President Lyndon B. Johnson's
Remarks in the Capitol Rotunda at the Signing of the
Voting Rights Act
August 6, 1965
Mr. Vice President, Mr. Speaker, Members of Congress, members
of the Cabinet, distinguished guests, my fellow Americans:
Today is a triumph for freedom as huge as any victory that
has ever been won on any battlefield. Yet to seize the meaning
of this day, we must recall darker times.
Three and a half centuries ago the first Negroes arrived at
Jamestown. They did not arrive in brave ships in search of a home
for freedom. They did not mingle fear and joy, in expectation
that in this New World anything would be possible to a man strong
enough to reach for it.
They came in darkness and they came in chains.
And today we strike away the last major shackle of those fierce
and ancient bonds. Today the Negro story and the American story
fuse and blend.
And let us remember that it was not always so. The stories
of our Nation and of the American Negro are like two great rivers.
Welling up from that tiny Jamestown spring they flow through the
centuries along divided channels.
When pioneers subdued a continent to the need of man, they
did not tame it for the Negro. When the Liberty Bell rang out
in Philadelphia, it did not toll for the Negro. When Andrew Jackson
threw open the doors of democracy, they did not open for the Negro.
It was only at Appomattox, a century ago, that an American
victory was also a Negro victory. And the two rivers--one shining
with promise, the other dark-stained with oppression--began to
move toward one another.
THE PROMISE KEPT
Yet, for almost a century the promise of that day was not fulfilled.
Today is a towering and certain mark that, in this generation,
that promise will be kept. In our time the two currents will finally
mingle and rush as one great stream across the uncertain and the
marvelous years of the America that is yet to come.
This act flows from a clear and simple wrong. Its only purpose
is to right that wrong. Millions of Americans are denied the right
to vote because of their color. This law will ensure them the
right to vote. The wrong is one which no American, in his heart,
can justify. The right is one which no American, true to our principles,
can deny.
In 1957, as the leader of the majority in the United States
Senate, speaking in support of legislation to guarantee the right
of all men to vote, I said, "This right to vote is the basic
right without which all others are meaningless. It gives people,
people as individuals, control over their own destinies."
Last year I said, "Until every qualified person regardless
of . . . the color of his skin has the right, unquestioned and
unrestrained, to go in and cast his ballot in every precinct in
this great land of ours, I am not going to be satisfied."
Immediately after the election I directed the Attorney General
to explore, as rapidly as possible, the ways to ensure the right
to vote.
And then last March, with the outrage of Selma still fresh,
I came down to this Capitol one evening and asked the Congress
and the people for swift and for sweeping action to guarantee
to every man and woman the right to vote. In less than 48 hours
I sent the Voting Rights Act of 1965 to the Congress. In little
more than 4 months the Congress, with overwhelming majorities,
enacted one of the most monumental laws in the entire history
of American freedom.
THE WAITING IS GONE
The Members of the Congress, and the many private citizens,
who worked to shape and pass this bill will share a place of honor
in our history for this one act alone.
There were those who said this is an old injustice, and there
is no need to hurry. But 95 years have passed since the 15th amendment
gave all Negroes the right to vote.
And the time for waiting is gone.
There were those who said smaller and more gradual measures
should be tried. But they had been tried. For years and years
they had been tried, and tried, and tried, and they had failed,
and failed, and failed.
And the time for failure is gone.
There were those who said that this is a many-sided and very
complex problem. But however viewed, the denial of the right to
vote is still a deadly wrong.
And the time for injustice has gone.
This law covers many pages. But the heart of the act is plain.
Wherever, by clear and objective standards, States and counties
are using regulations, or laws, or tests to deny the right to
vote, then they will be struck down. If it is dear that State
officials still intend to discriminate, then Federal examiners
will be sent in to register all eligible voters. When the prospect
of discrimination is gone, the examiners will be immediately withdrawn.
And, under this act, if any county anywhere in this Nation
does not want Federal intervention it need only open its polling
places to all of its people.
THE GOVERNMENT ACTS
This good Congress, the 89th Congress, acted swiftly in passing
this act. I intend to act with equal dispatch in enforcing this
act.
And tomorrow at 1 p.m., the Attorney General has been directed
to file a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the poll
tax in the State of Mississippi. This will begin the legal process
which, I confidently believe, will very soon prohibit any State
from requiring the payment of money in order to exercise the right
to vote.
And also by tomorrow the Justice Department, through publication
in the Federal Register, will have officially certified the States
where discrimination exists.
I have, in addition, requested the Department of Justice to
work all through this weekend so that on Monday morning next,
they can designate many counties where past experience clearly
shows that Federal action is necessary and required. And by Tuesday
morning, trained Federal examiners will be at work registering
eligible men and women in 10 to 15 counties.
