JFK got shot
carlito movement
Republicans and Northern Democrats.AnswerI beg your pardon. .AnswerRather than being split along party lines, the Civil Rights movement tended to split the country along North-South lines. Northern politicians tended to be either pro-Civil Rights, or neutral. Southern politicians tended to be anti-Civil Rights, or rarely, neutral.
They didn't support freedom for enslaved African Americans
The equal rights amendment The right of women to hold membership in the AFL
The deep South was still unprepared to rid itself of "Jim Crow" attitudes.
Congressional democrats were split into conservative and liberal factions.
The movement splintered due to a march being done. During that march Martin Luther King said what do we want and Stokely Charmiceal said Black Power, causing a different meaning to be protrayed. Also many times where whites helped to make advancements in civil rights it cause theyre death and whites to get even more upset that they are killed for blacks. so many people didnt want to be hated on and created all black organization only wanting their people that actually are discriminated against instead of "outsiders" that dont even get the hatred.
Southern Dixiecrats were a faction of conservative Southern Democrats who opposed civil rights initiatives in the mid-20th century. They were segregationists who supported maintaining white supremacy in the South. The Dixiecrats split from the Democratic Party in the 1948 presidential election to form the States' Rights Democratic Party.
The northern and southern states split up due to differing views on issues such as slavery, tariffs, and states' rights. These differences led to growing tensions that eventually escalated into the American Civil War in 1861.
Martin Luther King Jr. started the civil rights movement in response to the systemic racism and inequality faced by African Americans. He believed in nonviolent protest and used his platform to advocate for desegregation, voting rights, and equal treatment under the law. King's leadership and persuasive speeches inspired millions of people to join the movement and work towards racial justice.
The religious movements that Quakers have had are the Hickside movement, which was a split in the movement, and the Beaconite Controversy, which caused a split of around 300 Quakers from the movement.
William Wilberforce is the person who is known to have split the abolitionist movement with his radical views. The movement was mainly aimed at bringing an end to slavery.