(Public Law 88-352)
Title I
Barred unequal application of voter registration requirements,
but did not abolish literacy tests sometimes used to disqualify
African Americans and poor white voters.
Title II
Outlawed discrimination in hotels, motels, restaurants, theaters,
and all other public accommodations engaged in interstate commerce;
exempted private clubs without defining "private," thereby allowing
a loophole.
Title III
Encouraged the desegregation of public schools and authorized
the U. S. Attorney General to file suits to force desegregation,
but did not authorize busing as a means to overcome segregation
based on residence.
Title IV
Authorized but did not require withdrawal of federal funds
from programs which practiced discrimination.
Title V
Outlawed discrimination in employment in any business exceeding
twenty five people and creates an Equal Employment Opportunities
Commission to review complaints, although it lacked meaningful
enforcement powers.
NOTE: The text of the entire act is posted at http://usinfo.state.gov/usa/infousa/laws/majorlaw/civilr19.htm
A Case History: The 1964 Civil Rights
Act
Overview
The 1964 Civil Rights Act was a landmark in legislative attempts
to improve the quality of life for African Americans and other
minority groups. Although civil rights had a long history as
a political and legislative issue, the 1960s marked a period
of intense activity by the federal government to protect minority
rights. The Act did not resolve all problems of discrimination.
But it opened the door to further progress by lessening racial
restrictions on the use of public facilities, providing more
job opportunities, strengthening voting laws, and limiting federal
funding of discriminatory aid programs.
The story of the 1964 Civil Rights Act is interesting and
instructive because it illustrates how an historically important
piece of legislation became part of our nation's heritage.
An examination of the Act also provides a way to understand
the climate of opinion regarding African American rights, the
nature of civil rights activity, the obstacles to political
and social change, the role of politics in the way issues are
handled, the actions of individual senators and representatives,
and the nature of legislative activity in general. The intricate
process that makes a bill become law is a combination of all
these factors.
Historical Pressure for Legislative
Action
Although the United States Constitution contains no express
reference to federal protection of minority rights, amendments
ratified after the Civil War directly addressed the civil rights
matter. The 13th, 14th,
and 15th
amendments outlawed slavery, provided for equal protection
under the law, guaranteed citizenship, and protected the right
to vote for African American Americans. The amendments also
allowed Congress to enforce these provisions by enacting appropriate,
specific legislation.
In the nine years spanning 1866 through 1875, Congress passed
five major pieces of legislation designed to enact the spirit
of the amendments. By the early 20th century, however, further
legislative modifications and judicial decisions rendered by
the United States Supreme Court restricted severely the application
of civil rights measures. As a result, individual states controlled
the treatment of blacks, with southern states generally the
harshest in their abuse of civil rights. The federal government
took very little action to enforce civil rights after 1900.
The climate of opinion did not yet favor comprehensive legislative
action by Congress to remedy the increasing disregard for the
rights of African Americans.
Historical momentum for civil rights legislation picked up
speed after 1945 as a result of black migration to northern
cities and the experiences of black soldiers in World War II.
Bills introduced in Congress regarding employment policy brought
the issue of civil rights to the attention of representatives
and senators. In 1945, 1947, and 1949, the House of Representatives
voted to abolish the poll tax restricting the right to vote.
Although the Senate did not join in this effort, the bills
signaled a growing interest in protecting civil rights through
federal action. The executive branch of government, by Presidential
order, likewise became active by ending discrimination in the
nation's military forces and in federal employment and work
done under government contract.
The Supreme Court joined the civil rights forces in the 1950s
and, in the process, added to the historical pressure for sweeping
legislation a decade later. In a number of cases after World
War II, the federal courts began to protect the civil rights
of minorities in certain specific circumstances, gradually
making it possible for African Americans to participate in
some activities on an equal basis with whites. The Supreme
Court took its most memorable step in this direction when it
agreed in 1954 to hear a case dealing with racial segregation
in public schools.
The practice of separating African American and white children
in public schools had always been unpopular among civil rights
leaders who viewed proper education as a means for African
Americans to escape racial discrimination. They argued that
the mere fact of segregation in schools doomed African Americans
to inferior education and deprived whites and African Americans
of an important educational experience. In Brown
v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas, the Supreme
Court struck down the legal support for maintaining "separate
but equal" educational facilities:
To separate black children from others of similar age
and qualifications solely because of their race generates
a feeling of inferiority as to their status in the community
that may affect their hearts and minds in a way never to
be undone . . . We conclude that in the field of public
education the doctrine of separate but equal has no place.
Separate educational facilities are inherently unequal.
The Brown decision meant that white and African American
children could not be forced to attend separate public schools.
The Supreme Court s landmark decision was one of the single
most important features of the climate of opinion that began
to encourage federal action to protect civil rights. Yet the
Brown ruling did not settle the controversy surrounding the
treatment of minorities in the United States. Although the
Supreme Court made its commitment to equal rights unmistakably
clear, the cause of civil rights still required affirmative
action by Congress to become a reality for most African Americans.
The United States Congress began to take its first, tentative
steps to enact major civil rights legislation soon after the
Brown decision. Although Congress considered a civil rights
bill each year from 1945 until 1957, every measure failed to
pass into law. It was not until Congress turned its attention
to voting rights in 1957 that the first civil rights act of
the 20th century actually became law. Congress followed the 1957
Civil Rights Act with another in 1960.
Together these measures made moderate gains for minorities.
