The right answer is televised debates.
The 1960 election elevated the role of images over substance. Both campaigns hired sophisticated marketing specialists to shape the media coverage of the candidates. Television played a crucial role. During the first of four debates, few significant policy differences surfaced, allowing viewers to shape their opinions more on matters of appearance and style. Some 70 million people watched this first-ever televised debate. They saw an obviously uncomfortable Nixon, still weak from a recent illness, perspiring heavily and looking pale, haggard, uneasy, and even sinister before the camera. Kennedy, on the other hand, appeared tanned and calm, projected a cool poise, and offered crisp answers that made him seem equal, if not superior, in his fitness for the nation’s highest office. Kennedy’s popularity immediately shot up in the polls.
Answer:
They are too young. They might not be able to do jobs and tasks as such the older men do. They might not be as fit and might slow things down.
Answer: Help keep the public informed about issues
Most Civil Rights are achieved when the group does it peacefully, have a lot of people backing them up, and the cause seems right.
If the group uses violence, many people would think of it as an uprising instead of a group of people trying to get equality
hope this helps