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1 | | HOUSE RESOLUTION
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2 | | WHEREAS, The right to vote is one of the most fundamental |
3 | | rights afforded to American
citizens; and
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4 | | WHEREAS, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. proclaimed "The denial |
5 | | of this sacred right is a tragic
betrayal of the highest |
6 | | mandates of our democratic traditions and it is democracy |
7 | | turned upside
down"; and
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8 | | WHEREAS, Despite receiving the right to equal protection |
9 | | under the law with the Fourteenth
Amendment and the right to |
10 | | vote with the Fifteenth Amendment to the United States |
11 | | Constitution, ratified
in 1868 and 1870, respectively, African |
12 | | Americans in the country's southern states were
routinely |
13 | | intimidated, harassed, and assaulted when they tried to |
14 | | register to vote; and |
15 | | WHEREAS, On May 17, 1957, in the Prayer Pilgrimage for |
16 | | Freedom, nearly 25,000
demonstrators gathered at the Lincoln |
17 | | Memorial in Washington, D.C. to urge the federal
government to |
18 | | stand by the U.S. Supreme Court's 1954 Brown vs. Board of |
19 | | Education decision
declaring segregation in public schools to |
20 | | be unconstitutional; it was at the Prayer Pilgrimage for
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21 | | Freedom that a young civil rights leader, Dr. Martin Luther |
22 | | King, Jr., called for voting rights for
African Americans in |
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1 | | his Give Us The Ballot speech, launching the issue to national |
2 | | attention
and introducing Dr. King as the pre-eminent national |
3 | | leader of the civil rights movement; and |
4 | | WHEREAS, While the federal Civil Rights Act of 1964 ended |
5 | | segregation in public places and
ended discrimination on the |
6 | | job, it did not abolish "voter qualification" and thus did not |
7 | | curb the
use of literacy tests, poll taxes, economic |
8 | | retaliation, repression from authorities, and physical
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9 | | violence against African-American voters; and |
10 | | WHEREAS, In 1964, many demonstrations were held demanding |
11 | | voting rights for African
Americans, often accompanied by |
12 | | considerable violence against non-violent protesters, bringing
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13 | | renewed attention to the issue of the constitutionally |
14 | | guaranteed right to vote; and |
15 | | WHEREAS, On February 18, 1965, while participating in a |
16 | | peaceful voting rights march in
Marion, Alabama, Jimmie Lee |
17 | | Jackson, an unarmed voting-rights protestor, was beaten by
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18 | | Alabama state troopers and fatally shot by a state trooper; the |
19 | | tragedy inspired a march from
Selma to Montgomery, Alabama to |
20 | | bring the issue of voting rights to Governor George
Wallace's |
21 | | front door; and |
22 | | WHEREAS, On March 7, 1965, a peaceful demonstrators |
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1 | | attempted to march from Selma to
Montgomery, Alabama, only for |
2 | | participants to be attacked at the Edmund Pettus Bridge by |
3 | | state
troopers with billy clubs and tear gas; and |
4 | | WHEREAS, On March 9, 1965, after a second march attempt, |
5 | | civil rights activist James Reeb, a
white Unitarian minister |
6 | | from Boston who had come to Selma with many other clergy and
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7 | | sympathizers from around the country, was beaten to death, |
8 | | bringing national calls for voting
rights and inspiring |
9 | | President Lyndon B. Johnson to take action; and |
10 | | WHEREAS, President Johnson called for the Voting Rights Act |
11 | | in front of a joint session of
Congress on March 15, 1965, |
12 | | invoking the words of the protestors as he declared, "We shall
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13 | | overcome"; and |
14 | | WHEREAS, Congressman John Lewis of Georgia's 5th |
15 | | Congressional district was pivotal in
the success of the Civil |
16 | | Rights Movement and continues to lead this country as a member |
17 | | of the
United States House of Representatives; and |
18 | | WHEREAS, The Voting Rights Act of 1965 was introduced in |
19 | | the U.S. Senate as S.1564 by
Republican Sen. Everett Dirksen of |
20 | | Illinois and Democratic Sen. Mike Mansfield of Montana on
March |
21 | | 17, 1965; and |
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1 | | WHEREAS, On March 21, 1965, protected by 2,000 soldiers of |
2 | | the U.S. Army, 1,900 members
of the Alabama National Guard |
3 | | under federal command, and FBI agents and federal marshals,
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4 | | 8,000 people began the 54-mile journey along U.S. Route 80 from |
5 | | Selma to Montgomery; and |
6 | | WHEREAS, On March 25, 1965, 25,000 people completed the |
7 | | march at the steps of the
Alabama State Capitol Building; and
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8 | | WHEREAS, The Voting Rights Act of 1965 passed the U.S. |
9 | | Senate on May 26, 1965, and
passed the House of Representatives |
10 | | on July 9, 1965, and was signed into law by President
Johnson |
11 | | on August 6, 1965; and
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12 | | WHEREAS, The fight for civil rights continues throughout |
13 | | the nation today; therefore, be it
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14 | | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE |
15 | | NINETY-NINTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we |
16 | | recognize the 50th
Anniversary of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 |
17 | | on August 6, 2015; and be it further
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18 | | RESOLVED, That the State of Illinois honors all of the |
19 | | individuals and organizations that helped
fight for and pass |
20 | | this legislation, as well as the memories of those who died in |
21 | | peaceful protests
for their right to vote.
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