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Zorluk: Çok zorReconstruction and the Reconstruction Amendments

"I regret that the bill, which has passed both Houses of Congress, entitled 'An act to protect all persons in the United States in their civil rights and furnish the means of their vindication,' contains provisions which I cannot approve consistently with my sense of duty to the Constitution... By the first section of the bill all persons born in the United States... are declared to be citizens of the United States. This provision associates at once with the Federal jurisdiction each citizen of a State, and makes the Federal Government the guarantor of his rights... It is another step, or rather a stride, toward centralization, and the concentration of all legislative powers in the National Government."
— President Andrew Johnson, Veto of the Civil Rights Act, March 27, 1866

The constitutional debate over federal authority outlined in the excerpt directly contributed to which of the following actions by Radical Republicans in Congress?

  1. A
    The drafting of the Fifteenth Amendment to guarantee suffrage as the primary constitutional protection for newly freed individuals against state laws
  2. B
    The establishment of the Freedmen's Bureau as a permanent cabinet department to enforce labor contracts under Abraham Lincoln's Ten-Percent Plan
  3. The drafting and proposal of the Fourteenth Amendment to constitutionalize federal citizenship and protect civil rights from future legislative or executive overridesCevap
  4. D
    The reliance on the Thirteenth Amendment to declare Southern Black Codes unconstitutional, negating the need for further civil rights legislation

Cevap

The drafting and proposal of the Fourteenth Amendment to constitutionalize federal citizenship and protect civil rights from future legislative or executive overrides
The debate over the Civil Rights Act of 1866 led Radical Republicans to draft the Fourteenth Amendment. Because President Johnson vetoed the Civil Rights Act on the grounds that it was an unconstitutional expansion of federal power over state citizenship, Congress sought to place these rights beyond presidential vetoes and potential future legislative repeal by codifying them directly into the U.S. Constitution.

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1
Identify the historical context of the stimulus.
The stimulus is Andrew Johnson's 1866 veto of the Civil Rights Act, where he objects to the federal government defining citizenship and guaranteeing civil rights, claiming it causes centralization of power.
This establishes the baseline conflict between Presidential Reconstruction (Johnson's view of limited federal power and quick readmission) and Congressional Reconstruction.
2
Analyze how Radical Republicans reacted to the veto and the constitutional challenges raised by the President.
Radical Republicans realized that civil rights legislation passed as ordinary statutes could be vetoed by the president or repealed by future conservative Congresses.
Understanding the political vulnerability of statutory civil rights laws explains why a constitutional amendment was necessary.
3
Select the action that directly addressed both the policy goal and the constitutional challenge.
Congress proposed the Fourteenth Amendment, which defined national citizenship and guaranteed equal protection under the law, permanently embedding these protections in the Constitution.
This aligns with the direct constitutional response to Johnson's veto, securing federal authority over civil rights.

Anahtar Kavram

The transition to Congressional Reconstruction and the constitutionalization of civil rights via the Fourteenth Amendment.

Alternatif Yöntem

Analyzing the debate from a legal history perspective: one can trace how the Civil Rights Act of 1866 was passed over Johnson's veto, but Republican leaders immediately realized they needed a constitutional amendment (the Fourteenth) because they feared the Supreme Court or a future Democratic-controlled Congress might strike down the statute.
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