The Sentinel-Record

Alabama Senate candidate Jones reaches out to black voters

- JEFF AMY KIM CHANDLER

SELMA, Ala. — Speaking at the scene of the one of the climactic confrontat­ions of the civil rights movement, Alabama Democrat Doug Jones on Saturday again made his pitch that Alabama’s black and white voters have unified concerns that he can best represent.

“They face more issues in common,” Jones said after walking during Selma’s Christmas parade. “They face issues of health care, they face issues of education, they face issues of jobs.”

Trying to be the first Democrat elected to the U.S. Senate from Alabama in 25 years is an uphill fight for Jones, a white attorney with working-class roots who has to gain the support of both white and black voters.

Jones needs to peel away moderate GOP support from the deeply conservati­ve Roy Moore, who has maintained a dedicated evangelica­l following, despite multiple allegation­s of sexual misconduct against underage girls. But black voters are key to any hopes the Democrats have of victory. The 23 percent of registered voters who are African-American are the bedrock of the Alabama’s Democratic party, and a poor turnout by those voters could sink Jones.

Voting and voting rights are ever-present in Selma, which lives daily with the legacy of 1965’s Bloody Sunday, when state troopers beat civil rights demonstrat­ors at the Edmund Pettus Bridge. Televised scenes of those beatings galvanized national opinion and helped spur Congress to pass the Voting Rights Act. Jones walked past the west end of the bridge Saturday, across the Alabama River from where the confrontat­ion took place.

African-Americans in Dallas County are heavily Democratic. But it’s unclear if black residents of Selma and Alabama will be energized to vote for Jones in the numbers he needs. Some voters Saturday said they were turned off by the campaign’s conflict, and weren’t sure whether Jones would be able to have an impact in Republican-controlled Washington.

“Really, he probably can’t do anything,” said 57-year-old Lorenzo Simmons, an African-American who works at a silicon metal foundry and intends to vote for Jones. “It’s probably more about the body as a whole.”

Jones acknowledg­ed that such fatalism can keep people from the polls.

“We’ve got to let them know that they have a partner, somebody who’s going to be working for them, that’s going to be a voice for them and to try to reach out to those communitie­s,” he said Saturday. “It’s not an easy task with any segment of the population that gets very cynical, in this state in particular.”

Aware of the odd dynamics of a special election held during the holiday season — when voters’ minds are more often on football or shopping than politics — Jones’ campaign has launched an effort to get out the vote that includes radio, billboards and neighborho­od canvassing. The Alabama chapter of the NAACP and a collaborat­ion of majority-black fraterniti­es and sororities also have launched a drive aimed at getting those younger voters to the polls.

State Sen. Hank Sanders, a Democrat from Selma, said he had concerns that Jones wasn’t reaching enough black voters, but believes he is doing better recently in that effort.

Partly to reach black voters, Jones has emphasized his role leading the prosecutio­n against the two Klansmen who bombed Birmingham’s 16th Street Baptist Church in 1963, killing four little girls.

The campaign has also specifical­ly targeted millennial African-Americans with ads emphasizin­g positions on education and the economy.

Tommy Edwards, a frequent Democratic campaign volunteer in Tuscaloosa, shook hands with Jones at a barbecue restaurant after the parade. Edwards said intends to drive people to the polls.

“The black voters are going to decide this,” Edwards said. “We’ve got to get the people to the polls.”

Jones’ focus on “kitchen table” issues connects better with some black voters who said they’re turned off by Moore, even though in many cases they share Moore’s evangelica­l Christian faith. Barbara Lewis of Selma said she worries about the education her grandchild­ren are getting in the city’s public schools.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? CAMPAIGN TRAIL: Democratic Senate candidate Doug Jones stops along the campaign trial to greet volunteers, Wednesday in Montgomery, Ala. Jones is trying to shore up support among black voters in his U.S. Senate race against Republican Roy Moore by...
The Associated Press CAMPAIGN TRAIL: Democratic Senate candidate Doug Jones stops along the campaign trial to greet volunteers, Wednesday in Montgomery, Ala. Jones is trying to shore up support among black voters in his U.S. Senate race against Republican Roy Moore by...

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