The Commercial Appeal

Voter turnout decreases in Selma

Participat­ion in 2020 election was under 57%

- Jay Reeves

SELMA, Ala. – Fewer and fewer people are voting in Selma, Alabama. And to many, that is particular­ly heartbreak­ing.

They lament that almost six decades after Black demonstrat­ors on the city’s Edmond Pettus Bridge risked their lives for the right to cast ballots, voting in predominan­tly Black Selma and surroundin­g Dallas County has steadily declined. Turnout in 2020 was under 57%, among the worst in the state.

“It should not be that way. We should have a large voter turnout in all elections,” said Michael Jackson, a Black district attorney elected with support from voters of all races.

Thousands will gather March 6 for this year’s re-enactment of the bridge crossing to honor the foot soldiers of that “Bloody Sunday” in 1965. Downtown will resemble a huge street festival during the event, known as the Selma Bridge Crossing Jubilee, with thousands of visitors, blaring music and vendors selling food and T-shirts.

Another Selma event, less celebrator­y and more activist, was held last year by Black Voters Matter. It aimed to boost Black power at the ballot box.

But the issues in Selma – a onetime Confederat­e arsenal located west of Montgomery in Alabama’s old plantation region – defy simple solutions.

Some cite a hangover from decades of white supremacis­t voter suppressio­n, others a 2013 Supreme Court ruling that gutted key provisions of federal voting law to allow current GOP efforts to tighten voting rules. Some Black voters, who tend to vote Democratic, simply don’t see the point in voting when every statewide office is held by white Republican­s who also control the Legislatur­e.

Then there is what some describe as infighting between local leaders, and low morale in a crime-ridden town with too many pothole-covered streets, abandoned homes and vacant businesses. All are considered factors that contribute­d to a 13% population decline over the last decade in a town where more than one-third live in poverty.

Despite visits from presidents, congressio­nal leaders and celebrity luminaries like Oprah Winfrey – and even the success of the 2014 historical film drama “Selma” by Ava Duvernay – Selma never seems to get any better.

Resident Tyrone Clarke said he votes when work and travel allow, but not always. Many others don’t because of disqualify­ing felony conviction­s or disillusio­nment with the shrinking town of roughly 18,000 people, he said.

“You have a whole lot of people who look at the conditions and don’t see what good it’s going to do for them,” Clarke said. “You know, ‘How is this guy or that guy being in office going to affect me in this little, rotten town here?’ ”

But something else seems to be going on in Selma and Dallas County. Other poor, mostly Black areas have not seen the same drastic decline in turnout. Only one of Alabama’s majority Black counties, Macon, the home of historical­ly Black Tuskegee University, had lower voter turnout than Dallas in 2020.

Selma is hardly the only place where large Black majorities don’t always translate to big voter turnout. The U.S. Census Bureau found that a racial gap persisted nationwide in voting in 2020, with about 71% of white voters casting ballots compared to 63% of eligible Black people.

A majority of Dallas County’s voters are Black, and Black people made up 68% of the county’s vote in 2020, state statistics show. But white voters had a disproport­ionately larger share of the county electorate compared to Black voters, records showed.

Jimmy L. Nunn, a former Selma city attorney who became Dallas County’s first Black probate judge in 2019, said the community is weighted down by its own history.

“We have been programmed that our votes do not count, that we have no vote,” said Nunn, who works in the same county courthouse where white, Jim Crow officeholders refused to register Black voters, helping inspire the protests of 1965. “It is that mindset we have to change.”

Selma entered voting rights legend because of what happened at the foot of the Edmond Pettus Bridge, which is named for a onetime Confederat­e general and reputed Ku Klux Klan leader, on March 7, 1965. After months of demonstrat­ions and failed attempts to register Black people to vote in the white-controlled city, a long line of marchers led by John Lewis, then a young activist, crossed the span over the Alabama River headed toward the state capital of Montgomery to present demands to Gov. George C. Wallace, a segregatio­nist. State troopers and sheriff’s posse members on horseback stopped them.

A trooper bashed Lewis’ head during the ensuing melee and dozens more were hurt. Images of the violence reinforced the evil and depth of Southern white supremacy, helping build support for the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

In the following decades, Selma became a worldwide touchstone for voting rights, with then-president Barack Obama speaking at the 50th anniversar­y of Bloody Sunday in 2015.

However, after more than 66% of Dallas County’s voters went to the polls in 2008, when Obama became the nation’s first Black president, turnout fell in each presidenti­al election afterward.

A Black member of the county’s Democratic Party executive committee, Collins Pettaway III ponders how to get young voters like Mendenhall more engaged. Older residents who remember Bloody Sunday and the subsequent Selma-to-montgomery voting rights march vote, he said, but turnout is falling away among younger generation­s.

“We just have to try to really make it relevant for them and really get them to see the importance through their lens,” said Pettaway, 32, the son of a county judge.

This year, the commemorat­ion of Bloody Sunday will include a “hip-hop political summit” aimed at helping make voting more relevant and giving voice to the reality that many people have given up on the system because they seldom see their votes making a difference in their daily lives, he said.

“There are so many people who feel they have been disenfranc­hised, and they believe that the system is working against them. We cannot dispute it and we cannot make them feel that is wrong, because it is true,” Pettaway said. “We have to let them know and find a way for them understand that the only way that is going to change is if they participat­e in the process.”

 ?? BUTCH DILL/AP FILE ?? Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Ala., is the site of 1965’s “Blood Sunday.”
BUTCH DILL/AP FILE Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Ala., is the site of 1965’s “Blood Sunday.”

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