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Harris called the site hallowed ground on which people fought for the “most fundamental right of America citizenship: the right to vote.”
“Today, we stand on this bridge at a different time,” Harris said before a cheering crowd of thousands.
“We again, however, find ourselves caught in between. Between injustice and justice. Between disappointment and determination. Still in a fight to form a more perfect union. And nowhere is that more clear than when it comes to the ongoing fight to secure the freedom to vote.” The nation’s first female vice president — as well as the first African American and Indian American in the role — spoke of marchers whose “peaceful protest was met with crushing violence.
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“In a moment of great uncertainty, those marches pressed forward and they crossed,” Harris said. ”We must do the same. We must lock our arms and march forward. We will not let setbacks stop us. We know that honouring the legacy of those who marched then demands that we continue to push Congress to pass federal voting rights legislation.” President Joe Biden on Sunday renewed his call for the passage of voting legislation.
“The battle for the soul of America has many fronts. The right to vote is the most fundamental,” Biden said in a White House statement. In Selma, a crowd gathered hours before Harris was scheduled to speak.
Rank-and-file activists of the civil rights movement, including women who fled the beatings of Bloody Sunday, were seated near the stage. The milestone of Harris becoming the nation’s first Black female vice president seemed unimaginable in 1965, they said.
“That’s why we marched,” Betty Boynton, the daughter-in-law of voting rights activist Amelia Boynton, said.
“I was at the tail end and all of the sudden I saw these horses. Oh my goodness, and all of the sudden … I saw smoke. I didn’t know what tear gas was. There were beating people” Boynton said.
But Boynton said Sunday’s anniversary is tempered by fears of the impact of new voting restrictions being enacted.
“And now they are trying to take our voting rights from us. I wouldn’t think in 2022 we would have to do all over again what we did in 1965,” Boynton said.
Ora Bell Shannon, 90, of Selma, was a young mother during the march and ran from the bridge with her children. Ahead of Bloody Sunday, she and other Black citizens stood in line for days at a time trying to register to vote in the then white-controlled city, facing impossible voter tests and long lines.
“They knew you wouldn’t be able to pass the test,” Shannon recalled. Biden said the strength of the groundbreaking 1965 Voting Rights Act “has been weakened not by brute force, but by insidious court decisions.” The legislation, named for Lewis, who died in 2020, is part of a broader elections package that collapsed in the US Senate in February.
“In Selma, the blood of John Lewis and so many other courageous Americans sanctified a noble struggle. We are determined to honour that legacy by passing legislation to protect the right to vote and uphold the integrity of our elections, including the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act and the Freedom to Vote Act,” Biden said in a statement.
The US Supreme Court in 2013 gutted a portion of the 1965 law that required certain states with a history of discrimination in voting, mainly in the South, to get US Justice Department approval before changing the way they hold elections. The supporters of the end of preclearance said the requirement — while necessary in the 1960s — was was no longer needed. Voting rights activists have warned the end of preclearance is emboldening states to pass a new wave of voting restrictions. The sweeping legislation called the Freedom to Vote: John R. Lewis Act would restore the preclearance requirement and the put nationwide standards for how elections operate — such as making Election Day a national holiday and allowing early voting nationwide — establish rules for redistricting criteria.