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Volume IV: Symbol of the Movement,
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Statement to the Press on Meeting with Richard M. Nixon13 June 1957 [Washington, D.C.]
I shall soon lay plans before the Southern Leaders Conference for launching a campaign to prepare three million Negroes to participate in the 1958 election. Across the South we now intend to extend the voting clinics to help Negroes overcome the contrived and artificial obstacles to their registering and voting. We hope the campaign will culminate in simultaneous mass attendance at the registration offices in ten cities across the South. In order to help this crusade for the extension of democracy and alleviate the possibilities of violence, I have today appealed to Vice President Nixon to do three things which I feel will immeasurably aid the cause of justice and freedom in our great nation. 1. To come South on a number of occasions to speak to the people of the South and to explain to them in moral terms that civil rights is the great crisis and issue of our time, thus to give strength to the Southern liberals who fear to speak out or act with understanding and equality. 2. To urge all Southerners, Negro and white, to uphold the Unites States Constitution by supporting the Negroes' right to vote, and refraining from manipulation of devices to disenfranchise Negro citizens, many of whom have never voted in their lives. 3. To call together all Republican Representatives and Senators to impress upon them the importance of passing the civil rights bill now before Congress, not only because failing to do so will create social disunity at home and confusion about American democracy abroad, but primarily because the achievement of civil rights is a moral imperative. Our nation cannot exist as a democracy half slave and half free. We hope that the Vice President will see his way clear to do these things, not only in the interest of Negroes but to aid all Americans, Negro and white, who are victims of the civil rights crisis. Because the question of civil rights is one of such paramount importance to our nation at home and abroad, and (is) {thus} of necessity beyond partisan politics, I have therefore suggested to Vice President Nixon that he be accompanied by the Chairman of the Senate Sub-Committee on Consitutional Rights, Senator Thomas J. Hennings, Jr. In this campaign we shall urge Negroes to hold unswervingly to non-violence in word, thought and deed. Under these conditions we cannot fail, for as we move peacefully towards our goal without rancor and without bitterness, the spirit of good-will that a campaign of this nature will generate will be a boon to the spiritual growth and the democratization of our nation. TD. MLKJP-GAMK: Box 107. |