Policy Record

Nixon v. Herndon

The Supreme Court struck down a Texas statute that explicitly barred Black citizens from voting in Democratic primary elections.

Year 1927Era: Jim Crow and DisenfranchisementCourt CasePositive
Impact Score20.00

Plain-language summary

What happened and why it matters

This page is the proof layer of the public site. It should let a reader move from score into explanation, evidence, and related records without guessing.

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.

Civil RightsConstitutional RightsVoting Rights

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

Policy pages keep score, evidence, and completeness side by side so users can evaluate what is known, what is sourced, and what still needs work.

Sources

1

Source Quality

Limited

Completeness

Needs Review

Evidence

Source trail

Evidence should be visible immediately, not hidden behind a second click. Open the source list first if you want to verify the record before reading related content.

Related records

Promises, explainers, and report paths

Related records make it easier to move from a single policy into the broader public narrative or administrative context.

No related promise records are linked to this policy yet.