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Select ALL the correct answers.
Read the text below.

"The entire philosophy of those who support this legislation is impregnated [filled up] with the basic idea that white southerners are not just second-class citizens, but apparently, should have no rights whatsoever."

The person who made this statement argued that the bill took away the rights of White southerners and bestowed them on Black southerners.


Based on your understanding of the era and the realignment of the parties, which politicians were most likely associated with these kinds of statements?

George Wallace, the Democratic governor of Alabama who approved of segregation
Ross Robert Barnett, the Governor of Mississippi who was a prominent member of the Dixiecrats
Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota, who later became the 1968 Democratic nominee for president
Richard Daley, who was the Democratic mayor of Chicago in 1968

Respuesta :

Answer:

George Wallace was opposed to the bill. Wallace was a widely known civil rights leader. Wallace was a participant of the lunch counter sit ins and the freedom riders bus tour of the south. George Wallace was even on the Edmund Pettis bridge, linked arm in arm with Martin Luther King Jr.

Explanation:

The people that would most likely be in support of this position would be:

  • Ross Robert Barnett, the Governor of Mississippi who was a prominent member of the Dixiecrats.
  • George Wallace, the Democratic governor of Alabama who approved of segregation.

What was the fight against slavery?

This was a fight to see that the institution of slavery was abolished in the Southern part of the United States.

The white southerners felt that the blacks should not be given any rights whatsoever because they are supposed to serve the white people.

Read more on slavery here:https://brainly.com/question/9374853

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