LOCCRC_141220_263
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The 1964 Civil Rights Bill

On November 20, 1963, the civil rights bill was referred to the House Rules Committee. Chairman Howard W. Smith (D-VA), an avid segregationist, refused to grant a rule for the bill's floor debate. He conceded in early January 1964 under the threat of a discharge petition and public pressure. The Rules Committee finally cleared H.R. 7152 on January 30. The bill that passed the House on February 10 by a 290–130 vote was stronger and broader than the bill President Kennedy proposed. It included additional protection of the right to vote, an FEPC, Part III, provisions on public facilities, and the withholding of federal funds from discriminatory programs. Representative Emanuel Celler (D-NY) initially supported a much stronger bill, with FEPC and Title III authority, but the administration had made an ironclad agreement with Representative William McCulloch (R-OH) not to go beyond its initial scope.
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