attorney to challenge Oklahoma’s grandfather clause, which had been enacted in 1910. The NAACP, founded in 1909, persuaded a U.S. “The white people are on the rolls and the black people are not.”Īfrican-Americans typically lacked the financial resources to file suit. “Once you’ve got people removed from the rolls, it becomes less necessary,” Smethurst says. They hoped to get whites registered before these laws could be challenged in court. senators warned it would be “grossly unconstitutional.”įor that reason, nearly every state put a time limit on their grandfather clauses. The Louisiana state constitutional convention adopted a grandfather clause even though one of the state’s own U.S.
Some state legislatures enacted grandfather clauses despite knowing they couldn’t pass constitutional muster. This was pretty prima facie a way to allow whites to vote, and not blacks.” “But the 15th Amendment allowed restrictions that were non-racial. “Because of the 15th Amendment, you can’t pass laws saying blacks can’t vote, which is what they wanted to do,” says Eric Foner, a Columbia University historian. It was politically necessary, because otherwise you’d have too much opposition from poor whites who would have been disenfranchised.”īut protecting whites from restrictions meant to apply to African-Americans was obviously another form of discrimination itself. “It was a means of enfranchising whites who might have been excluded by things like literacy clauses. “The grandfather clause is actually not a means of disenfranchising anybody,” says Michael Klarman, a Harvard law professor. Most such laws were enacted in the early 1890s. The solution? A half-dozen states passed laws that made men eligible to vote if they had been able to vote before African-Americans were given the franchise (generally, 1867), or if they were the lineal descendants of voters back then. “If all these white people are going to be non-citizens along with blacks, the idea is going to lose a lot of support,” says James Smethurst, who teaches African-American Studies at the University of Massachusetts. But many poor southern whites were at risk of also losing their rights because they could not have met such expectations.
Various states created requirements - literacy tests and poll taxes and constitutional quizzes - that were designed to keep blacks from registering to vote. If you know your history, you’ll realize that African-Americans were nevertheless kept from voting in large numbers in southern states for nearly a century more. The 15th Amendment, which prohibited racial discrimination in voting, was ratified by the states in 1870. It entered the lexicon not just because it suggests something old, but because of a specific set of 19th century laws regulating voting. Old power plants are sometimes grandfathered from having to meet new clean air requirements.īut like so many things, the term “grandfather,” used in this way, has its roots in America’s racial history. The troubled website reassures consumers they can stay enrolled in grandfathered insurance plans that existed before the Affordable Care Act was enacted in 2010. It’s an easy way to describe individuals or companies who get to keep operating under an existing set of expectations when new rules are put in place. The term “grandfathered” has become part of the language. People aren’t exempted from new regulations because they’re old and crotchety, even if that’s what it sounds like when we say they’re “grandfathered in.”