary is the
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The Democratic Presidents, who have made complimentary efforts in legislation for African Americans are challenged by their Democratic colleagues. The first moral Democratic leader on the civil rights issue was President Lyndon Johnson. His administration oversaw the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and 1968, the 1965 Voting Rights and Immigration and Nationality Acts, and the appointment of Thurgood Marshall to the Supreme Court in 1967. These efforts were opposed by a Democratic Coalition and only passed as a result of the coalition President Johnson had built with Republican …show more content…
“It is difficult for Republicans to trumpet their role in passing Civil Rights Acts while the Republican National Committee is spearheading efforts to dismantle affirmative action” (AL-GHARBI, 2016). To many blacks the conservative emphasis on personal responsibility sounds absurd. African Americans feel that the Republican Party needs to acknowledge the continued effects of slavery, segregation, and Jim Crow. Because most black people identify with their ancestors and the hardships they endured during those times, the Republican should be more sympathetic toward the situation but instead continue to make excuses. The RNC usually finds some black candidate to put on the national stage in every election that has the same basic view as their white party members. These candidates offer no other point of view on how to approach policy problems, which looks to most African Americans as if they are not on board with the same views they are. Republican Presidential Candidates Alan Keyes, Herman Cain, and Dr, Ben Carson all downplay the significance of historical disadvantages and institutionalized