Biden to commemorate Bloody Sunday in Alabama

President Joe Biden.
President Joe Biden. Oliver Contreras/Sipa/Bloomberg via Getty Images
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President Biden will visit Selma, Alabama, on Sunday to mark the 58th anniversary of a violent attack against civil rights activists attempting to cross the Edmund Pettus Bridge.

The president is expected to deliver a speech on voting rights and the ongoing effort by Democrats to protect access to the ballot box. White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters that Biden would "highlight how the continued fight for voting rights is integral to delivering economic justice and civil rights for Black Americans," per The New York Times.

The anniversary will mark one of the most defining moments of the 1960s, when protesters attempted to march across the bridge in an attempt to shine a light on efforts in Alabama to restrict Black voting. They were met with a violent response by Alabama state troopers, who beat them with clubs, chased them on horseback, and deployed tear gas in an attempt to drive them from the bridge.

The day, which has become immortalized as "Bloody Sunday," was called a "seminal moment in the civil rights movement" by The Associated Press. The images of peaceful protesters being beaten caused outrage among Americans, and helped spur the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 just five months later.

The courage of the protesters "inspired many to join the fight for civil rights," Vice President Kamala Harris said in a statement. "If we are to truly honor the legacy of those who marched in Selma on Bloody Sunday, we must continue to fight to secure and safeguard the freedom to vote."

Speaking in Selma in 2013, Biden, then the vice president, said that during Bloody Sunday, "we saw in stark relief the hatred, discrimination and violence that still existed in large parts of the nation."

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