The Norwalk Hour

King’s daughter slams twisting of critical race theory, pushes for voting rights legislatio­n

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ATLANTA — Martin Luther King Jr.’s daughter used an address Monday to push for federal voting rights legislatio­n and slam the twisting of critical race theory to create what she called “false narratives.”

The Rev. Bernice King said there is a “very urgent need” for voting legislatio­n, and that it is “crucial to humanity across the globe that the United States of America stands as a democratic nation.” Her remarks came ahead of a scheduled visit Tuesday to Georgia by President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris to talk about voting rights.

“I also know that there are many people who are not as urgently concerned about that unfortunat­ely,“King said during the address at The King Center in Atlanta to announce events for the upcoming holiday in honor of her father. “There’s a wind of discontent for some and a wave of apathy for others that has settled into the hearts and minds of not only an increasing number of people in the United States, but throughout the world.”

Voting legislatio­n backed by Democrats is currently stalled in the U.S. Senate in the face of Republican opposition, and the party is mounting an effort to change the chamber’s rules to get it passed. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, DN.Y., has set the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday on Jan. 17 as the deadline to either pass the voting legislatio­n or consider revising the rules. King said she was frustrated by the lack of progress on voting rights, but she believed legislatio­n would pass and urged dialogue with Republican­s.

“This is not just a Black issue,” she said. “This is an issue about democracy.”

King also addressed critical race theory, a way of thinking about America’s history that centers on the idea that racism is systemic in the nation’s institutio­ns and that they function to maintain the dominance of white people in society. Republican-controlled states have invoked it in legislatio­n restrictin­g how race can be taught in public schools, and it’s become a lightning rod for the GOP.

She said the nation needed a shift in priorities that “helps us understand we can’t commemorat­e my father on the one hand while also promoting false narratives under the banner of critical race theory.”

She added: “CRT is not the problem. Racism is the problem, poverty or extreme materialis­m is the problem and militarism, war is the problem.”

 ?? Robert Ray / Associated Press file photo ?? Bernice King at the King Center, in Atlanta in 2018. Martin Luther King Jr.’s daughter used an address on Monday to push for federal voting rights legislatio­n and slam “false narratives under the banner of critical race theory.”
Robert Ray / Associated Press file photo Bernice King at the King Center, in Atlanta in 2018. Martin Luther King Jr.’s daughter used an address on Monday to push for federal voting rights legislatio­n and slam “false narratives under the banner of critical race theory.”

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