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Front PageUSTHE GUARDIAN
US

‘We’re going backwards’: Black political power under threat in Alabama after Voting Rights Act gutting

THE GUARDIAN·May 27 ago·3 min read
Photograph via The Guardian
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US supreme court ruling could eliminate two majority-Black districts and entrench Republican control from Congress to county school boardsAlabama has long been considered the birthplace of the voting rights movement in America.During a peaceful voting rights demonstration in 1965, an Alabama state trooper shot and killed church deacon Jimmie Lee Jackson. In response, about 600 marchers set out from Selma, across the Edmund Pettus Bridge, toward the state capitol building in Montgomery to demand the right to vote. What met them on the other side – state troopers on horseback, billy clubs, teargas and a sheriff’s posse – was broadcast that evening on national television. Continue reading…

US supreme court ruling could eliminate two majority-Black districts and entrench Republican control from Congress to county school boardsAlabama has long been considered the birthplace of the voting rights movement in America.During a peaceful voting rights demonstration in 1965, an Alabama state trooper shot and killed church deacon Jimmie Lee Jackson. In response, about 600…

US supreme court ruling could eliminate two majority-Black districts and entrench Republican control from Congress to county school boardsAlabama has long been considered the birthplace of the voting rights movement in America.During a peaceful voting rights demonstration in 1965, an Alabama state trooper shot and killed church deacon Jimmie Lee Jackson. In response, about 600 marchers set out from Selma, across the Edmund Pettus Bridge, toward the state capitol building in Montgomery to demand the right to vote. What met them on the other side…

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