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Demonstrations to sweep the South over voting rights and redistricting (axios.com)

axios.com · 4 days ago · write a board post referencing this
A wave of voting rights battles and GOP redistricting fights is triggering a coordinated response across the South, with organizers preparing a "Summer of Action" campaign with marches that start this weekend. Why it matters: Organizers say the fight over congressional maps, voting access and political representation is accelerating in real time as states redraw political power ahead of November's midterms and the 2028 general election. The Supreme Court narrowed the Voting Rights Act in late April, making it harder to challenge maps on the basis of racial discrimination. Republican-led efforts in states like Tennessee and Alabama have targeted Democratic-leaning districts, particularly those anchored by Black voters in urban areas, for last-minute 2026 redistricting. Gov. Brian Kemp has called a special session to redraw Georgia's maps for 2028, and Gov. Tate Reeves said Mississippi Republicans will redistrict ahead of 2028 to draw out longtime Rep. Bennie Thompson's (D) seat. (edited) Zoom in: Organizers in Selma, Ala., are planning marches tied to the legacy of Bloody Sunday and the Edmund Pettus Bridge, framing this summer's demonstrations as a continuation of the civil rights movement. "This is an altar call," Black Voters Matter co-founder LaTosha Brown said during a national organizing call ahead of Saturday's event. Plans for marches are taking shape in Texas , where activists say rising living costs and concerns over representation are energizing younger Black voters. National organizing networks and "Day of Action" coalitions are coordinating marches, teach-ins and grassroots mobilization efforts across multiple states. Zoom out: Arndrea Waters King tells Axios that returning to Selma also serves as a way for people to "come together and rededicate" themselves amid rapidly changing voting battles. "The reality is, it simply is our turn in that long march toward freedom." Her husband , Martin Luther King III, questioned whether Americans are confronting deeper structural challenges around democracy itself: "How do you fight a system that is being manipulated not to work?" The other side: The marches come even as President Trump is making gains with Black voters despite posting racist videos , using racist rhetoric and advancing policies critics say erase slavery history and weaken voting rights. An Axios review of recent data shows breaks in the strong Black support for Democrats going back to John F. Kennedy's 1960 presidential run and Barack Obama's historic 2008 win. The intrigue: The South has become both the nation's population-growth center and one of its most contested political battlegrounds — making fights over representation and voting power increasingly consequential. What they're saying: Marc Morial, president of the National Urban League, tells Axios the recent court ruling and redistricting fights mark "the beginning of a summer of action." "This is going to require sustained pressure and agitation," Morial said. "There wil

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