Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Resolution to back movement fails

- HUNTER FIELD

The Arkansas Senate on Monday shot down a resolution in support of the Arkansas Poor People’s Campaign.

The resolution “recognizes and supports” the group that began organizing in 2017, reviving the 1968 campaign that Martin Luther King Jr. helped organize prior to his assassinat­ion.

However, several Republican senators questioned whether the group — which bills itself as “challengin­g the evils of systemic racism, poverty, the war economy, ecological devastatio­n and the nation’s distorted morality” — reflected King’s principles.

Sen. Joyce Elliott, D-Little Rock, who sponsored the resolution, said that history shows that the campaign follows King’s ideals.

“There is nothing in this resolution that is not a part of Dr. King’s legacy,” Elliott said. “Not a single thing.”

Sen. Trent Garner, R-El Dorado, spoke against the resolution, calling the revived Poor People’s Campaign “overtly political” and criticizin­g what he perceived as anti-police rhetoric from the campaign.

“We all in this body, I think, care deeply about the message that Martin Luther King had and the original Poor People’s Campaign and what they stood for,” Garner said. “If that was what was in this resolution in front of us today, I would support it, put my name on it, be proud to do it.”

The resolution passed on a voice vote, but several members objected, asking for a roll-call vote, which failed 9-14 along party lines with 10 senators not voting.

Sen. Jason Rapert, R-Conway, questioned references in the resolution to “systemic racism” and “the false moral narrative of Christian nationalis­m.”

“I would be happy to support a resolution that upholds Dr. Martin Luther King’s principles, but because of a lot of the questions here it makes it very difficult for me,” Rapert said

Sen. Linda Chesterfie­ld, D-Little Rock, said King was imprisoned for challengin­g norms at the time, and she challenged senators not to vote for or against any particular set of religious beliefs.

“We have in this country have almost establishe­d a theocracy where only Christian values are those that are valued,” Chesterfie­ld said. “Rather than recognizin­g that in this country the Establishm­ent Clause in the Constituti­on prohibits us from doing thusly.”

The Arkansas Poor People’s Campaign has demonstrat­ed often at the state Capitol, and its members have been arrested for nonviolent protests, Elliott said.

The group has also demonstrat­ed around Little Rock. Garner criticized its members for blocking traffic and holding signs with what he called anti-police messages.

Elliott closed for the resolution, urging those who revere King’s principles to vote for it.

“Do you really know Dr. King’s legacy?” she said. “Because if you know Dr. King’s legacy, you are not against this resolution. I don’t care how many times somebody stands up here and says this is not his legacy; doesn’t make it true.”

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