Enforcement Acts

Passed under the presidency of Ulysses S. Grant, the laws also allowed the federal government to intervene when states did not act to protect these rights.Although this act was meant to fight the KKK and help black people and freedmen, many states were reluctant to take such relatively extreme actions, for several reasons.[1] The Enforcement Act of 1870 prohibited discrimination by state officials in voter registration on the basis of race, color, or previous condition of servitude.The Act also authorized the president to suspend the writ of habeas corpus if violence rendered efforts to suppress the Klan ineffective.[6] After the Colfax massacre in Louisiana, the federal government brought a civil rights case against nine men (out of 97 indicted) who were accused of paramilitary activity intended to stop black people from voting.However, in Ex Parte Yarbrough (1884) the Court allowed individuals who were not state actors to be prosecuted because Article I Section 4 of the Constitution gives Congress the power to regulate federal elections.In Hodges v. United States (1906) the Court addressed a possible Thirteenth Amendment rationale for the Enforcement Acts, and found that the federal government did not have the authority to punish a group of men for interfering with black workers through whitecapping.
Force BillUnited States CongressAfrican Americansequal protection of lawsUlysses S. GrantFourteenth AmendmentslavesFifteenth AmendmentKu Klux Klanwhite supremacypoliticiansviolenceReconstruction eraAmerican Civil WarEnforcement Act of 1870Second Enforcement ActSecond Enforcement Act of 1871Enforcement Act of 1871 (second act)Civil Rights Act of 1875Ku Klux Klan ActEnforcement Act of 1871habeas corpusSouth CarolinaAmos T. AkermanFifteenth Amendment to the United States ConstitutionColfax massacreUnited States v. Cruikshankstate actorsEx Parte YarbroughArticle I Section 4Hodges v. United StatesThirteenth AmendmentwhitecappingJones v. Alfred H. Mayer Co.United States Department of JusticeMichael Schwerner, James Chaney, and Andrew GoodmanMississippiUnited States v. PriceDonald TrumpUnited States v. Donald Trumpattempts to overturn the 2020 United States presidential electionCivil Rights Act of 1866Voting rights in the United StatesArticle I1st Amendment14th AmendmentEqual Protection ClausePrivileges or Immunities Clause15th Amendment17th Amendment19th Amendment23rd Amendment24th Amendment26th AmendmentU.S. Department of JusticeCivil Rights Act of 1957U.S. Commission on Civil RightsU.S. Department of Justice Civil Rights DivisionCivil Rights Act of 1960Title I of the Civil Rights Act of 1964Voting Rights Act of 1965amendmentscovered jurisdictionsVoting Accessibility for the Elderly and Handicapped ActUniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting ActFederal Voting Assistance ProgramMilitary and Overseas Voter Empowerment ActNational Voter Registration Act of 1993Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996Help America Vote Act of 2002Election Assistance CommissionAbsentee ballotEarly votingInitiatives and referendumsPostal votingProvisional ballotRecall electionVoter registration in the U.S.Electoral fraudGrandfather clauseLiteracy testPoll taxVoter cagingVoter ID lawsVoter suppressionFirst-past-the-post votingGerrymanderingMultiple non-transferable voteOne man, one voteFelonsForeignersTransgender peopleNative AmericansAmerican Samoa residentsDistrict of Columbia residentsGuam residentsNorthern Mariana Islands residentsPuerto Rico residentsUnited States Virgin Islands residentsTimelineDisfranchisement after the Reconstruction eraTimeline of women's suffrageSuffrage HikesWoman Suffrage ProcessionSilent SentinelsGive Us the BallotFreedom SummerSelma to Montgomery marchesWomen's poll tax repeal movementHistory of direct democracyBallot accessCampaign financeCitizenshipDemocratic backsliding in the United StatesDisfranchisementElectionElection lawElections in the U.S.Electoral CollegeElectoral reformElectoral systemRanked-choice voting in the U.S.National Voting Rights MuseumRedistrictingSecret ballotSuffrageVoter registrationVoting