More importantly, they foreshadowed increasing support for
more substantial civil rights guarantees in the 1960s and contributed
to a climate of opinion favoring these guarantees.
By the early 1960s, the nation s congressional history contributed
to growing legislative pressures for a comprehensive civil
rights law. Although political pressures prevented President
John F. Kennedy's administration from proposing legislation
to Congress in 1961 and 1962, the President took steps to ensure
minority rights in voting, employment, housing, transportation,
and education by executive action. The stage was set for a
new legislative initiative to deal with the problem of federal
protection of civil rights.
Social Conditions
The nature of American society also hastened the movement
towards civil rights legislation. The Civil Rights Act of 1964
not only represented a period of intensity in legislative activity
but it also reflected the changing nature of social conditions
in the United States. Minority groups grew more vocal and persuasive
in their demands, and many white Americans began to see the need
for civil rights laws. These social conditions contributed mightily
to the climate of opinion demanding congressional action.
African American Americans became increasingly vocal and better
mobilized for political action after World War II. During the
1950s, they began to protest their treatment more publicly
and actively as they demanded comprehensive protection of their
civil rights.
African American protesters pointed to a number of social
inequalities from which they suffered. Segregation prevented
them from using a variety of public facilities on an equal
basis with whites. African Americans were restricted in their
use of public city buses, park facilities, and restrooms, for
instance. Educational opportunities were limited sharply by
the practice of separating African Americans and whites and
providing African Americans with inferior instructional equipment.
As late as 1963, for example, only 12,000 of the 3,000,000
African Americans in the South attended integrated schools,
in spite of the Brown decision. Finally, employment practices
throughout the South and in many northern cities restricted
African Americans' ability to advance economically.
In addition to challenging segregation in the courts, African
Americans relied increasingly upon direct action to publicize
their plight by staging sit-ins and boycotts. Perhaps the most
dramatic of the early protests was Martin
Luther King, Jr.'s demonstration in Montgomery,
Alabama, in 1955. Protesting rules that required them to
sit in the backs of buses, African Americans refused to use
public transportation and picketed against the regulations.
The protest soon spread as African Americans boycotted white
Montgomery businesses in an effort to slow down business and
to force businessmen to support African American demands. After
months of confrontation and some violence, the city agreed
to end seating requirements on buses, signaling a symbolic
victory for civil rights workers in the South. Similar protests
grew up throughout the South, highlighted by violence in Little
Rock, Arkansas, in 1957 during school desegregation demonstrations.
Building upon the legacy of the 1950s, the pace of social
protest increased dramatically in the four years before passage
of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. In February 1960, African American
students demonstrated against segregation at a department store
lunch counter in Greensboro,
North Carolina, by conducting a sit- in protest that soon
spread to more than one hundred other communities. Later that
year, after violence erupted over New Orleans's school racial
policies, the Supreme Court struck down a Louisiana statute
blocking integration. In January 1961, two African American
students enrolled in the University of Georgia at Athens marking
the first desegregation in public education in Georgia.
As isolated protests against segregation increased, many civil
rights organizations gained new strength through increasing
membership and financial support. The Congress
of Racial Equality (CORE) set an example of non-violent
direct action that proved effective even though whites dominated
CORE. The
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
(NAACP) set up legal defense funds to aid jailed protestors.
The Southern
Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), the Student
Non- Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), and the Urban
League all prospered as organizations representing the
civil rights movement.
A major development in the civil rights direct action protest
movement occurred with the formation of the Freedom
Rides in the early 1960s. Groups of African Americans and
whites entered southern cities by bus to test segregation barriers
in transportation facilities. Frequently, they were met with
violence. In May 1961, while riders were in Alabama, rioting
broke out, forcing the U.S. Attorney General to protect civil
rights workers with U.S. marshals. During the fall of 1962, James
Meredith's attempt to enroll as the first African American
in the University of Mississippi in Oxford generated extreme
hostility. Two men were killed and 375 injured as the state
resisted Meredith's admission.
Social pressures continued to mount in 1963. Martin Luther
King organized peaceful demonstrations in Birmingham, Alabama,
to protest segregation in public facilities, but many whites
responded angrily. Throughout the spring, an escalating cycle
of violence consumed Birmingham, forcing President Kennedy
to alert federal troops and to warn Governor George
Wallace that continued violence against peaceful civil
rights marchers would bring the troops into action. The murder
of civil rights workers Medger
Evers and William
L. Moore added fuel to the controversy. Birmingham whites
killed several other African Americans, including four young
girls who were attending Sunday school when their church was
bombed.
The nation's news media covered the Birmingham episodes in
depth, bringing pictures into homes throughout the country
of whites beating African Americans, of dogs snarling at protesters,
of fire hoses being turned against marchers, and of police
using electric cattle prods to control the crowd. Civil rights
leaders and sympathizers protested the senseless violence through
letters and telegrams to their congressmen. Many African Americans
expressed their outrage by rioting. By 1964, there were unmistakable
signs that social conditions for African American Americans
required legislative attention in the U.S. Congress.
Moreover, civil rights ceased to be only a southern problem
as the social pressure for action surfaced in northern cities.
During the summer of 1963, New York, Philadelphia, Chicago,
Trenton and Newark, New Jersey, joined other cities in taking
action to bar discrimination in the construction industry.
To respond to civil rights activists, a number of communities
established biracial committees to examine the human rights
of citizens and to explore ways of guaranteeing civil rights.
