Policy Record
Nixon v. Herndon
The Supreme Court struck down a Texas statute that explicitly barred Black citizens from voting in Democratic primary elections.
Plain-language summary
What happened and why it matters
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What happened
The Supreme Court struck down a Texas statute that explicitly barred Black citizens from voting in Democratic primary elections.
Why it matters
EquityStack classifies this policy as positive impact with limited supporting evidence. The record matters because it helps explain how government action shaped Black Americans' rights, resources, exposure to harm, or access to institutions.
What this means
Impact on Black Americans
The ruling was an important but incomplete victory against white primaries, because states and party actors quickly adapted with new exclusion mechanisms.
1927
The Supreme Court struck down a Texas statute that explicitly barred Black citizens from voting in Democratic primary elections.
Outcome
The ruling was an important but incomplete victory against white primaries, because states and party actors quickly adapted with new exclusion mechanisms.
1927-03-07T08:00:00.000Z
Latest source linked to this policy record.
Era context
Previous era-adjacent record: Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill.
Trust and evidence
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Sources
1
Source Quality
Limited
Completeness
Needs Review
Evidence
Source trail
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