Roy Moore Led Charge Against Removing Segregation From Alabama Constitution
By CAMERON JOSEPH Published OCTOBER 13, 2017 6:00 AM
In 2004, a bipartisan coalition of Alabama leaders moved to eliminate sections of the state constitution mandating school segregation and poll taxes. They assumed itd be an easy feat until Roy Moore got involved.
Democrats and Republicans led by then-Gov. Bob Riley (R) worked together on an amendment to remove language in the state constitution mandating separate schools for white and colored children and allowing poll taxes, Jim Crow-era requirements that people to pay to vote that disenfranchised most black people.
The changes were purely symbolic all of the state constitutional language had already been struck down by state and federal courts but civil rights and business leaders saw it as a way to heal old wounds and make the state more attractive to big business.
The opposite happened instead, and Moores fierce opposition likely made the difference.
He had a huge impact. It was a measure that was set to pass without much opposition and then because he got involved it changed the dynamic completely, said Susan Kennedy of the Alabama Education Association, the state public teachers lobby that supported the amendment.
more
http://talkingpointsmemo.com/dc/roy-moore-led-charge-against-removing-segregation-from-alabama-constitution