U.S. Representative John
Boehner
Honoring
the 50th
Anniversary of the Civil Rights Act of 1964
WASHINGTON, DC – Today,
Congressman John Boehner (R-West Chester) released the following
column honoring the 50th anniversary of the Civil Rights Act of 1964:
On July 2, 1964, Congress
completed what many consider to be the most fundamental and
consequential legislation in our long history, the Civil Rights Act
of 1964.
And
as our nation comes together to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the
bill’s final passage, many will rightly recall the names of
those who stood in the face of violence and injustice during the
civil rights movement, so that every citizen – regardless of race,
color, religion, or national origin – may truly pursue happiness
without discrimination or segregation.
It was a movement whose
time had come, and quietly at its forefront was a farm kid from Ohio,
William McCulloch.
In the fanfare of history,
it’s easy to overlook the small moments that make big things
possible, but it was a deal struck by Congressman McCulloch in Piqua,
Ohio, that – a year before the Civil Rights Act was signed into law
– led to a bill that would prove capable of fulfilling the promise
of justice and liberty for all.
Passage of the Civil Rights
Act is rightly regarded as one of the House’s finest hours, and
when the final vote neared, the chamber paused for a standing ovation
– and it was for William McCulloch.
I’m particularly proud of
the key role he played, and I’m deeply honored for the privilege to
represent the same corner of Ohio that McCulloch called home.
His story reminds us that
while there is no indispensable man, there is the common man who
doesn’t use his status for personal gain – but to serve
others.
“In a democratic society like ours,” McCulloch once said, “the
purpose of representative government is to soften tension – reduce
strife – while enabling groups and individuals to more nearly
obtain the kind of life they wish to live.”
While William McCulloch
isn’t a household name, it doesn’t have to be. That’s
because, for him, the biggest thing was the right thing.
So as we come together and
celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, I
invite all Ohioans to join me in remembering one of our very own,
William Moore McCulloch.
Boehner represents Ohio’s
8th District, which includes all of Butler, Clark, Darke, Miami, and
Preble counties, and the southernmost part of Mercer County. He was
first elected to Congress in 1990.
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