REMINDER: Join us for “From Bloody Sunday to Today: the Fight for the Right to Vote” March 9th at 7pm ET Robin Troutman 08 Mar 2021 10:55 EST
“The vote is the most powerful tool we have in a democratic society” -- Congressman John Lewis.

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Join us for “From Bloody Sunday to Today: the Fight for the Right to Vote”
To Register click here: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/3916146366165/WN_UmnkTAbzRpmCR441vWcJmw

On March 7, 1965, John Lewis, Hosea Williams and 600 civil rights marchers were viciously beaten and tear gassed by Alabama state and local police at the Edmund Pettus Bridge they embarked on a march from Selma to Montgomery to demand voting rights. “Bloody Sunday” ignited the conscience of the nation and led to the Voting Rights Act, passed five months later.

Today the fight to ensure every eligible American has the right to vote has taken on new urgency. Since the 2013 Supreme Court Decision, Shelby v. Holder, that removed federal oversight of states with long histories of voter suppression, there has been a dramatic rise in state laws that restrict peoples’ right to vote. In fact, since the 2020 election, state legislators have introduced four times as many bills to restrict people’s basic right to vote<https://votingrightslab.us4.list-manage.com/track/click?u=726a2570656bae04d06b099ef&id=67a06f5a9b&e=8e94979343> as last year.  This is terrible news for people with disabilities.

NACDD is pleased to co-sponsor “From Bloody Sunday to Today: The Fight for the Right to Vote (Register<https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/3916146366165/WN_UmnkTAbzRpmCR441vWcJmw> Here),” an in-depth conversation among nationally recognized experts, presented by the Workers Circle and the Center for Common Ground. The will be ASL and live captioning provided.

Presenters will look back at what it took to get the Voting Rights Act passed, how it expanded the vote, the ongoing attempts to subvert it, and how passing voting rights legislation in 2021 is an urgent matter of racial justice and critical to strengthening our democracy. You’ll leave this conversation equipped and inspired to take action.
This event is March 9th at 7:00pm ET

Robin Troutman (she/her)
Deputy Director
National Association of Councils on Developmental Disabilities
1825 K Street, NW, Suite 600
Washington, DC  20006
202.506.5813 Ext. 105 (Phone)
www.nacdd.org<http://www.nacdd.org/>
www.onevotenow.org<http://www.onevotenow.org/>
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