Major legislation rarely occurs unless there are social pressures
encouraging action. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 certainly
was no exception. As African Americans organized and demonstrated,
other groups formed in reaction. On many occasions the result
was peaceful accommodation between the two groups and a working
out of difficulties. In several cases, however, violence resulted,
forcing the nation as a whole to review its treatment of African
Americans and other minorities.
The climate of opinion had changed dramatically between World
War II and 1964. It appeared that a vocal majority of churches,
representatives and senators, and the nation favored civil
rights legislation. The National Opinion Research Center discovered
this change of attitude in a sample survey of northern whites
in 1963. The Center determined that the number who approved
neighborhood integration had risen 30% in twenty years, to
72% in 1963. The proportion favoring school integration had
risen even more impressively to 75%.
The nature of social conditions for African American Americans
had created an atmosphere ripe for civil rights activity. According
to the government, there were nearly 1,000 civil rights demonstrations
in 209 cities in a three-month period beginning May 1963. Newsweek
published a survey in July showing that 40 % of African Americans
interviewed had taken part in a civil rights protest. Pressure
mounted in the nation's Capitol to respond.
Representatives and senators could not ignore the impact of
social protest. In a confidential memorandum, one Republican
senator asked in May 1963 that Republicans meet the challenge
by proposing a legislative initiative to revise Senate rules
to make it easier to pass a civil rights bill which would cut
off federal funds to programs that discriminated against African
Americans. In suggesting this action, the senator made the
link between social conditions and legislation clear when he
said that "recent events in racial relations in Birmingham,
Alabama and elsewhere, in the North and the South, have demonstrated
the critical need for further action by the Congress . . .
toward righting the wrongs and ending the disadvantages of
the past."
Political Factors
The politics of civil rights legislation can be viewed from
a number of perspectives. In general, the political situation
reflected the nation's social transition in its uncertainty and
ambiguity. Although a consensus favoring civil rights legislation
eventually emerged, it is difficult to point to specific political
trends that dominated the process. Political factors influenced
different people in contrasting ways. The impact of politics
was complicated and diffuse. One way to understand the role of
politics in the enactment of civil rights legislation, however,
is to look at the way President
John F. Kennedy approached the legislation. In a very important
sense, Kennedy came to endorse a civil rights bill because political
circumstances allowed him to support what once had been a controversial
and unpopular legislative program.
John F. Kennedy's civil rights record before 1963 was neither
a clear endorsement nor rejection of civil rights legislation.
As a senator from Massachusetts, he had an opportunity to vote
on the 1957 Civil Rights Act, the first passed in the 20th
century. Kennedy apparently had enough reservations about the
bill to vote to send it to the conservative Senate
Judiciary Committee where it probably would have been pigeonholed.
Another indication of his lukewarm support for the Act was
his vote to allow juries to hear contempt cases. Southerners
preferred jury to bench trials since all-white juries rarely
convicted white civil rights violators. At the same time, Kennedy
supported efforts to end discrimination in education. His record
in the 1950s did not mark the future President as a civil rights
activist. It indicated that Kennedy, much like the rest of
the nation, had complicated and sometimes contradictory views
about civil rights.
As a presidential campaigner in 1960, Kennedy largely avoided
the civil rights issue for basically political reasons. Although
he endorsed some kind of federal action, he could not afford
to antagonize southern Democrats whose support he desperately
needed to defeat Republican candidate Richard
M. Nixon. In outlining the most important issues for the
campaign early in 1960, Kennedy ignored civil rights rather
than jeopardize his political support.
After his election in November 1960, the new President failed
to suggest any new civil rights proposals in 1961 or 1962,
again for political reasons. He needed southern support in
Congress for his other foreign and domestic programs. It was
particularly risky to introduce specific civil rights legislation
in the Senate. The Senate filibuster rule
made it possible for a minority of senators to prevent passage
and to obstruct other Senate business. To overcome this obstacle,
67 members would have to support some version of civil rights
legislation and vote to end the inevitable filibuster. It was
difficult for the Kennedy administration to propose a bill
without considering carefully the politics of congressional
passage.
Although Kennedy accomplished some strictly limited improvements
in equal rights by executive action, the civil rights movement
generally proceeded without Presidential support. When Kennedy
did act in June 1963 to propose a civil rights bill, it was
because the climate of opinion and the political situation
forced him to act.
Sources of Legislation
Ideas for legislation can come from many different sources.
When an issue is as important and controversial as civil
rights was in 1963, the final bill may reflect the ideas
of individual citizens, organized groups, members and committees
of Congress, congressional staff, and the executive branch.
The specific source of the 1964 Civil Rights Act was the President
of the United States. John Kennedy began the process of gaining
support for the legislation in a nationally televised address
on June 11, 1963. Discouraged by the violence accompanying
the Birmingham demonstrations, Kennedy urged in eloquent language
that Americans take action to guarantee equal treatment of
every individual, regardless of color.
Kennedy proposed that Congress consider a civil rights act
dealing with the following subjects: voting rights, public
accommodations, desegregation of public schools, establishment
of a Community Relations Service, continuation of the Civil
Rights Commission, nondiscrimination in federally assisted
programs, and formation of an Equal Employment Opportunities
Commission. One hundred years after Abraham
Lincoln announced his Emancipation
Proclamation, the executive branch of government readied
itself to ask Congress to pass a major civil rights bill into
law. (Click for link
to Press Release of Kennedy's Request)
Click for link to
letter from Senator Thomas Dodd
The Bill is Written
The Justice
Department was charged with the responsibility of converting
the President's words into legislative form. Department officials
developed a proposal to address the serious problems of racial
discrimination which at the same time recognized the politics
of the situation. After consulting with congressional leaders
in both parties, drafters of the bill avoided any controversial
and unnecessary language that could have alienated potential
support in Congress. The bill's sponsors kept a close eye on
the 67 votes needed in the Senate to overcome any filibuster
against civil rights.
