USA TODAY International Edition

Heirs keep making ‘ good trouble’

They’re fighting wave of state voting restrictio­ns

- Phillip M. Bailey and Deborah Barfield Berry

“He had more moral authority than anybody within Congress by virtue of the blood he shed. There is redeeming power in blood, you know? He had suffered, bled and got a concussion for the struggle.”

Jesse Jackson first met John Lewis in Greensboro, North Carolina, when the two were young civil rights activists fighting racial segregatio­n.

Both made the pilgrimage to the Southern city after four Black college students dared to sit at a Woolworth’s lunch counter in 1960 and politely ask for service. Those students, and the activists who flocked to them, inspired a generation of teenagers to break racist Jim Crow laws in the South and created the modern civil rights movement.

Jesse Jackson

Jackson was struck by how ordinary Lewis was – even when jumping to do extraordin­ary things.

“There was a certain average quality about him – an averagenes­s,” Jackson told USA TODAY. “He was one of the guys. He was not imposing. But he had that courage factor.”

Their friendship spanned six decades through historic marches, assassinat­ions and elections until Lewis died in July 2020 from pancreatic cancer.

Jackson, who was diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease in 2017, said Lewis, a Democratic representa­tive of Georgia, was troubled by the rise of laws making it harder to vote.

He said that if his friend were alive, the two would hold daily strategy sessions about what must be done in the

halls of power and the grassroots level.

“He had more moral authority than anybody within Congress by virtue of the blood he shed,” Jackson said. “There is redeeming power in blood, you know? He had suffered, bled and got a concussion for the struggle.”

Lewis’ death last year left a hole, not just in Congress but in the civil rights universe, according to friends and allies.

In the midst of arguably America’s most divisive debate on voting rights since the 1960s, the heirs to Lewis’ mantle wonder what and how is the best way to honor his legacy amid a swarm of new election laws that tighten the rules around the ballot box.

Many said the most productive course is for Congress to pass a bill bearing Lewis’ name that fortifies the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

Others contended that voting rights advocates must walk in Lewis’ footsteps by getting into “good trouble” in the way of state legislatur­es and Congress if swift action isn’t taken.

Leading up to the first anniversar­y of Lewis’ death, Rep. Joyce Beatty, D- Ohio, chairwoman of the Congressio­nal Black Caucus, locked arms with a group of activists Thursday to protest for a legislativ­e proposal that would expand voting rights.

“We will not be turned around. We will keep walking,” Beatty tweeted Thursday before being arrested by Capitol Police. “We will fight for freedom. We will fight for our right to vote!”

Not ‘ too radical’

Lewis’ biography is a map of almost every event to dismantle legal segregatio­n.

In 1961, he was one of the original Freedom Riders, a group of roughly a dozen trailblaze­rs who rode buses through the South’s segregated interstate system.

Two years later, Lewis, president of the Student Nonviolent Coordinati­ng Committee at age 23, was the youngest of the “Big Six” civil rights leaders who spearheade­d the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.

Jackson noted how Lewis’ speech during that demonstrat­ion was so fiery that older leaders insisted he change the language.

“They made him cut half of his speech out for being too radical for the crowd – it really wasn’t,” he said.

In 1965, Lewis participat­ed in the campaign in Selma, Alabama, which became known as “Bloody Sunday.”

Lewis and others led hundreds across the Edmund Pettus Bridge, where activists were tear- gassed by police. He almost died during the march after having his skull fractured, but the protest led to passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

Rep. Nikema Williams, D- Ga., who is four decades younger than Jackson, also has intimate memories of her late mentor.

She recalls him being an avid shopper who couldn’t resist visiting a Dillard’s. Without being invited, Lewis surprised her by attending her swearing- in ceremony when she was elected to the Georgia Senate in 2017.

“I knew that that meant that he was anticipati­ng big things for me, and I had a legacy to uphold, and he was going to be watching,” said Williams, who holds Lewis’ former congressio­nal seat.

“He wasn’t just that person that was going to be in your ‘ Amen corner,’ ” she said. “He would let you know if you needed to get it together and do something differently.”

Williams, like Lewis, isn’t afraid to throw her body in the way.

In 2018, while serving in the Georgia Legislatur­e, she was arrested at the state Capitol for protesting about uncounted ballots in the governor’s race.

“For Congressma­n Lewis, good trouble wasn’t just a tagline. It was a way of life,” she said. “And he would always tell us, you have to dramatize it.”

One way Williams and other House Democrats are doing that is by returning to Washington to huddle with a group of Texas Democratic state lawmakers, who left their special legislativ­e session to shut down an election bill backed by the GOP- controlled Legislatur­e that would make sweeping changes to voting rules in the state.

“Sometimes you do need to ruffle the feathers a little bit more,” said Kristin Fulwylie, managing director of Equal Ground, a Florida- based community activist group.

“John Lewis was all about good trouble, and good trouble is being vocal and being able to educate our communitie­s but also getting in the way,” Fulwylie said.

Williams said people are active in different ways, but the rising concerns about changes at the ballot box are creating a new engine of activism.

“I have my marching orders, and I hope that other people are taking heed,” she said.

What about Lewis bill?

President Joe Biden twice evoked Lewis’ name last week during a speech in Philadelph­ia, where he warned Americans about what he called Republican legislativ­e threats to voting.

Biden called it a “national imperative” for Congress to pass the For the People Act and the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancemen­t Act.

The proposal bearing the civil rights icon’s name hasn’t been introduced in Congress in the Democratic- controlled House.

Many of Lewis’ former colleagues said the bill should be brought to the floor as early as this month.

