The
continued into the ‘60s, with support from newly-elected President John F. Kennedy and his brother:
Attorney General, Robert Kennedy. The violence of the Birmingham, Alabama
influenced the President to fully
endorse the movement. On June 19th,
, he proposed a Civil Rights
Bill to Congress, which was approved in
after his death with support from President Lyndon Johnson. The bill
struck down existing legislation that allowed for
, and its
approval was largely influenced by Martin Luther King Jr. and the
on Washington of August 1963. Capturing the attention of the
and the population, this
attracted
of
of people in support of civil rights.
Following that, the Voting Rights Act of
ended the
prejudiced voting system. Instantly
effective, blacks began
and running for
public office.
However, just days later on August 11th, a violent six-day
riot in the Los Angeles
of Watts resulted in 34 deaths. This was indicative of a period of racially-motivated
that
occurred in the mid-to-late 1960s.