A person sings a spirtual music throughout a voting rally, Saturday, Could 16, 2026, in Montgomery, Ala.
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Mike Stewart/AP
MONTGOMERY, Ala.— In 1965, Black Individuals peacefully demonstrated for voting rights and had been overwhelmed by Alabama state troopers earlier than returning two weeks later to finish their march below federal safety. Keith Odom was a toddler then.
Now 62 years previous, the union man and grandfather of three retraced a few of their remaining steps. On Saturday, he got here from Aiken, South Carolina, to Atlanta, the place he joined a number of dozen different activists on two buses to Montgomery, Alabama. A couple of hours later, he stepped off his bus and onto Dexter Avenue, the place the unique march concluded.
“The historical past right here — being part of it, seeing it, feeling it,” stated Odom, who’s Black.

His voice trailed off as he noticed the Alabama Capitol and a stage that sat roughly the place the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. concluded the unique march.
Odom lamented that he and his fellow bus riders weren’t merely commemorating that seminal day within the Civil Rights Motion. As a substitute they got here to resume the combat. The 1965 effort helped push Congress to ship the Voting Rights Act to Democratic President Lyndon B. Johnson to signal, securing and increasing political energy for Black and different nonwhite voters for greater than a half-century.
Saturday’s “All Roads Result in the South” rally was the primary mass organizing response after a U.S. Supreme Court docket ruling that severely diminished that landmark legislation. Placing down a majority Black congressional district in Louisiana, the justices concluded in a 6-3 ruling that contemplating race when drawing political strains is in itself discriminatory. That spurred a number of states, together with Alabama, to redraw U.S. Home districts in ways in which make it tougher for Black voters, who lean overwhelmingly Democratic, to elect lawmakers of their alternative.
“I am not making an attempt to stay a life that is going backwards,” Odom stated. “I wish to go ahead, for my grandchildren to have the ability to go ahead.”
Keith Odom, a forklift driver from Aiken, S.C., seems to be out from his bus seat as he arrives in Montgomery, Ala., for a voting rights rally Saturday, Could 16, 2026.
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An previous political battle is new once more
The passenger rosters and the scene when riders arrived in Montgomery sounded the echoes and rhymes of previous and current.
“I talked to my grandmother earlier than I got here, and she or he was so excited,” stated Justice Washington, a Kennesaw State College pupil named as a result of her mom and grandmother had religion within the American system. “My grandmother informed me she did her half, and now it is time for me to do mine.”
Nobody on the Atlanta buses had reached voting age when the Voting Rights Act grew to become legislation. The youngest attendee was born as Democrat Barack Obama was elected the primary Black president in 2008.
Kobe Chernushin is eighteen, white and simply graduated highschool in Atlanta’s northern suburbs. He’s an organizer with the Georgia Youth Justice Coalition and spent the day filming Khayla Doby, a 29-year-old government for the group, doing standups for the group’s followers on social media.
“I consider within the energy of exhibiting up,” he stated.

The buses launched from the congressional district in Georgia as soon as represented by John Lewis, bloodied on the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama, when he was 25. Lewis died in 2020, however some on the buses Saturday celebrated {that a} proposed federal election overhaul is called for him. If some Democrats get their approach, the invoice would override the U.S. Supreme Court docket, reinvigorate the Voting Rights Act and outlaw the form of gerrymandering competitors that Republican President Donald Trump has instigated.
“I am right here due to the identical forces that pulled on John Lewis when he was a pupil,” stated Darrin Owens, 27. He has labored for former Vice President Kamala Harris and now trains Democratic candidates.
“Political activism is private,” Owens stated, explaining that he attended Saturday as a citizen, not a political skilled. “Generally these strains are blurred, and as a Black particular person in America, a Black particular person residing in a Southern state, I am dedicated to motion that stops what I think about to be un-American, this risk that the one who represents me is somebody who will not be from my neighborhood and doesn’t perceive me or my neighborhood.”
When he arrived, Owens noticed no federal authorities on Montgomery’s streets. A wounded, recovering Lewis did through the second march in 1965.
This time most of the Alabama troopers and native officers who walked the realm had been Black.
The buses and sandwich lunches had been organized by Honest Combat Motion, a legacy of the political community constructed by Georgia Democrat Stacey Abrams, who grew to become a nationwide determine in her unsuccessful runs in 2018 and 2022 to turn out to be the primary Black girl elected governor in U.S. historical past. No Black girl has but achieved that feat.
Bee Nguyen, left, talks to Carole Burton, heart, and Tondalaire Ashford at a voting rights rally Saturday, Could 16, 2026, in Montgomery, Ala.
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Totally different generations share their tales
At totally different factors, Montgomery has branded itself because the cradle of the Confederacy and the cradle of the fashionable Civil Rights Motion.
“It seems like our nation is caught on this sample of creating progress, then there’s an enormous backlash, after which folks must undergo the identical battle once more simply to get to the place we had been,” stated Phi Nguyen, the 41-year-old daughter of Vietnamese refugees. She is now a civil rights lawyer in Atlanta.
She stood throughout from the church the place a younger King led the Montgomery Bus Boycott in 1955 and never removed from the place Jefferson Davis took the oath of workplace in 1861 because the slavery-defending Accomplice president.
Nguyen and her sister Bee, a 44-year-old who served within the Georgia Basic Meeting and ran for statewide workplace, met two different girls as they walked. Carole Burton and Tondalaire Ashford are 72-year-old Montgomery residents who’ve been buddies since they had been in a segregated junior highschool after which newly desegregated Sidney Lanier Excessive College.
“I do not name it ‘integration,'” Ashford stated, pointing at her darkish pores and skin. “It was by no means actual integration, and it is not like we are able to ever simply mix in.”
Burton described them as being “within the second wave” of Black college students. “It wasn’t simple,” she stated. “And we needed to help one another.”
They bear in mind their mother and father not having the ability to vote within the period of ballot taxes, literacy exams and different racist restrictions that the Voting Rights Act finally outlawed. However they smiled as they swapped household histories with the Nguyens.
Burton stated immigrants, descendants of enslaved individuals and Native Individuals have totally different however overlapping paths. “We simply wish to be handled like folks with the identical rights and alternatives the nation has promised us,” she stated. “They’ve by no means totally lived as much as it.”
Aaron McGuire sings a spirtual music throughout a voting rally, Saturday, Could 16, 2026, in Montgomery, Ala.
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Conflicting legacies are at stake
To Odom, who had begun his journey Saturday in South Carolina, the present U.S. Supreme Court docket strengthened that historical past by refusing to see some race-conscious election coverage as a approach to make sure honest illustration, not merely the “technical proper to vote.”
He recollects a long time of his life being represented by Strom Thurmond, a segregationist Democratic governor who grew to become a “Dixiecrat” presidential candidate and U.S. senator — by now as a Republican — into the twenty first century. Odom stated he fears his state dropping U.S. Rep. Jim Clyburn, a senior member of the Congressional Black Caucus, via redistricting.
“They wish to take away that legacy once we’re nonetheless residing with Strom’s?” Odom stated.
Odom stated he’s additionally frightened that the younger individuals who participated Saturday should not a vanguard however outliers.
“I used to be speaking to a 20-year-old co-worker about this journey,” he stated. “She informed me she supported me however did not wish to do it or work for anyone” working for workplace. “She questioned what any of them are going to do for her.”
Nonetheless, he stated on the best way house, “I am nonetheless going to inform her what I noticed and what I heard.”

