How did literacy test laws affect politics in the South after the Civil War?
A. They prevented many former slaves from voting.
B. They helped Radical Republicans dominate state governments.
C. They allowed
states to avoid enforcing the Fifteenth Amendment.
D. They led state governments
to increase funding for
education.
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A. They prevented many former slaves from voting.
Explanation:
- After the Civil War, many states introduced mandatory literacy tests. The purpose was to ban the voting of people with low literacy levels, especially poor African-Americans in the South.
- The Civil Rights Act of 1964 required that a complete literacy test used to qualify for voting in federal elections be conducted only by those who have completed at least six years of formal education. To limit the use of literacy tests, Congress enacted the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
- Election literacy tests apply to both blacks and whites, but more African Americans from registration because poor education and discriminatory management require African American applicants to pass more difficult tests. Exclude people.
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