How would passage of the Wade-Davis Bill have slowed the Reconstruction effort?


The Wade-Davis Bill created the Freedmen’s Bureau to relocate refugees in the South.

The Wade-Davis Bill granted pardons to former Confederates.

The Wade-Davis Bill required that a majority of prewar southern voters swear loyalty to the Union.

The Wade-Davis Bill established black codes to limit the rights of African Americans.

Respuesta :

The Wade-Davis Bill required that a majority of prewar southern voters swear loyalty to the Union. Lincoln's plan did not guarantee African American equality. The Wade-Davis Bill passed by the Radical Republicans demanded guarantees of African American equality. Lincoln killed this bill with a "pocket veto."Lincoln's plan did not guarantee African American equality. Only white male citizens who could take an ironclad oath attesting to their past loyalty could serve in state constitutional conventions. High-ranking civil and military officers of the Confederacy were excluded from political rights. State constitutions were required to abolish slavery. State governments were required to repudiate debts incurred during the war.

Answer:  The Wade-Davis Bill required that a majority of prewar Southern voters swear loyalty to the Union.

Further detail/context:

President Abraham Lincoln had proposed lenient approaches to Reconstruction.  Lincoln's plan would have required only 10% of a Southern state's voters to pledge loyalty to the Union, as well as recognizing the freedom of slaves.  

Senator Benjamin F. Wade (from Ohio) and Representative Henry W. Davis (from Maryland) proposed their bill in February, 1864, requiring at least 50% of a state's prewar voters (white males) to swear loyalty to the Union, as well as giving blacks the right to vote.  The measure passed Congress, but Pres. Lincoln did not sign it.  (That's called a "pocket veto.")  So for the time being that measure died.

After Lincoln was assassinated in 1865, the "Radical Republicans" in Congress (who wanted harsher terms imposed on the South) tended to get their way.  President Andrew Johnson vetoed the stern Reconstruction Acts passed by Congress, but Congress overrode his vetoes and implemented their plans.  Tension between Congress and Pres. Johnson also led to the House of Representatives bringing impeachment charges against him.  The Senate narrowly failed to convict Johnson, so he stayed in office.  But Congress was clearly running the show.