[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 7 (Tuesday, January 12, 2016)]
[House]
[Page H283]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
VOTING RIGHTS ACTIVIST SHEYANN WEBB-CHRISTBURG JOINS CONGRESSWOMAN
SEWELL AT PRESIDENT OBAMA'S FINAL STATE OF THE UNION ADDRESS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Alabama (Ms. Sewell) for 5 minutes.
Ms. SEWELL of Alabama. Mr. Speaker, today I rise on Restoration
Tuesday to honor my guest to tonight's State of the Union Address. Ms.
Sheyann Webb-Christburg of Montgomery, Alabama, will be joining me as
my special guest to President Obama's final State of the Union Address.
Sheyann was 8 years old and was one of the youngest foot soldiers who
marched from Selma to Montgomery. I believe that Sheyann is the
embodiment of the struggle for voting rights equality in Alabama and in
America.
On this Restoration Tuesday, it is my sincere hope that her presence
will remind us of the modern-day fight for ensuring that every American
citizen has access to the ballot box.
At an early age, Sheyann recognized that America had failed to live
up to its own promise by depriving African Americans of their sacred
right to vote. Sheyann's bravery reminded those around her that they
are fighting for the next generation--her generation--as fervently as
they were fighting for their own. Her courage also made it possible for
me to represent our hometown of Selma in Congress.
On a personal level, I am thankful to call Sheyann my friend and
mentor. She was my childhood babysitter, so I literally grew up in her
shadow.
Her presence at President Obama's final State of the Union should
once again remind us of the gravity of our responsibility to protect
the vote for all Americans. Since the civil rights era ended, there are
now modern-day barriers to voting. Since the Supreme Court struck down
section 4 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 in 2013, my office has made
restoring this critically important section one of our top priorities.
For the past 3 years, my State of the Union guest has represented a
different aspect of the voting rights movement:
In 2014, my guest to the State of the Union was Selma's mayor, George
Evans. As mayor of the birthplace of the Voting Rights Act, he
represented the dynamic role Selma and her leaders have played in the
fight for voter equality.
In 2015, I invited the 104-year-old Amelia Boynton Robinson as my
guest to the State of the Union. As the matriarch of the voting rights
movement, Amelia challenged an unfair and unjust system that kept
African Americans from exercising their constitutionally protected
right to vote. I will always cherish the time we spent together when
she honored me as my special guest.
I think it is befitting that since last year my special guest was the
oldest living foot soldier, that my guest this year would be the
youngest living foot soldier--Sheyann Webb.
All of these individuals have paved the way for me to accomplish all
that I have today, and I am forever grateful. Their legacy should
inspire us not to take for granted the very sacred vote, and that is
the right to vote. Their sacrifices remind us that there is much more
work to be done, and my hope is that this Chamber will take on the
challenge of doing that work.
We should try to restore the Voting Rights Act of 1965. I think that
our work begins even today. I hope that Sheyann Webb, as my special
guest to the State of the Union, will remind all of us that it is
really important that we protect the sacred right to vote.
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