Quote:
	
	
		
			
				
					Originally Posted by  bambino
					 
				 
				
			
		 | 
	
	
 
yes. and if the Wizard knew what he was talking about he'd know why Goldwater reluctantly did not vote for it. 
Stance on civil rights
 In his first year in the Senate, Goldwater was responsible for the  desegregation of the Senate cafeteria after he insisted that his black  legislative assistant, Katherine Maxwell, be served along with every  other Senate employee.
[36]
Goldwater and the Eisenhower administration supported the  integration of schools in the south, but Goldwater felt the states  should choose how they wanted to integrate and should not be forced by  the federal government. "Goldwater criticized the use of federal troops.  He accused the Eisenhower administration of violating the Constitution  by assuming powers reserved by the states. While he agreed that under  the law, every state should have integrated its schools, each state  should integrate in its own way."
[41]  There were high-ranking government officials following Goldwater's  critical stance on the Eisenhower administration, even an Army General.  "Fulbright's startling revelation that military personnel were being  indoctrinated with the idea that the policies of the Commander in Chief  were treasonous dovetailed with the return to the news of the strange  case of General 
Edwin Walker."
[42]
Goldwater repeatedly introduced amendments to labor bills that  would outlaw racial discrimination in labor unions, however, labor  unions successfully used their political influence to defeat Goldwater's  proposals. Goldwater voted in favor of both 
Civil Rights Act of 1957 and the 
24th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution but did not vote on the 
Civil Rights Act of 1960.
[43][44][45] While he did vote in favor of it while in committee, Goldwater reluctantly voted against the 
Civil Rights Act of 1964 when it came to the floor.
[46] Later,
 Goldwater would state that he was mostly in support of the bill,  but he disagreed with Title II and VII, which both dealt with  employment, making him infer that the law would end in the government  dictating hiring and firing policy for millions of Americans.[47]
Congressional Republicans overwhelmingly supported the bill, with  Goldwater being joined by only 5 other Republican senators in voting  against it.
[48][49]  It is likely that Goldwater significantly underestimated the effect  this would have, as his vote against the bill hurt him with voters  across the country, including from his own party. In the 1990s,  Goldwater would call his vote on the Civil Rights Act, “one of his  greatest regrets."
[35]