Chattanooga Times Free Press

Alabama voters approve bid to cut racist phrases from constituti­on

- BY JAY REEVES

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Alabama voters have approved an amendment that would begin the process of deleting racist language from the state’s 119-year-old constituti­on, which was approved to entrench white supremacy as state law during the Jim Crow era.

Voters in the majority white, conservati­ve state rejected similar proposals twice since 2000, but the measure passed easily in balloting Tuesday.

Glenn Crowell, a retired restaurate­ur and registered Republican who is Black, said he voted to strip away the old phrasing, which the amendment’s sponsors viewed as an embarrassm­ent and potential roadblock to economic developmen­t.

“I just want to get rid of that language. It just doesn’t make any sense nowadays,” said Crowell, 63, of Montgomery.

Courts have long since struck down the legalized segregatio­n that was enshrined in the 1901 Alabama Constituti­on, but language banning mixedrace marriage, allowing poll taxes and mandating school segregatio­n remains.

With more than 1.7 million votes cast, the amendment passed with 67% support. That means more than 585,000 people

voted against it. The ballot didn’t mention race, and some voters might not have even known what the amendment involved.

Gov. Kay Ivey didn’t take an official position on any of six amendments that were on the ballot, including the anti-racism measure.

Passage eased the fears of supporters who worried that conservati­ve backlash to the Black Lives Matter movement could hurt the proposal, which qualified for the ballot with bipartisan legislativ­e support months before nationwide demonstrat­ions erupted in the wake of the police killing of George Floyd.

Called Amendment 4, the proposal allows state officials to recompile the constituti­on without the racist language. Partly because even local issues require constituti­onal changes, the document already has been amended 948 times and is considered the nation’s longest constituti­on.

Statehouse workers will create a draft to excise offensive wording, although sponsors said it was unclear exactly how much might be removed. Legislator­s then will consider the updated document in 2022, and voters would have to approve the changes again before they take effect.

Aside from cutting racist phrasing, the amendment also allows the Legislatur­e to remove repeated language and combine sections related to economic developmen­t or specific counties.

Informatio­n technology specialist Phillip Evans, who is Black and voted for Democrat Joe Biden for president, voted for the change.

“That wasn’t one of the major ones that I was looking at it but I saw it in there and I was like, ‘Yeah, that makes sense,’” said Evans, 41.

 ?? AP PHOTO/ALABAMA DEPARTMENT OF ARCHIVES AND HISTORY ?? Alabama’s 1901 constituti­on was intended to maintain white supremacy in the state.
AP PHOTO/ALABAMA DEPARTMENT OF ARCHIVES AND HISTORY Alabama’s 1901 constituti­on was intended to maintain white supremacy in the state.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States