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Mobilize for voting rights, by Marc H. Morial

12/23/2021, 6 p.m.
“After decades of struggle and a year of our leaders choosing the Jim Crow filibuster over our voting rights, our …
Marc H. Morial

“After decades of struggle and a year of our leaders choos- ing the Jim Crow filibuster over our voting rights, our time is now. On this day of action, I call on Congress and the White House to eliminate the filibuster and pass voting rights to protect millions of Black and Brown voters. The arc of the moral universe is long. Join me on January 17 to demand that it bends toward justice.” — Martin Luther King III

More than 55 years ago, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., led 2,000 marchers to the Edmund Pettis Bridge in Selma, Ala., where they knelt and prayed for an end to voter suppression. This MLK Day, his children will lead marchers to the Frederick Douglass Memorial Bridge in Washington, D.C., to culminate a weekend of action in defense of democracy.

Throughout MLK Day weekend, marches will take place around the nation on bridges, not only to recall the 1965 Selma to Montgomery marches and the historic “Bloody Sunday” attack on the Edmund Pettus Bridge, but also to contrast lawmakers’ inaction on voting rights with their success in enacting a $1 trillion infrastructure measure for roads, airports, seaports and bridges.

If Congress can deliver for bridges, it can deliver for voting rights.

Martin Luther King III, Arndrea Waters King and Yolanda Renee King, alongside more than 90 national and grassroots organizations, including the National Urban League, announced mobilizations on Martin Luther King Jr. Day to restore and expand voting rights to honor Dr. King’s legacy.

The actions will call on President Biden and the U.S. Senate to urgently pass federal voting rights legislation, including the Freedom to Vote Act and the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act, and ensure the Jim Crow filibuster doesn’t stand in the way.

Dr. King’s legacy reminds us that our right to vote was not easily won and it must be vigorously defended. It is a right that is foundational to our democracy. Last year, we saw what happens when we make voting more accessible for all and we were inspired. Those unpatriotic members of state legislatures who would seek to undermine voting rights saw it, too, and it scared them.

State lawmakers have introduced and enacted hundreds of anti-democratic voter suppression and election subversion bills since the 2020 election. These anti-democracy bills — introduced in direct response to Black and Brown voters showing up in record numbers — close polling centers, purge voter rolls, eliminate early voting and gerrymander Black and Brown voters into predominantly white districts.

Furthermore, the U.S. Supreme Court’s July decision in Brnovich v. DNC further gutted the federal Voting Rights Act,one of Dr. King’s signature achievements. Federal voting rights legislation will help overturn these Jim Crow-era state bills and put key protections in place.

The Freedom to Vote Act expands opportunities to vote, thwarts voter suppression, limits partisan gerrymandering, prevents election sabotage and promotes election security. The John R. Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act would restore a requirement in the Voting Rights Act that jurisdictions with recent histories of discrimination secure federal “preclearance” before altering their voting laws, and will enhance the ability of the U.S. Department of Justice and other stakeholders to challenge discriminatory voting laws.

President Biden and members of Congress no longer can stand by and allow American democracy to crumble. They must set a new national standard for voting and restore the Voting Rights Act of 1965 to its full strength,

even if that means reforming or eliminating the filibuster. Standing on the shoulders of Dr. King, Coretta Scott King, Whitney M. Young and many others, we must hold them accountable for doing so.

The MLK Day mobilizations will begin in Arizona on Jan. 15, Dr. King’s birthday, where the King family and local groups will rally supporters across Phoenix in alignment with the Arizona Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration Committee. On Jan. 17, the family and hundreds of others will cross the Frederick Douglass Memorial Bridge and join the annual D.C. Peace Walk: Change Happens with Good Hope and a Dream.

For more information about the weekend of mobilizations, visit www.deliverforvotingrights.com.

The writer is president and chief executive officer of the National Urban League.