Kerner Commission Report

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Kerner Commission Report
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Abstract

There have been many presidential commissions, but few have been more famous—or more controversial—than the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders, popularly known as the Kerner Commission. Appointed by President Lyndon B. Johnson in July 1967 as a series of deadly riots convulsed African American neighborhoods in many U.S. cities, the commission had the task of explaining why the violence was occurring and what to do about it. Johnson was a strong supporter of Black rights and a champion of social reform to help poor people and minorities. The Kerner Commission Report, issued February 29, 1968, proposed many reforms to augment the Johnson administration’s efforts, but the president was not eager to follow to the recommendations because the Vietnam War had become so expensive that the country could no longer afford costly new social programs. In addition, the president worried that the Kerner Commission Report, which asserted that white racism was the primary cause of inner-city problems, would alienate white, middle-class support for the programs it proposed. As a result, even though the Kerner Commission claimed that racial problems were about to fracture American society, many of its recommendations went unheeded.

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