The Oakland Press

Jim Crow and the Georgia voting law

- Cal Thomas Readers may email Cal Thomas at tcaeditors@ tribpub.com.

At his news conference last Thursday, President Biden said of Georgia’s new voting law, “It makes Jim Crow look like Jim Eagle.”

Jim Crow was not a person, but unlike most former presidents, he has a museum: The Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabili­a.

The name came from a song written by Thomas Dartmouth “Daddy” Rice. From the museum webpage: “Rice, a struggling ‘actor’ (he did short solo skits between play scenes) at the Park Theater in New York, happened upon a black person singing (a song titled ‘Jim Crow’) — some accounts say it was an old black slave who walked with difficulty, others say it was a ragged black stable boy. Whether modeled on an old man or a young boy we will never know, but we know that in 1828 Rice appeared on stage as ‘Jim Crow’ — an exaggerate­d, highly stereotypi­cal black character.

“Rice, a white man, was one of the first performers to wear blackface makeup…His Jim Crow song-and-dance routine was an astounding success that took him from Louisville to Cincinnati to Pittsburgh to Philadelph­ia and finally to New York in 1832. He also performed to great acclaim in London and Dublin. By then ‘Jim Crow’ was a stock character in minstrel shows, along with counterpar­ts Jim Dandy and Zip Coon. Rice’s subsequent blackface characters were Sambos, Coons, and Dandies. White audiences were receptive to the portrayals of blacks as singing, dancing, grinning fools.”

President Biden and other Democrats apparently want us to believe there has been no racial progress since then.

Democrats should display some humility when it comes to African-Americans and voting since it was members of their party who opposed civil rights legislatio­n, defended slavery in the 19th century and promoted “black codes” in Southern state legislatur­es that denied many rights to former slaves. Those were elected Democrats who stood in schoolhous­e doors, denying access to black children. Democrat sheriffs clubbed people in the streets during demonstrat­ions and sicced dogs on them, among other indignitie­s. It was also the party that required “poll taxes” and “literacy tests” for blacks, violating their right to vote.

The Georgia law leaves in place many voting options, in addition to showing up on Election Day. It eliminates signature matching, which should appeal to both parties. Vote tabulators will no longer have to subjective­ly decide the authentici­ty of two signatures.

Instead, voters will receive an ID number with their mailin ballots or applicatio­ns. Those numbers must match. In person voters who do not have an ID can easily obtain one.

How is doing a better job of ensuring ballot integrity and boosting confidence in election outcomes racist? Critics claim the new law negatively affects African American voters. Do they think Blacks are so incompeten­t they can’t do the minimum required in order to vote?

For years Democrats have expanded voting laws to include registrati­on at the DMV, early voting, and absentee voting with no excuses (still allowed under the new law).

The Georgia law, which is being duplicated in other states with Republican majority legislatur­es, seeks to prevent vote harvesting and voting by people who don’t exist, or who have moved out of state.

Today’s Democrats like to claim “voter suppressio­n” when Republican­s attempt to make sure every ballot is legitimate. We can’t afford to repeat Donald Trump’s claims of suspect voting behavior, miscountin­g and questions about machines and illegal voters that he alleged characteri­zed the 2020 presidenti­al election.

Most people are willing to accept the defeat of candidates for whom they voted if they believe the system was fair and the tabulation­s accurate. Achieving that end is the purpose of the new Georgia law. It’s not about Jim Crow, or for that matter, “Jim Eagle.”

How is doing a better job of ensuring ballot integrity and boosting confidence in election outcomes racist?

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