After outlining specific recommendations and lining up bipartisan support,
the Kennedy administration sent its proposal for a bill to
Congress on June 19. Political factors continued to shape the
President's attitude. He worked to secure Republican congressional
assistance; he sought unsuccessfully to ward off opposition
from the southern wing of his own party; and he urged African
American leaders to control demonstrations more carefully so
as not to scare off potential supporters by inciting violence
in the streets. Kennedy likewise marshaled support by conducting
discussions with businessmen, religious leaders, labor officials,
and other groups. He sought by these means to stimulate Congress
to action by mobilizing pressure for passage without at the
same time jeopardizing the fragile political coalition needed
to pass the bill.
The Bill is Introduced
It was against this background that the administration's proposal
went to Congress. On the Senate side, the bill was introduced
in three forms: the entire bill, introduced by Senate majority
leader Mike
Mansfield, went to the Judiciary Committee for consideration
as did the entire bill minus Title II; controversial Title
II, co-sponsored by Mansfield and Everett Dirksen, went to
the Commerce Committee for special study. Title II barred
discrimination in a wide range of public accommodations,
regardless of whether or not they were owned privately, and
was the object of a good deal of criticism. The strategy
here was to isolate the most objectionable part of the bill
so as not to jeopardize consideration of the remainder. Eventually,
42 senators joined in co-sponsorship of the omnibus civil
rights bill. On the House side, the entire bill was sent
as a unit to the House Judiciary Committee.
Committee Consideration in House
and Senate
Although either house of Congress could have taken the lead
in considering civil rights legislation in 1963 and 1964, the
Senate preferred to delay action until the House considered
the legislative package proposed by the President. Senate leaders
prevented the Judiciary Committee and the Commerce Committee
from formally reporting any of the several civil rights proposals
they considered in 1963, including S.1731
and S.1732 which contained the Justice Department's proposals.
(For a legislative history, click
here.) If a bill had been reported, it could have been
called up for consideration and debate on the Senate floor.
The leadership did not want to risk a filibuster they knew
would result because it would delay other Senate business.
It was more difficult to get a bill through Senate committee
for another reason: both the Judiciary and the Commerce committees
were chaired by southern conservative senators.
As a result of this strategy on the part of the Senate leadership,
the initial focus of activity on what was to become the Civil
Rights Act of 1964 took place in the House of Representatives.
Senate Republicans meet in conference to plan legislative
strategies during May 1964 [64/5/0-3]

Committee Action in the House: Judiciary Committee
H. R. 7152 was
referred for consideration to the House Judiciary Committee
chaired by civil rights supporter Emanuel
Celler. As is the case with most major bills, a subcommittee
considered the proposal in depth. From the perspective of
civil rights advocates, the choice of Celler as chairman
of Subcommittee Number 5 was fortunate in that Celler had
a strong, positive civil rights record. The ranking Republican
member of Judiciary, William
M. McCulloch, joined Celler in maneuvering the bill through
the committee process.
Subcommittee Number 5
The subcommittee conducted lengthy hearings from May into August
of 1963 on the civil rights bill, inviting many witnesses
to testify in favor of, or in opposition to, the proposal.
The subcommittee, in weighing the evidence, actually rewrote
the Justice Department's draft of H.
R. 7152 to make it stronger. In general, the subcommittee
draft made it more difficult to prevent African Americans
from voting, outlawed discrimination in all public accommodations,
gave the Attorney General the right to sue on behalf of integration
in education, and guaranteed equal employment opportunities.
Members of the subcommittee approved the bill with little
trouble. Northern Democrats welcomed the measure, and Republican
subcommittee members voted for the bill in order to receive
some credit for its passage. More interesting is the fact that
some southern Democrats who opposed the administration's bill
favored the more liberal subcommittee bill because they felt
that a stronger bill would be impossible to pass on the floor
of the House.
Committee Recommendations
The Kennedy administration apparently saw the correctness
and the danger of the southern Democrats' reasoning. When the
entire Judiciary Committee considered the subcommittee's draft
of the bill, Attorney General Robert
Kennedy appeared before the full committee in executive session
in mid-October to urge that it report a more moderate bill. The
Kennedy administration knew that a strong civil rights bill would
be more difficult to pass because Republicans would find little
in it to support. Republican support was absolutely crucial for
Senate passage and only slightly less so for House passage. The
administration's successful efforts to moderate the bill naturally
aroused suspicion among some civil rights groups, but Kennedy
probably had little choice: compromise or no bill.
As a result of the administration's urging, Democratic and
Republican House leaders on the Judiciary Committee worked
together to produce a more acceptable piece of legislation.
Republicans were able to modify voting registration procedures,
the status of the Civil Rights Commission, and enforcement
procedures. The resulting compromise received the Judiciary
Committee's endorsement, 23 to 11, on October 29, 1963, after
the original subcommittee proposal was defeated, 19 to 15.
The Judiciary Committee formally reported H. R. 7152 on November
20.
The new bill accomplished more in the areas of civil rights
protection than the Kennedy administration's first request.
