Civil rights questions cloud "Bloody Sunday" anniversary in Selma
Advocates are gathering in Selma, Alabama, this weekend to mark the 60th anniversary of "Bloody Sunday" amid fears of a rollback on voting and civil rights.
Why it matters: The commemoration comes just days after President Trump gutted nearly all federal affirmative action programs while ordering agencies to dismantle diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives.
- Meanwhile, the once-routine reauthorization of the Voting Rights Act β a law initially inspired by the brutal beatings of protesters at the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma 60 years ago β remains stalled in Congress with little hope of passage under GOP control.
- A Trump executive order "ending radical indoctrination" in K-12 schools and new state laws limiting classroom discussions on race also make it unclear if teachers, even in Alabama, can even discuss events in Selma that led to one of the most dramatic moments of the Civil Rights Movement.
Zoom in: "The Annual Pilgrimage to Selma," a yearly reenactment of the 1965 crossing of Edmund Pettus Bridge for voting rights, is expected to draw tens of thousands of people Sunday.
- The event is sponsored by the nonprofit Bridge Crossing Jubilee, which will also host workshops, lectures and performances. Another group, Salute Selma, will host events on Black women and HBCUs.
Context: On March 7, 1965, future Congressman John Lewis and 600 other civil rights demonstrators crossed the bridge from Selma for a planned march to Montgomery to protest voting discrimination against Black Americans.
- State troopers violently attacked the unarmed demonstrators with batons and tear gas β images that shocked the nation and prompted President Lyndon Johnson to give an emergency address to Congress.
- The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. followed up with a three-day march from Selma to Montgomery under the protection of the Alabama National Guard, which was under federal control.
- Five months later, Johnson got Congress to pass the Voting Rights Act.

State of play: Civil rights advocates and Black elected leaders tell Axios the mood at the gathering this year likely will be a mixture of fear, dejection, defiance and renewal.
- "This moment feels both familiar and unfamiliar," Tennessee state Sen. Charlane Oliver tells Axios.
- "The threats we face today are even more dire because of who is in the White House."
NAACP President Derrick Johnson warns that fundamental rights and economic protections are being eroded β threatening hard-fought civil rights gains. He sees this moment as a pivotal test for democracy.
- "Selma was never just about the past," he said. "It's about the future β about whether we will protect what so many fought and died for."
- "The fight for voting rights was never just about ballots β it was about dignity. And today, policymakers are seeking to steal that dignity, whether by defunding essential programs or undermining our democracy."
Southern Poverty Law Center president and CEO Margaret Huang tells Axios this year's Jubilee feels like a commemoration and a call to action.
- "For the first time in years, there will be no federal participation in Jubilee. That's a signal about where civil rights and our legacy sit in this country."
- "This year, it's not just looking back. We're in it β right now."
The White House did not immediately respond to questions about whether anyone from the administration would attend the Selma gathering.
- Presidents Clinton, Obama and Biden have attended annual events in Selma.

The intrigue: On Wednesday, just days before the march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge, House Democrats reintroduced the John R. Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act, sponsored by U.S. Rep. Terri Sewell (D-Ala.).
- The legislation seeks to restore and modernize the Voting Rights Act of 1965 protections, addressing challenges that have arisen since the Supreme Court invalidated key provisions in its 2013 decision in Shelby County v. Holder.
- Sewell tells Axios that in recent years, state lawmakers have introduced over 300 restrictive bills β more than 20 of which became law β slashing polling places, cutting early voting, eliminating mail-in ballots, and tightening ID rules.
Between the lines: Since the events in Selma, the number of Black Americans elected in the U.S. has shot up from just a few in 1964 to about 9,000.
- Most Black Americans are aligned with the Democratic Party, but Black Republicans have won high-profile races in Kentucky, New Mexico and California.