Black pastors move to counter new voter ID laws
By Adelle M. Banks Religion News Service
African-American clergy are joining forces with civil rights groups to push for increased voter registration ahead of the November election, spurred on by new voter laws they say re-strict opportunities for minorities to enter the voting booth.
“We must vote because we must counteract the corrupt and diabolical strategies of those who are trying to take away our vote by passing laws to suppress and diminish our voting rights,” said the Rev. Julius Scruggs, president of the National Baptist Convention, USA, at a news conference Wednesday (Sept. 5) during his denomination’s Annual Session in Atlanta.
Scruggs, leaders of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and top officials of four other Black Baptist groups gathered to rally against the new laws and continue longtime efforts to get Blacks registered to vote.
More than two dozen new voter laws have passed in 19 states since 2011, according to the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law. Some have been overturned but others remain on the books, such as a voter ID law in New Hampshire and proof of citizenship requirements in Alabama, Kansas and Tennessee. Proponents say they prevent fraud, while opponents say they are reducing access to the polling booth.
The voting laws — through which some states have reduced early voting or required government-issued identification to enter the polls — have changed some of the clergy’s voter education initiatives.
Rev. Al Sharpton’s National Action Network scheduled a luncheon during the Democratic National Convention to declare a “state of emergency over voter suppression” and call for Black pastors to spend the next 30 days helping people get IDs so turnout by Black and Latino voters “is not compromised.”
“We are targeting congregations across the country to let them know where the laws have been changed so they are not surprised,” said the Rev. W. Franklyn Richardson, chairman of NAN and of the Conference of National Black Churches.
His church network was addressed by Attorney General Eric Holder at a May meeting in Washington that focused on the new laws.
The Rev. Jamal-Harrison Bryant, pastor of Empowerment Temple in Baltimore, started the Empowerment Movement, a national network of African-American clergy that aimed to register 1 million voters starting Easter Sunday. Bryant said the initiative — initially to have each black church register 20 people that day — registered 100,000 on Easter and now has a total of 420,000 registered. But Bryant, who attended the Atlanta rally, had not given up on the million-voter milestone.
“I’m here at a Baptist convention as an AME,” the African Methodist Episcopal pastor said. “I’m trying to find 1 million Black people. They can be COGIC (Church of God in Christ), Pentecostal, United Methodist. It doesn’t matter.”
The NAACP estimates that 6 million African-Americans are eligible to vote but are not registered. In a new initiative, 34 churches have worked with the civil rights group to compare their membership rolls with local voter registration lists.
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