The process of legislative bargaining and compromise produced
a much different bill than had been introduced earlier in the
year by the Justice Department. This is true of most major
legislation. The bipartisan civil rights bill exceeded early
versions by extending the Justice Department's enforcement
powers; by requiring government agencies to seek nondiscrimination
in federal programs; by establishing an Equal
Employment Opportunities Commission; and by other modifications.
Rules Committee Action
Although the Judiciary Committee issued a favorable report
on H. R. 7152 in November, the House Rules Committee still had
to grant it a rule before it could be considered on the House
floor and voted upon. It was the Rules Committee that determined
when and under what conditions bills could be brought up for
formal consideration by the entire House membership. Rules Committee
chairman Howard
W. Smith of Virginia, a longtime opponent of civil rights,
refused to grant the bill a rule before the end of 1963. When
civil rights advocates, including Congressman Celler, threatened
to sign a discharge petition to free the bill from the Rules
Committee, Smith promised to grant a rule early in January
1964. The Rules Committee finally cleared H.R. 7152 for floor
consideration on January 30, 1964.
Everett Dirksen and Lyndon Johnson compare notes on the legislative
agenda in January 1964. Hubert Humphrey is on the left; House
Speaker Carl Albert is at the right. [64/1/8-8]

House Debate and Passage
The House of Representatives debated the bill for nine days
and rejected nearly one hundred amendments designed to weaken
the bill before passing H.R .7152 on February 10, 1964. Of the
420 members who voted, 290 supported the civil rights bill and
130 opposed it. Republicans favored the bill 138 to 34; Democrats
supported it 152-96. It is interesting to note that Democrats
from northern states voted overwhelmingly for the bill, 141 to
4, while Democrats from southern states voted overwhelmingly
against the bill, 92 to 11. A bipartisan coalition of Republicans
and northern Democrats was the key to the bill's success. This
same arrangement would prove crucial later to the Senate's approval
of the bill.
House action on the bill had been nearly exhaustive. In total,
the House held 70 days of public hearings, listened to 275
witnesses, and published 5,792 pages of testimony. It was now
up to the Senate to decide the bill's ultimate fate: Would
H. R. 7152 become the most important civil rights law of the
century or would it die like so many previous attempts?
Bill Introduced in Senate
Even before civil rights legislation came up for consideration
in 1964, the Senate set the stage for a lengthy civil rights
debate when it considered changing the Senate rule governing
the shutting off filibusters. The filibuster permitted one
or more senators to speak on any subject without a time limit.
In contrast to the House where debate is limited, Senate
Rule XXII stated that the only way to limit debate was
for two-thirds of the senators present and voting* to vote
for cloture. Cloture ends
debate and makes it possible to vote on a bill. Senate liberals
who anticipated a filibuster by opponents of civil rights
wanted to make it easier to shut off debate by decreasing
the number of votes needed to end debate. The Senate, however,
refused to change Rule XXII on January 31 by a 53 to 42 vote.
This set the stage for the impending Senate consideration
of the House passed version of the civil rights bill by making
it possible for a minority of senators to block action with
a filibuster.
* Changed March 7, 1975, to three-fifths of the total membership
of the Senate.
After the House-passed H. R. 7152 on February 10, the bill
went to the Senate for its consideration. It was held for a
few days by the House before it was "messaged" to the Senate
on February 17. The bill promptly went to the desk of the president
pro tempore of the Senate where it received its first reading.
Committees Bypassed
Senate leaders had prepared for the legislative controversy
over H. R. 7152 in a number of ways. The Senate Judiciary
Committee, which was the logical committee to consider a
civil rights bill, was manned by conservatives who probably
would have delayed or even pigeonholed the bill. Senate leaders
knew that since the bill had passed the House, it could be
placed directly on the Senate calendar without having to
go through committee. Although the Senate rules permit this
bypassing of its committee structure, the tactic is employed
rarely. Opponents of the civil rights bill opposed the leadership
strategy, but supporters gathered enough votes to place H.R
.7152 directly on the Senate calendar by a 54 to 37 vote
on February 26,1964. This action was crucial since it meant
that southern conservatives could not kill the bill in committee
and would have to rely on the filibuster to defeat civil
rights legislation on the Senate floor.
The parliamentary maneuvering did not cease immediately, however.
After the bill reached the Senate calendar, the Senate considered
a motion to take up, or debate, the bill on March 9. This preliminary
proposal to begin debate itself caused a sixteen-day debate
before, on March 26, the Senate voted 67 to 17 to begin formal
consideration of the civil rights legislation. Another effort
to refer the bill to the Judiciary Committee failed by a vote
of 50 to 34.
Senate Floor Debate: Leadership Strategy
When the House-passed bill reached the Senate floor in March
1964, three groups of senators formed: pro-civil rights Democrats,
southern Democrats opposed to the bill, and Republicans. Senator Hubert
H. Humphrey led the Democrats who supported the bill and
worked actively for its passage. As Senate majority whip, Humphrey
enjoyed the support of Mike Mansfield, Senate majority leader.
Together they were determined to pass the legislation and even
arranged grueling twelve-hour daily sessions to wear down the
opposition. Humphrey's task was to line up supporters to defend
the bill in debate, to persuade reluctant members of his party
to vote for passage, to encourage publicity, and to count votes.
The Senator from Minnesota labored hard for passage and sought
cooperation from many sources, including the Republicans.
