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"In the presence of a growing national civil rights movement, President Lyndon Johnson issued a call for strong voting rights

laws in 1965. The Voting Rights Act, signed into law in August 1965, suspended literacy tests and provided for the
appointment of federal examiners with the power to register qualified citizens to vote.
On being signed into law, the act had an almost immediate impact In South Carolina the number of American Americans
registered to vote rose dramatically. In 1964, 38.7 percent of voting-age African Americans were registered. Four years later
that number climbed to 50.8 percent. There were also gains in African American political participation. Less than a decade
after the passage of the act, the number of African American legislators had risen to thirteen.
from "The South Carolina Encyclopedia"
Which of these BEST explains the actual impact of literacy tests in the South?
A)
They limited the number of uneducated voters.
B)
They limited the number of Democratic voters.
C)
They limited the number of Republican voters.
D
They Limited the number of African American voters,
I

User Mimosinnet
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1 Answer

3 votes

Answer:

D.

Step-by-step explanation:

I read the passage and D. makes the most sense out of all of them

User Maxedison
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