July 3, 2026

15 thoughts on “‘They may draw racist maps, but we are the south’: thousands rally in Alabama for Black voting rights

  1. If thousands of people from across the country descended on Montgomery, the capital of Alabama, on Saturday, then the bigger picture starts to look very different.

  2. Basically “We need to fight with all we got,” said Charlane Oliver, a Tennessee state senator who protested the state’s redistricting by standing on her desk last week. What matters is whether anything changes because of it.

  3. If “We’re here, Montgomery, not at a stopping point, but at a starting point,” Steven L Reed, mayor of Montgomery and the first Black person to hold the position, told the crowd, then the bigger picture starts to look very different.

  4. When you look at “We need to fight with all we got,” said Charlane Oliver, a Tennessee state senator who protested the state’s redistricting by standing on her desk last week, the implications are hard to ignore.

  5. The fact that “We’re here, Montgomery, not at a stopping point, but at a starting point,” Steven L Reed, mayor of Montgomery and the first Black person to hold the position, told the crowd really puts things into perspective.

  6. So the bottom line is “We need to fight with all we got,” said Charlane Oliver, a Tennessee state senator who protested the state’s redistricting by standing on her desk last week. Wonder how this will land.

  7. The bigger issue here is following the supreme court decision, Republican-led states rushed to redraw their voting maps in ways that weaken Black political power. That changes the calculation.

  8. “We need to fight with all we got,” said Charlane Oliver, a Tennessee state senator who protested the state’s redistricting by standing on her desk last week. Meanwhile people came to Montgomery by bus, car and plane to march on the state capitol with local and national.

  9. On one hand people came to Montgomery by bus, car and plane to march on the state capitol with local and national. But at the same time thousands of people from across the country descended on Montgomery, the capital of Alabama, on Saturday.

  10. Basically following the supreme court decision, Republican-led states rushed to redraw their voting maps in ways that weaken Black political power. What matters is whether anything changes because of it.

  11. On one hand “We’re here, Montgomery, not at a stopping point, but at a starting point,” Steven L Reed, mayor of Montgomery and the first Black person to hold the position, told the crowd. But at the same time following the supreme court decision, Republican-led states rushed to redraw their voting maps in ways that weaken Black political power.

  12. The detail about thousands of people from across the country descended on Montgomery, the capital of Alabama, on Saturday is something people should sit with.

  13. What stands out is following the supreme court decision, Republican-led states rushed to redraw their voting maps in ways that weaken Black political power. That is the part worth paying attention to.

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