George Wallace was painted as a turbulent era in the 1960s. One of the most controversial topics of this era is the battle for citizenship. George Wallace is one of the major politicians for the support of the civil rights movement and isolation. Wallace represents the view of the southern part of racial discrimination. Many Americans are apartheid, but Wallace insists on this topic. In the 1960s, many established politicians were assassinated. Both Martin Luther King, JFK, and RFK are active foresighted people and have caused controversy over the last decade.
In 1963 the governor of Alabama Governor George C. Wallace threatened the same position trying to quit apartheid at the University of Alabama, the Kennedy government tried to do this with all the power of the federal government including the US military. A violent incident occurred. And to force the abolition of apartheid. Confrontation between Barnett and Wallace promoted Kennedy, which was temporary support of civil rights at the time and was fully devoted to the end of apartheid. National civil rights leaders decided to continue to pressure the Kennedy administration and Congress to pass civil rights law in Washington in March 1963. This is a conscious resurrection of the 1941 parade planned by A. Philip Randolph who promised fair employment during the Second World War. Randolph appeared with the leaders of NAACP, CORE, SCLC, Urban League, SNCC in 1963.
On June 11, 1963 George C. Wallace of Alabama Governor George C. Wallace was surrounded by IPTV cameras, dramatically disdained, and then passed away by the federal authorities who came to Tuscaloosa. Alabama White University is looking for two black students. That night, exhausted Kennedy made an exciting Golden Time speech, and he told the National Civil Rights Bill that it was coming. Eight days later he sent it to Capitol Hill. Purdum and Risen each describe the common fate of postwar civil rights law. The ruling party will submit a strong bill and Congress will dilute it because of the control of the Southern Democratic House Committee of the House of Representatives and the willingness to pay Senator members. However, when the prohibition of racial discrimination in public places was added to the discrimination of discriminatory employment practices, this time the "civil rights law" began to be moderately strong and more powerful (Chapter 7 ) (Title II)
In the presidential election of 1968, Alabama governor George C. Wallace took over as president of the American Independent Party. Wallace made a "law and order" campaign similar to Republican candidate Richard Nixon. The southern strategy for Nixon's election vote is focused on culturally conservative values such as ethnic problems, family problems, patriotism, cultural problems appealing to the Southern Baptist Church. In the 1994 midterm, another southern statesman, Newt Gingrich led the Republican revolution and began the reign of the Republican Party which governs the House of Representatives for 12 years. Gingrich resigned in 1999 as the US House of Representatives in 1995. Tom Dray is the most powerful Republican leader in Congress until being criticized in criminal cases in 2005 and driven to Republican rule.