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Thousands Mark Selma March Anniversary Amid Voting Rights Act Case

Thousands commemorate the 1965 Bloody Sunday march as the Supreme Court reviews a case that could alter protections under the Voting Rights Act, organizers and leaders warn.

  • Thousands have gathered in Selma this weekend, and the commemorative march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge is set to conclude the anniversary events, with legal stakes looming nearby.
  • Long ago, the March 7, 1965 violence known as Bloody Sunday shocked the nation and helped spur the Voting Rights Act's passage.
  • Charles Mauldin, 78, warned that past advances risk being eradicated and recalled brutalization by state authorities during the 1965 march.
  • The U.S. Supreme Court is expected to rule soon on a Louisiana case about the role of race in drawing districts, with a limiting ruling possibly enabling Republican-controlled states to redraw and roll back majority Black and Latino districts, as seen in Rep. Shomari Figures' 2024 win.
  • At the apex of the bridge, marchers encountered a large law enforcement presence, including officers on horseback, while organizers urged attendees to keep pressing forward like in 1965.
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KTVB broke the news in Boise, United States on Saturday, March 7, 2026.
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