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Civil Rights Leaders Plan Washington March Over Voting Rights

Civil Rights Leaders Plan Washington March Over Voting Rights
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A coalition of civil rights leaders has announced plans to hold a march in Washington, D. C.

, on August 28, 2026, to defend voting rights.

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The demonstration follows a series of federal and Supreme Court rulings that weakened protections against racial discrimination in U.

S. elections.

March on Washington 2026

Reverend Al Sharpton’s National Action Network is spearheading the event, titled "March on Washington 2026: Defend the Vote."

The date coincides with the 63rd anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr.’s historic speech.

The initiative has drawn support from Martin Luther King III, Arndrea Waters King, and the Congressional Black Caucus.

Ongoing disputes over minority political representation across several states have fueled the push for the march.

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"Defending the vote means defending the foundation of our democracy," said Martin Luther King III, Chairman of the Drum Major Institute.

"Sixty-three years after my father stood at the Lincoln Memorial, we are called to march again, not only in remembrance, but in action."

The demonstration intensified after an April 2 Supreme Court ruling struck down Louisiana’s congressional map and altered Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act.

Multiple states have since redrawn their districts.

Organizers have planned a symbolic return to the site of the original 1963 demonstration to continue advocacy efforts for modern voters.

"We return to the ground where a quarter million Americans once stood for jobs and freedom, and we carry their unfinished work into a new generation," said campaign organizers.

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In Alabama, federal judges recently upheld a redistricting process that will eliminate one of the state's two majority-Black districts for the upcoming midterm elections.

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Editors Team
Author: Angkasa Pura
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