Senator Richard
Russell, Democrat from Georgia, led the so-called opposition
forces. The group was also known as the "southern
bloc." It was composed of eighteen southern Democrats
and one Republican, John
Tower of Texas. Although a hopeless minority, the group
exerted much influence because Senate rules virtually guaranteed
unlimited debate unless it was ended by cloture. The "southern
bloc" relied on the filibuster to postpone the legislation
as long as possible, hoping that support for civil rights
legislation throughout the country would falter. The Democratic
leadership and Humphrey could not control the southern wing
of the party.
Russell's forces disliked civil rights legislation for several
reasons. Many feared that their southern constituents would
vote them out of office if, as senators, they voted for equal
rights for African Americans. The "southern bloc" held up consideration
of the bill from March into June hoping that presidential candidate
George Wallace, a segregationist from Alabama, would do well
in the early presidential primaries. If Wallace seemed popular,
Russell would argue that the nation as a whole did not support
federal civil rights legislation and that the Senate should
not pass an unwanted bill. Southern senators could not compromise.
Only by forcing cloture could they demonstrate to their constituents
that they had fought to the end against hopeless odds.
From Filibuster to Cloture
The filibuster forces knew that they faced a long and tiring
battle. Their opponents had anticipated and planned for the
filibuster. In fact, Humphrey personally opened full-fledged
debate on the civil rights bill on March 30 with a three
hour, eleven-minute speech from a 68 page speech of his own
in defense of H. R. 7152. Both Humphrey and Thomas
Kuchel (R-CA), Senate Minority Whip gathered enough senators
together so that at any time a quorum call came up, the pro-civil
rights forces could answer it. Northerners also combated
the "southern bloc" by answering southerners' criticisms
of the bill on the floor rather than simply letting the filibusterers
speak indefinitely without response. To respond to the organized
opposition, southerners formed a platoon system composed
of three six- member filibuster teams. When one team had
the floor for the filibuster, the other two would rest and
then prepare to take turns speaking on the floor.
The Republican Party was not so badly split as the Democrats
by the civil rights issue. Only one Republican senator participated
in the filibuster against the bill. In fact, since 1933, Republicans
had a more positive record on civil rights than the Democrats.
In the twenty-six major civil rights votes since 1933, a majority
of Democrats opposed civil rights legislation in over 80 %
of the votes. By contrast, the Republican majority favored
civil rights in over 96 % of the votes.
The Republican pro-civil rights forces were blessed with gifted
leadership. Although Senate minority whip Thomas Kuchel initially
managed the party's forces, it increasingly became clear to
Democrats, Republicans, the press, civil rights groups, and
the White House that Everett
McKinley Dirksen was the key man in the entire civil rights
legislative effort.
After criticizing H. R. 7152 in March, Dirksen began to work
more closely in late spring with Humphrey and the civil rights
forces to fashion a strategy that would secure passage of the
bill. Dirksen organized Republican support for the bill by
designating a floor captain for each of the bill's seven sections.
He and the bipartisan leaders believed that five or six "swing" votes
held the key to cloture and the end of debate. Almost all of
these uncommitted senators were conservative Republicans from
rural states without racial difficulties. Their constituents
opposed the legislation because it involved expanded federal
powers. The problem facing the leadership was how to enlist
the support of these uncommitted senators.
By working with Dirksen to swing key votes and by marshaling
public opinion and constituent support for the civil rights
measure, Senate leaders moved forward with the legislation.
Pressure for Senate Action
Interest in the legislative course of H. R. 7152 was not confined
to Congress. Outside pressure on Congress came from ordinary
citizens, civil rights organizations, church organizations,
and the executive branch of government.
Individual citizens responded to the civil rights battle in
the Senate in amazing numbers. In June 1964, for example, Senator
Dirksen estimated that he had heard from at least 100,000 people
about the bill. Senate offices could not keep up with the thousands
of letters they received daily and had to respond by form letter.
Many citizens urged adoption of H. R. 7152 without change in
the Senate; others clamored for a seemingly endless variety
of modifications. Public opinion was at fever pitch. "Sharp
opinions have developed," Dirksen observed before continuing:
Incredible allegations have been made. Extreme views
have been asserted. The mail volume has been heavy. The
bill has provoked many long-distance telephone calls, many
of them late at night or in the small hours of the morning....Thousands
of people have come to the Capitol to urge immediate action....
Telegrams, petitions, and letters all expressed the climate
of opinion that shaped the legislative struggle and pressured
Congress to act.
Civil rights and church organizations joined in the massive
lobbying effort. The National Association for the Advancement
of Colored People, the Congress of Racial Equality, the National
Urban League, the Southern Regional Council, the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference, and others sought to represent the African
American interest in civil rights. These groups combined, for
example, to sponsor the successful March on Washington in 1963.
At times, however, the vocal pressure exerted by African American
groups worked to their disadvantage.
One such case involved Senator Dirksen. African American groups
in Illinois had not supported Dirksen for reelection to the
Senate in 1962 and suspected his loyalty to African Americans
during the civil rights debate. African American organizations
knew the importance of Dirksen's vote and intended to force
him to support an unchanged H. R. 7152 by demonstrating and
picketing his Chicago office. James
Farmer, director of CORE, publicly declared that there
would be "extensive demonstrations" in Illinois against the
Senator personally. Farmer added that "people will march en
masse to the post offices there to file handwritten letters" protesting
Dirksen's ambivalent attitude.
