P1 1WHEREAS, March 7, 2015, will mark 50 years since the brave
2Foot Soldiers of thebegin insert Selmaend insert Voting Rights Movement first attempted
3to march from Selma to Montgomery on Bloody Sunday in protest
4against the denial of their right to vote and were brutally assaulted
5by Alabama state troopers; and
6WHEREAS, Beginning in 1964, members of the Student
7Nonviolent Coordinating Committee attempted to register
8begin delete African-Americansend deletebegin insert African Americansend insert to vote throughout the State
9of Alabama; and
10WHEREAS, These efforts were designed to ensure that every
11American citizen would be able to exercise their constitutional
12right to vote and have their voices heard; and
13WHEREAS, By December of 1964, many of these efforts
14remained unsuccessful. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., working with
15leaders from the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and
16the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, began to organize
17protests throughout Alabama; and
18WHEREAS, On March 7, 1965, over 500 voting rights marchers,
19known as Foot Soldiers, gathered on the Edmund Pettus Bridge
20in Selma, Alabama, in peaceful protest of the denial of their most
21sacred and constitutionally protected right--the right to vote; and
22WHEREAS, Led by John Lewis of the Student Nonviolent
23Coordinating Committee and Rev. Hosea Williams of the Southern
P2 1Christian Leadership Conference, these Foot Soldiers began the
2march towards the Alabama State Capitol in Montgomery,
3Alabama; and
4WHEREAS, As the Foot Soldiers crossed the Edmund Pettus
5Bridge, they were confronted by a wall of Alabama state troopers
6who brutally attacked and beat them; and
7WHEREAS, Americans across the country witnessed this tragic
8turn of events as news stations broadcast the brutality on a day
9that would be later known as Bloody Sunday; and
10WHEREAS, Two days later, on Tuesday, March 9, 1965, nearly
112,500 Foot Soldiers led by Dr. Martin Lutherbegin delete Kingend deletebegin insert King, Jr.,end insert risked
12their lives once more and attempted a second peaceful march
13starting at the Edmund Pettus Bridge. This second attempted march
14was later known as Turnaround Tuesday; and
15WHEREAS, Fearing for the safety of these Foot Soldiers who
16received no protection from federal or state authorities during this
17second march, Dr. King led the marchers to the base of the Edmund
18Pettus Bridge and stopped. Dr. King kneeled and offered a prayer
19of solidarity and walked back to the church; and
20WHEREAS, Lyndon B. Johnson, inspired by the bravery and
21determination of these Foot Soldiers and the atrocities they
22endured, announced his plan for a voting rights bill aimed at
23securing the precious right to vote for all citizens during an address
24to Congress on March 15, 1965; and
25WHEREAS, On March 17, 1965, one week after Turnaround
26Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Frank M. Johnson ruled that the Foot
27Soldiers had a First Amendment right to petition the government
28through peaceful protest and ordered federal agents to provide full
29protection to the Foot Soldiers during the Selma to Montgomery
30Voting Rights March; and
31WHEREAS, Judge Johnson’s decision overturned Alabama
32Governor George Wallace’s prohibition on the protest due to public
33safety concerns; and
34WHEREAS, On March 21, 1965, under the court order, the U.S.
35Army, the federalized Alabama National Guard, and countless
36federal agents and marshals escorted nearly 8,000 Foot Soldiers
37from the start of their heroic journey in Selma, Alabamabegin insert,end insert to their
38safe arrival on the steps of the Alabama State Capitol Building on
39March 25, 1965; and
P3 1WHEREAS, The extraordinary bravery and sacrifice these Foot
2Soldiers displayed in pursuit of a peaceful march from Selma to
3Montgomery brought national attention to the struggle for equal
4voting rights, and served as the catalyst for Congress to pass the
5Voting Rights Act of 1965, which President Johnson signed into
6law on August 6, 1965; now, therefore, be it
7Resolved by the Senate of the State of California, That to
8commemorate the 50th anniversary of thebegin insert Selmaend insert Voting Rights
9Movement and the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, it is
10befitting for the California State Senate to commemorate March
117, 2015, in honor of the Foot Soldiers who participated in Bloody
12Sunday, Turnaround Tuesday, or the final Selma to Montgomery
13Voting Rights March during March of 1965, which served as a
14catalyst for the Voting Rights Act of 1965; and be it further
15Resolved, That the Secretary of the Senate provide copies of
16this resolution to the author for appropriate distribution.
O
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