And on that same day, next Tuesday, additional poll tax suits
will be filed in the States of Texas, Alabama, and Virginia.
And I pledge you that we will not delay, or we will not hesitate,
or we will not turn aside until Americans of every race and color
and origin in this country have the same right as all others to
share in the process of democracy.
So, through this act, and its enforcement, an important instrument
of freedom passes into the hands of millions of our citizens.
But that instrument must be used.
Presidents and Congresses, laws and lawsuits can open the doors
to the polling places and open the doors to the wondrous rewards
which await the wise use of the ballot.
THE VOTE BECOMES JUSTICE
But only the individual Negro, and all others who have been
denied the right to vote, can really walk through those doors,
and can use that right, and can transform the vote into an instrument
of justice and fulfillment.
So, let me now say to every Negro in this country: You must
register. You must vote. You must learn, so your choice advances
your interest and the interest of our beloved Nation. Your future,
and your children's future, depend upon it, and I don't believe
that you are going to let them down.
This act is not only a victory for Negro leadership. This act
is a great challenge to that leadership. It is a challenge which
cannot be met simply by protests and demonstrations. It means
that dedicated leaders must work around the clock to teach people
their rights and their responsibilities and to lead them to exercise
those rights and to fulfill those responsibilities and those duties
to their country.
If you do this, then you will find, as others have found before
you, that the vote is the most powerful instrument ever devised
by man for breaking down injustice and destroying the terrible
walls which imprison men because they are different from other
men.
THE LAST OF THE BARRIERS TUMBLE
Today what is perhaps the last of the legal barriers is tumbling.
There will be many actions and many difficulties before the rights
woven into law are also woven into the fabric of our Nation. But
the struggle for equality must now move toward a different battlefield.
It is nothing less than granting every American Negro his freedom
to enter the mainstream of American life: not the conformity that
blurs enriching differences of culture and tradition, but rather
the opportunity that gives each a chance to choose.
For centuries of oppression and hatred have already taken their
painful toll. It can be seen throughout our land in men without
skills, in children without fathers, in families that are imprisoned
in slums and in poverty.
RIGHTS ARE NOT ENOUGH
For it is not enough just to give men rights. They must be
able to use those rights in their personal pursuit of happiness.
The wounds and the weaknesses, the outward walls and the inward
scars which diminish achievement are the work of American society.
We must all now help to end them--help to end them through expanding
programs already devised and through new ones to search out and
forever end the special handicaps of those who are black in a
Nation that happens to be mostly white.
So, it is for this purpose--to fulfill the rights that we now
secure--that I have already called a White House conference to
meet here in the Nation's Capital this fall.
So, we will move step by step--often painfully but, I think,
with clear vision--along the path toward American freedom.
It is difficult to fight for freedom. But I also know how difficult
it can be to bend long years of habit and custom to grant it.
There is no room for injustice anywhere in the American mansion.
But there is always room for understanding toward those who see
the old ways crumbling. And to them today I say simply this: It
must come. It is right that it should come. And when it has, you
will find that a burden has been lifted from your shoulders, too.
It is not just a question of guilt, although there is that.
It is that men cannot live with a lie and not be stained by it.
DIGNITY IS NOT JUST A WORD
The central fact of American civilization--one so hard for
others to understand--is that freedom and justice and the dignity
of man are not just words to us. We believe in them. Under all
the growth and the tumult and abundance, we believe. And so, as
long as some among us are oppressed--and we are part of that oppression--it
must blunt our faith and sap the strength of our high purpose.
Thus, this is a victory for the freedom of the American Negro.
But it is also a victory for the freedom of the American Nation.
And every family across this great, entire, searching land will
live stronger in liberty, will live more splendid in expectation,
and will be prouder to be American because of the act that you
have passed that I will sign today.
Thank you.
NOTE: The President spoke at 12:05 p.m. in the Rotunda at the
Capitol, prior to signing the bill. In his opening words he referred
to Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, President of the Senate,
and Representative John W. McCormack of Massachusetts, Speaker
of the House of Representatives.
As enacted, the Voting Rights Act of 1965 is Public Law 89-110
(79 Stat. 437).
Reports to the President on the implementation of the act,
prepared by the Attorney General and the Chairman of the Civil
Service Commission, were made public by the White House on August
5, August 14, and August 21. They are printed in the Weekly Compilation
of Presidential Documents (vol. 1, pp. 51, 92, 125).
The determinations of the Attorney General are printed in the Federal Register
of August 7 and August 10, 1965 (30 F.R. 9897, 9970).
Source: Public Papers of the Presidents of the United
States: Lyndon B. Johnson, 1965. Volume II, entry 394, pp. 811-815. Washington,
D. C.: Government Printing Office, 1966.
Last Updated
June 6, 2007
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