Everett Dirksen meets with black leaders in 1964. [64/0/0-3]

The protestors had almost directly the opposite impact. Dirksen
strongly objected to what he believed were uncalled-for tactics
by African American groups; he resented their lack of trust
in his judgment and his favorable civil rights record. On February
17, 1964, Dirksen complained on the Senate floor about the
harassment and let it be known that such pressure would not
affect his judgment. "When the day comes that picketing, distress,
duress, and coercion can push me from the rock of conviction,
that is the day," Dirksen announced, "that I shall gather
up my togs and walk out of here and say that my usefulness
in the Senate has come to an end." Richard Russell, leader
of the filibuster forces, thought that Dirksen might desert
the civil rights proponents because of the incident, but the
minority leader did not forsake the northern Democrats. Hubert
Humphrey made sure, however, that African American groups did
not risk Dirksen's support by similar tactics. Click
here.
In spite of CORE's mistake, group pressure generally proved
effective in creating support for civil rights legislation.
Labor unions, including the powerful AFL-CIO,
joined the lobbying effort in impressive numbers. The National
Council of Churches, the National Catholic Conference for Interracial
Justice, the National (Jewish) Community Relations Advisory
Council, and the National Student Christian Federation added
potent strength to the cause of civil rights by marshaling
organized religious support behind the bill. Other interest
groups which testified for the bill, or coordinated support
for it, included the Americans
for Democratic Action, the American Civil Liberties Union,
the Japanese-American Citizens League, the Women's
International League for Peace and Freedom, and the American
Veterans Committee. In all, nearly one hundred major national
organizations representing multiple interests combined to favor
the omnibus civil rights act. Click
here.
The executive branch of government conducted a lobbying campaign
of its own. Both President John Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson
had worked out legislative strategy with; a view toward persuading
Congress to accept civil rights legislation. President Johnson
even assigned two members of his White House staff to cultivate
Dirksen's commitment to H. R. 7152 . Conferences between the
executive and Congress abounded. lt was very clear to contemporary
observers that the administration had brought its full persuasive
powers to bear on the civil rights legislation.
Senate Debate, "The Long Hard Furrow"
As the civil rights debate unfolded, it became increasingly
clear that the southern bloc objected most strongly to two sections
of the bill, the cut-off of federal funds to projects that discriminated
against African Americans and the provision for fair employment
practices enforcement. Many Republicans, including the "swing" senators,
joined the southerners in their concern about the impact of fair
employment provisions on business, particularly small businesses.
Even in states with no racial problem, the prospect of making
employers comply with the law seemed to many Republican to be
an unwarranted expansion of federal power. Early in April 1964,
Everett Dirksen, who had expressed reservations about the bill,
indicated to the press that he might offer amendments to the
fair employment practices title. Although President Johnson had
made it clear that the administration wanted the Senate to accept
the House bill without change, the Republicans met in study groups
throughout April in an effort to make the bill more acceptable
through modification.
Dirksen first discussed his proposals to modify the bill with
the Senate Republican Policy Committee on March 31 and then
with all Republican senators. Dirksen knew that to persuade
Republicans to support northern Democrats in their effort to
end the filibuster, he would have to make the bill itself acceptable
to the "swing" senators.
He met repeatedly with his Republican colleagues in an attempt
to forge a consensus on appropriate changes. The task was not
an easy one, and several senators objected to Dirksen's tactics
and recommendations. At one point Dirksen explained his goal
as ". . . first, to get a bill; second, to get an acceptable
bill; third, to get a workable bill; and, finally, to get an
equitable bill." Slowly the rough consensus that Dirksen sought
began to emerge.
Rather than stressing the moral or racial questions involved,
Dirksen focused on a compromise that emphasized state responsibility
for civil rights enforcement. The Senate minority leader realized
that the "swing" votes would not be persuaded social arguments
but by assurances that federal government intervention in local
affairs would be kept to a minimum. Dirksen eventually proposed
ten amendments for his colleagues' consideration that assured
the states primary jurisdiction over complaints about discrimination
during a transition period before the federal government entered
the picture. Dirksen's modified bill appeared to satisfy enough
Republicans to guarantee that the prolonged filibuster would
be ended when a vote could be scheduled.
Meanwhile, the filibuster continued throughout the entire
month of April into May. Two- hour speeches were common, but
occasionally a senator would speak without interruption for
eight hours. Senator Dirksen remembered that one of his colleagues
brought a 1,500 page speech to deliver on the Senate floor.
The filibuster virtually immobilized the Senate in all its
other activities.
The Johnson administration realized that it would have to
fashion some kind of compromise with the Republicans and Everett
Dirksen in order to persuade the "swing" votes under Dirksen's
influence to favor cloture.
"Clean
Bill" Substitute
During the first week in May, Dirksen began talks in
his office with Senate Democratic and Republican civil rights
advocates and with Justice Department officials to achieve
an acceptable package of civil rights legislation. On May
13, after 52 days of filibuster and five negotiation sessions,
Dirksen, Humphrey, and Attorney General Robert Kennedy agreed
to propose a "clean bill" as a substitute for H. R. 7152.
Senators Dirksen, Mansfield, Humphrey, and Kuchel would cosponsor
the substitute. This agreement did not mean the end of the
filibuster, but it did provide Dirksen with a compromise
measure which was crucial to obtain the support of the "swing" Republicans.
