{"ok":true,"report":{"slug":"RnUj5B1u","publishedAt":1780199787343,"post":{"text":"Last I checked, Republicans voted to end slavery and segregation while democrats voted against it.","uri":"https://www.threads.com/@manmythlegend1982/post/DY9mmMGDvHR","authorHandle":"manmythlegend1982"},"verdict":{"verdict":"Misleading","confidence":92,"summary":"The post correctly notes that Republicans overwhelmingly supported both the 13th Amendment (abolishing slavery) and the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (ending segregation). However, it falsely claims Democrats voted against ending segregation; in reality, a clear majority of Democrats in both the House and Senate voted for the Civil Rights Act. The slavery claim is partially accurate but oversimplified, as while most Democrats opposed the 13th Amendment, about 20% of Democratic lawmakers did vote for it.","claims":[{"claim":"Republicans voted to end slavery.","assessment":"True. In the 1865 House vote on the 13th Amendment, 100% of Republican representatives (85) voted in favor. In the 1864 Senate vote, 100% of Republican senators (30) voted in favor."},{"claim":"Democrats voted against ending slavery.","assessment":"Mostly true but oversimplified. A majority of Democrats did vote against the 13th Amendment (56 in the House, 6 in the Senate), but a significant minority supported it (16 House Democrats and 4 Senate Democrats voted yes)."},{"claim":"Republicans voted to end segregation.","assessment":"True. In the 1964 Civil Rights Act votes, roughly 80% of Republicans supported the legislation (138 of 172 in the House; 27 of 33 in the Senate)."},{"claim":"Democrats voted against ending segregation.","assessment":"False. A clear majority of Democrats voted in favor of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. In the House, 152 Democrats (61%) voted yes; in the Senate, 46 Democrats (69%) voted yes. While a significant Democratic minority opposed it (largely Southern segregationists), the party as a whole voted to pass the bill."}],"caveats":"The 19th-century Democratic and Republican parties had different ideological coalitions and geographic bases than their modern counterparts. Southern Democrats of the 1960s were the primary opponents of civil rights legislation, while Northern Democrats largely supported it. The post's blanket characterization of 'Democrats' ignores this crucial regional split.","sources":[{"title":"Did Dems Oppose 13th, 14th, 15th Amendments That Gave Freedom, Voting Rights to Slaves?","url":"https://www.snopes.com/articles/463909/democrats-opposed-amendments-slavery"},{"title":"Democrat/GOP Vote Tally on 1964 Civil Rights Act - WSJ","url":"https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB1041302509432817073"},{"title":"civil rights bill of 1964: How many Republicans voted against it, chamber by chamber","url":"https://michaelcarbonara.com/how-many-republicans-voted-against-civil-rights-bill-1964"},{"title":"Roll Call Tally on Civil Rights Act 1964, June 19, 1964","url":"https://www.archives.gov/legislative/features/civil-rights-1964/senate-roll-call.html"}]},"communityNote":"Misleading. While Republicans overwhelmingly backed the 13th Amendment and the 1964 Civil Rights Act, Democrats did not vote against ending segregation. A clear majority of Democrats in Congress supported the 1964 Act. Party coalitions have also shifted significantly since the 1800s.","sourceUrl":"https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB1041302509432817073"}}