In*American politics, theSouthern strategy*refers to aRepublican Party*strategy of gaining political support for certain candidates in theSouthern United States*by appealing to*racism against African Americans.[1][2][3]
The mid-1960s saw the*African-American Civil Rights Movement, a push for*desegregation, and thebipartisan*passage of the*Civil Rights Act of 1964*and*Voting Rights Act of 1965, after which more than 90 percent of black voters registered with the Democratic Party following their decades-longdisenfranchisement*by southern states. During this period of social upheaval, Republican Presidential candidate*Richard Nixon*worked to attract southern white conservative voters to his candidacy and the Republican Party,*[4]*and Senator*Barry Goldwater*won the five formerly Confederate states of the*Deep South*(Alabama,*Georgia,Louisiana,*Mississippi, and*South Carolina) in the 1964 presidential election. In the*1968 presidential campaign, Nixon won Florida, South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, and Tennessee, all former Confederate states, contributing to the*electoral realignment*of white voters in some Southern states to the Republican Party.
History.
Get some.
Doyle you're leaving out a pretty big part of what was happening in politics during that time. My point was that during the most difficult times of the civil rights movement it was democrat governors that were turning the hoses and the dogs on the marchers. If you're going to ask people to get some history, you should as well. There is no doubt that many of the underserved people throughout the country gravitated to the democratic party under Johnson's great society. The notion that republicans are bigots and filled with hate would not get far under historical scrutiny. There are however, looneys from every political persuasion and to get back to my original point we really need to get back to finding things that unite us rather than to divide us.