The White House says Selma Marches shaped voting rights
Key points
- Commemorates 61st Selma Marches
- Commits to voter ID legislation and election safeguards
TL;DR
- Commemorates 61st anniversary of the Selma Marches and salutes the marchers' courage
- Details administration actions to safeguard elections: strengthen voter citizenship verification, promote paper ballots, and ban foreign nationals from interfering
- States commitment to signing proof-of-identification voting legislation and links the commemoration to the 250th anniversary of American independence
Original text
Today marks the 61st anniversary of the Selma Marches—a defining chapter in our Nation’s righteous crusade for equal justice under the law. Beginning on March 7, 1965, thousands of civil rights advocates marched along U.S. Highway 80 in Alabama, traveling from Selma to the State Capitol in Montgomery to demand an end to unjust practices that denied African American citizens the right to vote. It was a painful moment ...
Key tags
Topics
- Civil Rights
- Voting Rights
- Election Security
- + 2 more
Keywords
- Selma Marches
- Selma
- Montgomery
- + 5 more
Stats
Word count: 328
Summary words: 63
Compression: 19%
Boilerplate removed: Yes
Top phrases: