[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 39 (Monday, March 9, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Page S1328]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY OF BLOODY SUNDAY
Mr. LEAHY. Madam President, this past weekend, Americans gathered in
Selma, Alabama. They did that to mark the 50th anniversary of Bloody
Sunday. Many of us are old enough to remember that day when hundreds of
brave men and women marched across the Edmund Pettus Bridge. There,
they were savagely beaten because they dared to stand up for their
right to vote--a right that we in Vermont take as inalienable. Their
blood, their sweat, and their tears helped pave the way for the Voting
Rights Act. They ultimately helped move our Nation toward what is
supposed to be a ``more perfect Union.''
In commemorating the bravery of these foot soldiers for justice, we
are reminded of what we can accomplish if we stand on principle and we
come together, Republicans and Democrats, to do what is right. At a
time when lawmakers seem far too polarized on the most important issues
facing our Nation, I was encouraged to see leaders from both political
parties join President Obama and Congressman Lewis, and so many others
this weekend in Selma. President George W. Bush shared the stage with
President Obama to honor the brave men and women who inspired the
Nation and helped bring about historic change.
I was proud to work with President Bush on the reauthorization of the
Voting Rights Act, along with the Republican Chairmen of the House and
Senate Judiciary Committees, Congressman Sensenbrenner and Senator
Specter. We can see them on each side of President Bush in this picture
of the bill signing. We can see Congressman Sensenbrenner standing
there and the late Senator Specter standing there. I was standing over
here with my camera as one of the people who helped move the bill
through. President Bush had invited me to attend and I took this
photograph at the signing ceremony. I am going to give this photograph
to President Bush because it is the only photograph where we can
actually see his hand and his signature going down. That is because I
was the only person with a camera, standing behind the President. I
don't say that to praise my photographic ability; I say that to praise
President Bush for signing the bill.
In response to the Supreme Court's Shelby County decision--a decision
where five members of the Supreme Court decided they had a far better
idea than virtually all House Members and Senators--I have been working
with Congressman Sensenbrenner on bipartisan legislation that would
restore the Voting Rights Act. This is so that President Obama can sign
a bill as President Bush did. Unfortunately, no Republican Senator has
yet stepped forward to join me in introducing this legislation in the
Senate.
The Republican Party of 2006, along with their President, reached
across the aisle to advance the cause of voting rights, saying they
were not there for any particular party, they were there for all
Americans. I am still hopeful the Republican Senate of 2015 will
continue the bipartisan tradition that President Bush and Republican
leaders did in 2006.
The civil rights milestones we celebrate this month can't be just
historical discussions to be talked about in a history class somewhere.
The plain reality is that racial discrimination in voting still exists
in this country. Chief Justice Roberts acknowledged that very fact in
his opinion in Shelby, and he asked Congress to update the Voting
Rights Act. I wish we had not had the Shelby decision--I think it was
wrong on many counts--but the majority in the Supreme Court voted that
way. I agree with the Chief Justice that it is time for us in the
Congress--Republicans and Democrats alike--to act.
In his inspirational speech in Selma on Saturday, President Obama
noted that 100 Members of Congress had come to Selma to honor people
who died for the right to vote. He then laid out a challenge by saying,
``If we want to honor this day, let that hundred go back to Washington
and gather 400 more, and together, pledge to make it their mission to
restore the Voting Rights Act this year. That's how we honor those
people on this bridge.''
I agree with him. We should come together, as this body has done so
many times before, to restore the Voting Rights Act and to reaffirm our
steadfast commitment to equal protection under the law.
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