History Lesson: First African-Americans Elected to Congress Were Republicans

Since 1870, 10 African-Americans have served in the U.S. Senate, four of them Republicans and six Democrats

Since 1870, 10 African-Americans have served in the U.S. Senate, four of them Republicans and six Democrats.

The criticism about the Republican Party having just one black senator in South Carolina's Tim Scott has intensified with allegations that the GOP is using him to lead Capitol Hill police-reform efforts, which have focused on police brutality toward black Americans after George Floyd’s death.

However, the first African-Americans to serve in both chambers of the U.S. Congress were members of the Republican Party.

Hiram Rhodes Revels, a Republican from Mississippi, became the first African-American member of the Senate when he was seated in 1870, during the post-Civil War Reconstruction era. Blanche Bruce, also a Mississippi Republican, was the second in 1875.

Rep. Joseph Rainey, a Republican from South Carolina, became the first African-American to serve in the House when he was selected by his party to complete the term of an incumbent who resigned in disgrace in 1870.

The Republican Party, at that time, represented emancipation for slaves while members of the Confederacy, which opposed the abolition of slavery in the South, were members of the Democratic Party.

Since 1870, 27 African-Americans elected to the House of Representatives have been registered Republicans, and 117 have been registered Democrats.

(h/t Just the News)

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