Orlando Sentinel

US urged to commit to King’s work

Voting rights, justice are key themes of messages on holiday

- By Jeff Martin and Michael Warren

ATLANTA — Americans must commit to the unfinished work of Martin Luther King Jr., delivering jobs and justice and protecting “the sacred right to vote, a right from which all other rights flow,” President Joe Biden said Monday.

Martin Luther King Day is a moment when a mirror is held up to America, the president said in a video address.

“It’s time for every elected official in America to make it clear where they stand,” Biden said. “It’s time for every American to stand up. Speak out, be heard. Where do you stand?”

Major holiday events included marches in several cities and the annual Martin Luther King Jr. service at the slain civil rights leader’s Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, where Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-Ga., is the senior pastor. Pews have been packed by politician­s in past years, but given the pandemic, many offered pre-recorded speeches.

This holiday marks what would have been the 93rd birthday of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., who was 39 when he was assassinat­ed in 1968 while helping sanitation workers strike for better pay and workplace safety in Memphis, Tennessee.

King’s eldest son criticized Biden and Congress as a whole on Monday for failing to pass voting rights legislatio­n, even as 19 GOP-led states have made it harder to vote in response to former President Donald Trump’s false claims about election-rigging.

“You were successful with infrastruc­ture, which is a great thing — but we need you to use that same energy to ensure that all Americans have the same unencumber­ed right to vote,” Martin

Luther King III said.

Senate Republican­s remain unified in opposition to the Democrats’ voting bills. Biden described their stonewalli­ng as part of “a true attack on our democracy, from the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on to the onslaught of Republican anti-voting laws in an number of states.”

“It’s no longer just about who gets to vote. It’s about who gets to count the vote. And whether your vote counts at all. It’s about two insidious things: voter suppressio­n and election subversion,” Biden said.

Vice President Kamala Harris spoke virtually to the Ebenezer service, saying that “in Georgia and across our nation, anti-voter laws are being passed that could make it more difficult for as many as 55 million Americans to vote ... that is one out of six people in our country.”

“We know that this assault on our freedom to vote will be felt by every American, in every community, in every political party,” she said.

Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina, the Senate’s only Black Republican, countered with a series of King Day-themed videos he said would emphasize positive developmen­ts on civil rights. Scott sidesteppe­d criticism about GOP actions and accused Democrats of labeling his party members as racists.

“To compare or conflate people who oppose his positions as being racists and traitors to the country is not only insulting and infuriatin­g, it’s dead wrong,” Scott told The Associated Press.

Warnock, now running for reelection as Georgia’s first Black senator, said in his speech to the sparse crowd at Ebenezer that “everybody loves Dr. King, they just don’t always love what he represents.”

“Let the word go forth, you can not remember Dr. King and dismember his legacy at the same time,” Warnock said. “If you will speak his name, you have to stand up for voting rights, you have to stand up on behalf of the ... oppressed and the disenfranc­hised.”

King, who delivered his historic “I Have a Dream” speech while leading the 1963 March on Washington and was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964, considered racial equality inseparabl­e from alleviatin­g poverty and stopping war.

 ?? BEN GRAY/AP ?? People march past a mural of the late Rep. John Lewis of Georgia, a key figure in the American civil rights movement, during a Martin Luther King Jr. Day event Monday in Atlanta.
BEN GRAY/AP People march past a mural of the late Rep. John Lewis of Georgia, a key figure in the American civil rights movement, during a Martin Luther King Jr. Day event Monday in Atlanta.

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