“We should get that done to honor Mr. Lewis’ legacy and secure voting rights for all people in our country because voting rights cannot wait,” said Rep. Joe Neguse, D- Colo.

Beatty was one of nine people arrested Thursday during the demonstrat­ion at the Capitol demanding that the Senate pass the For the People Act.

“Let the people vote,” a tweet from Beatty’s official account said. “Fight for justice.”

David Becker, an elections law expert, said the legislatio­n named for Lewis has the potential to garner bipartisan support.

“It’s an important bill,” said Becker, founder of the Center for Election Innovation & Research. “I also believe it’s an important part of the legacy of Rep. Lewis. ... I hope that both parties in Congress can come together and introduce that bill as soon as possible and tailor it as needed to get it passed to protect the voters in those states that are most likely to face discrimina­tion.”

The Lewis bill looks to restore parts of the Voting Rights Act.

Among its goals is to bring back a preclearan­ce formula that would require states with a history of racial discrimina­tion in their voting laws to obtain approval from the Justice Department or federal courts before making any election changes.

The Supreme Court struck down that part of the Voting Rights Act in 2013, ruling the formula was outdated. The court did not rule that the requiremen­t itself was unconstitu­tional.

Democrats in the House and Senate have held several hearings on voting rights, including one Wednesday.

Rep. G. K. Butterfield, D- N. C., chairman of the elections subcommitt­ee of the House Administra­tion Committee, expressed optimism that there will be more support for the Lewis bill than the For The People Act, which failed to get enough GOP backing last month to begin debate.

Among the changes supporters of the Lewis bill are considerin­g, Butterfield said, would be creating a national formula that would require federal oversight of any state election rule changes.

The congressma­n acknowledg­ed such a change would make it a challenge to get enough support in the Senate, and House Democrats first want to prove there’s still a problem for minorities voting in certain states.

He said that in August, his panel will send findings from its hearings to the House Judiciary Committee, which will write the legislatio­n.

“That’s what the art of politics is all about,” Butterfield said. “We have to get the formula first. Get it on paper. Get the thousands of pages of documentat­ion that we’re accumulati­ng, and we can make the case to our Senate friends.”

Ways to honor legacy

Nancy Wang, executive director of the Detroit- based Voters Not Politician­s, said Michigan activists have been on the front lines of resisting legislativ­e election changes in the wake of the 2020 election.

“We voters are doing every single thing we can in our seat to save our democracy from politician­s who are supposed to be serving us,” she said.

Carolyn DeWitt, president and executive director of Rock the Vote, said those fighting to expand voting access realize they must pull various levers at once.

“There is a resistance to this issue that necessitat­es multiple actions and multiple avenues for action,” she said. “Legislativ­e is one, protest is another, but whatever it is, I think there has to be amplification.”

Black Voters Matter, an activist group, ripped a page out of the Lewis- led Freedom Rides and conducted a weeklong bus tour through the South last month to push for action on the congressio­nal measures.

National and local voting rights leaders joined the organizati­on on the tour, including at a vigil in front of the Supreme Court and a rally on the National Mall near where Lewis spoke during the March on Washington in 1963.

Diallo Brooks, national field director for People for the American Way, a liberal advocacy group in Washington, said Biden should do more to persuade his former Senate colleagues to support voting rights legislatio­n.

“We want the president to lean in with everything he can and the White House can do,” he said. “It’s really urgent.”

Brooks and other advocates said that must include addressing the filibuster.

Liberal critics and Democratic lawmakers have argued that requiring the 60- vote threshold to advance measures in the Senate is an archaic legislativ­e maneuver that has historical­ly been used to block civil rights.

“It’s not one of those conversati­ons you just pass off. … We feel like they’ve taken some steps,” Brooks said. “We want to reiterate to them how important this is to folks.”

“People need to bring heat to that negotiatio­n,” DeWitt said.

Melanie Campbell, president and CEO of the National Coalition on Black Civic Participat­ion, said the political temperatur­e has surpassed a boiling point. She said the Senate vote last month not to start debate on the For the People Act should be as clear a sign as any that more direct action is necessary.

“When those senators did not vote to at least discuss voting rights, to me, that was a shot across the bow,” she said.

Campbell’s group, along with a coalition of faith, labor, social justice, voting rights and civil rights organizati­ons, hosted a campaign to call Senate offices.

The coalition demonstrat­ed Thursday on Capitol Hill where Beatty was arrested.

Campbell, who was also arrested, said much like Lewis and others did in the 1960s that the fight to protect voting rights will require increased activism to force change.

“Is it easy? No. But it wasn’t easy for our ancestors and our predecesso­rs,” said Campbell, who worked with Lewis on civil rights issues for years. “They gave us a road map. We need to use it. So as we think about him a year later talking good trouble. That’s what we have to get in. We have to all get in good trouble.”

 ?? HANNAH GABER/ USA TODAY ?? Marcia Johnson- Blanco of the Lawyers’ Committee says the Supreme Court cut voter rights.
HANNAH GABER/ USA TODAY Marcia Johnson- Blanco of the Lawyers’ Committee says the Supreme Court cut voter rights.
 ??  ?? Lewis
Lewis
 ?? ALEX WONG/ GETTY IMAGES ?? A Capitol Police officer leads away Rep. Joyce Beatty, D- Ohio, during a protest Thursday on Capitol Hill to advocate for voting rights legislatio­n in Congress.
ALEX WONG/ GETTY IMAGES A Capitol Police officer leads away Rep. Joyce Beatty, D- Ohio, during a protest Thursday on Capitol Hill to advocate for voting rights legislatio­n in Congress.

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