The compromise civil rights bill worked out in Dirksen's office
did not seriously weaken the original H. R. 7152 . The bargainers
were careful not to include any changes that might cause the
House to reconsider the entire bill once the Senate had finished
its work. The "clean bill" made somewhat over seventy changes
in H. R. 7152 , most of them concerning wording and punctuation
and most of them designed to win over reluctant Republicans
and to allow cloture. The major change in what was called the
Dirksen-Mansfield substitute was to lessen the emphasis on
federal enforcement in cases of fair employment and public
accommodations violations. The substitute gave higher priority
to voluntary compliance than the House bill. It encouraged
more private, rather than official, legal initiatives. The
compromise also reserved a period for voluntary compliance
before the U.S. Attorney General could act in discrimination
suits.
What Dirksen had done was to put together a substitute for
the House-passed H. R. 7152 that was near enough to the original
version that it satisfied the Justice Department and the bipartisan
civil rights coalition in Congress, and sufficiently different
in tone and emphasis to win a few Republican converts to support
cloture.
Armed with the compromise bill and moving toward consensus
within his own party, Everett Dirksen became the man of the
hour. The fate of civil rights legislation rested squarely
on his shoulders. Dirksen overcame the continuing reluctance
of some of his party colleagues to cooperate during a June
5 Senate Republican conference and indicated to Senate majority
leader Mike Mansfield that the time had come to vote on cloture.
Dirksen and Mansfield then joined to offer a motion to invoke
cloture and thereby end the filibuster.
Cloture
On June 10,1964, after an
impassioned plea by Dirksen on behalf of the compromise bill,
the Senate voted 71 to 29 to close off the civil rights filibuster.
Every member of the Senate was present for the vote, including Senator
Engle of California who had suffered a stroke and could not
speak but pointed to his eye as a sign of his "aye" vote. The
margin was four votes larger than the 67 required. It ended 57
days of debate, the longest debate since the cloture rule had
been adopted in 1917. Forty four Democrats and 27 Republicans
supported cloture; 23 Democrats and 6 Republicans opposed it.
Supporters of the civil rights bill in the Senate celebrate
the cloture vote on June 10, 1964 [64/6/10- 10]

Several factors combined to impel senators to vote for cloture
besides the merits of bill. Many simply wished to move on to
other Senate business. Some were candidates for reelection
in 1964 and wanted to speed up the work so they could return
home to campaign. Still others needed to prepare for the up-coming
national party conventions. Finally, there were the "swing" Republicans
who had listened to Dirksen and had senators voted for cloture
because Dirksen had persuaded them: Carl
Curtis and Roman
Hruska of Nebraska; Karl
Mundt of South Dakota; and Jack
Miller of Iowa. Without Dirksen's assistance, there is
little doubt that the civil rights forces would have been defeated
in their attempt to end debate.
Senator Everett Dirksen and Hubert Humphrey share in the victory
as the Senate ends debate on the civil rights bill. Humphrey
holds the vote tally sheet on the cloture motion. June 10,
1964. [64/6/10-6]

Final Votes
Under the Senate rules, after cloture is invoked each senator
may speak for one hour on the bill or pending amendments.
Although southerners called up many amendments between June
10 and June 17 to stall action further, the Senate leadership
allowed only those it wanted to be adopted. Most of the amendments
were defeated by large margins. On June 17, the Senate voted
by a 76 to 18 margin to adopt the bipartisan substitute worked
out by Dirksen in his office in May and to give the bill
its third reading. Two days later, the Senate passed the
bill by a 73 to 27 roll call vote. Six Republicans and 21
Democrats held firm and voted against passage. In all, the
the 1964 civil rights debate had lasted a total of 83 days,
slightly over 730 hours, and had taken up almost 3,000 pages
in the Congressional
Record.
Return to the House
Since the Senate-passed version of the bill differed from the
House passed H. R .7152, the measure returned to the House
of Representatives for reconsideration.
During the long months of debate in the Senate, the House
leadership had watched anxiously. Neither the Senate nor the
House wanted to jeopardize passage of the bill by making wholesale
changes in it that would undermine its support in the other
body. Consequently, when the Senate sent its approved compromise
substitute bill back to the House for action, every attempt
was made to accept compromise in the House without change to
avoid beginning another lengthy debate and to avoid sending
the bill to conference committee.
Compromise Bill Accepted by House; Conference Committee
Avoided
The chief stumbling block in the plan was the southern-dominated
Rules Committee. A bipartisan coalition of committee members
quickly surmounted this obstacle by seizing control from chairman
Howard Smith and, on June 30, the House Rules Committee reported
H. Res.789 providing for the acceptance of the Senate bill
without change.
House leaders brought the resolution up for floor consideration
on July 2 where members quickly approved the Senate-passed
civil rights bill, 289 to 126. Only six representatives changed
their votet from February when the House first sent H. R. 7152
to the Senate. Because there were no differences in the two
bills, there was no need for a conference committee and the
bill went immediately to the White House for President Johnson
s signature.
White House Approval
President Johnson welcomed the bill he had sought for so
long. Within a few hours of passage, he signed it into law in
a nationwide television broadcast from the White House. On July
2, 1964, President Johnson spoke the following words before signing
the bill:
We believe that all men are created equal -- yet many
are denied equal treatment. We believe that all men have
certain inalienable rights. We believe that all men are
entitled to the blessings of liberty -- yet millions are
being deprived of those blessings, not because of their
own failures, but because of the color of their skins.
The reasons are deeply embedded in history and tradition
and the nature of man. We can understand without rancor
or hatred how all this happens. But it cannot continue.
Our Constitution, the foundation of our Republic, forbids
it. The principles of our freedom forbid it. Morality forbids
it. And the law I sign tonight forbids it....
Lyndon Johnson signs the Civil Rights Act of 1964 [64/7/2-3]
