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Essay: In the US, the Black Church has been getting ‘souls to the polls’ for more than 60 years

US election North Carolina early voters

In an article first published on The Conversation, DAVID D DANIELS III, professor of church history at McCormick Theological Seminary in the US, looks at how Black churches have historically been involved in encouraging congregants to vote…

At Black churches up and down the US, religious slogans have been supplanted with another message in the run up to 3rd November: Vote!

The landscape of the 2020 general election has been dotted with efforts by the Black Church – churches that have traditionally had predominantly African American congregation – to encourage voter registration, mobilisation and protect against efforts to suppress the vote.

US election North Carolina early voters

  Early voters wait to cast their ballots at the South Regional Library polling location in Durham, North Carolina, on Thursday, 15th October. PICTURE: AP Photo/Gerry Broome/File photo.

Under slogans including “Souls to the Polls,” “AME Voter Alert” and “COGIC Counts,” Black denominations and national bodies such as the Conference of National Black Churches have partnered with civil rights organisations including the NAACP in a concerted effort to increase voter turnout among African Americans.

The push comes amid deliberate tactics to make it harder for Black and Latino Americans to vote, including purges of voter rolls in communities of colour, strict voter ID rules and restrictions on polling places. As a historian, I know these tactics are nothing new – nor is the role of Black Churches in countering these moves.

“Black church-led campaigns to expand and protect voting among African American reaches back to the years following the Civil War. At political forums held in churches, clergy educated congregants on political issues, regularly running for elected office themselves.”

Black church-led campaigns to expand and protect voting among African American reaches back to the years following the Civil War. At political forums held in churches, clergy educated congregants on political issues, regularly running for elected office themselves.

“Give us the ballot”
Modern efforts picked up momentum during the years after World War II, especially during the era of the civil rights movement in the 1950s and 1960s. Most African Americans were denied the right to vote prior to the 1965 Voting Rights Act being signed into law. As a result, Black Americans were grossly under-represented in the political system while simultaneously marginalised within the economy and social order through racial segregation laws.

In 1957, churches and civil rights organizations got together to sponsor the “Prayer Pilgrimage of Freedom” demonstration in Washington, DC. Organised to celebrate the third anniversary of the Supreme Court’s Brown v Board of Education decision, which ruled school segregation unconstitutional, the event became a rallying cry for voting rights.

Speaking at the Lincoln Memorial, Martin Luther King, Jr, framed the issue of voting, racial progress, and democracy in these terms:
“Give us the ballot and we shall no longer have to worry the Federal government about our basic rights.
“Give us the ballot and we will by the power of our vote write the laws on…the statute books of the southern states and bring to an end the dastardly acts of the hooded perpetrators of violence.
“Give us the ballot and we will fill our legislative halls with men of goodwill.
“Give us the ballot and we will place judges on the benches of the South who will do justly and have mercy.”

The speech came at a time when barriers to Black voting ranged from poll taxes, literacy tests to the use of voter intimidation.

To King and other civil rights leaders, the Black Church was a key institution within the pro-democracy movement. They believed its reach could be harnessed to eradicate the barriers to voting and expand accessibility of voting and enlarge the number of voters.

Rise of the PACs
A lot of Black Church-based voter registration efforts in the following decades took place under the Voter Education Project, which lasted from 1962 to 1992. The project sponsored citizenship education, voter registration and mobilisation, as well as research on voting among African Americans.

Black denominations such as the African Methodist Episcopal Church also worked alongside black sororities and fraternities, civil rights agencies, masonic lodges and labor unions in voter projects such as “Operation Big Vote” and “Wake Up, Black America” to encourage voter turnout.

Meanwhile churches often served as locations for voter registration strategy meeting and forums.

A D V E R T I S E M E N T


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In addition to the Voter Education Project, churches and civil rights organisations worked together to set up political action committees to push for voting rights. Political scientist Ronald E Brown has described how in cities like Detroit, The Black Slate Political Action Committee and The Fannie Lou Hamer Political Action Committee were established as “church-based political action committees” advocating “on behalf of the poor and powerless during electoral campaigns.”

These PACs emerged during the 1970s and 1980s. They led voter registration and turn-out campaigns, provided education on political issues and endorsed candidates. Both remained active even into the 2020 general election cycle.

The “Souls to the Polls” movement began in Florida during the 1990s. The concept was to organise caravans after church service on the Sunday prior to Election Day to transport Black congregants to early voting locations. By the early 2000s, the NAACP, Black denominations and other organizations had transformed “Souls to the Polls” into a national movement.

Record turnout
Such initiatives along with the passing of the Civil Rights Act helped increase national Black voter turnout from 40 per cent in 1960 to 60 per cent in 1984, according to political scientist Zulema Blair.

Obama’s re-election garnered the highest percentage of Black voter turnout, reaching 66.6 per cent of eligible Black voters in 2012. This was one percentage point higher than the actual white voter turnout – a new threshold for Black voter mobilisation.

But with the US Supreme Court eliminating part of the Voting Rights Act in 2013, Black Church-based voter registration and “turnout the votes” campaigns have been hampered by voter suppression efforts that have included new voter ID requirements, the reducing of early voting days, the ending of same-day registration, the disenfranchisement of citizens with felony records , and the closing of over 1,600 polling sites across the nation.

The voter suppression has kick-started a renewed focus on protecting the right to vote in addition to voter registration and mobilisation spearheaded by organisations such as the Black Church PAC and Black denominations such as the African Methodist Episcopal, Full Gospel Baptist, Church of God in Christ, and Church of Our Lord Jesus Christ. Meanwhile, the Conference of National Black Churches along with advocacy groups the National Action Network and The Collective have launched “Black Church 75” – which aims to get 75 per cent of all Black church members registered to vote.

With a dual approach of concentrating on the 2020 general election and future planning for the 2022 and 2024 elections, the Black Church continues to work to expand and strengthen democracy in the United States, tapping into its rich history of securing voting rights for all US citizens.

McCormick Theological Seminary is a member of the Association of Theological Schools.The Conversation The ATS is a funding partner of The Conversation US.

David D Daniels III, is professor of church history ay McCormick Theological Seminary This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

 

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