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Later the president headed to Boston in support of the Senate candidacy of state Attorney General Martha Coakley, who is in a tight race for the seat long held by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, who died in August. Coakley's defeat would upend the Democrat's 60-vote majority in the Senate, making it impossible to overcome a filibuster that could kill hard-fought health care legislation. Obama was accompanied to the church by first lady Michelle Obama and their daughters, Sasha and Malia. King himself spoke in 1956 at Vermont Avenue Baptist Church, located just over a mile north of the White House. Then a 27-year-old preacher who was emerging as a prominent voice in the civil rights movement, King visited Washington shortly after the Supreme Court sided with a ruling that led to the end of racial segregation aboard city buses in Montgomery, Ala. King was one of the leaders of a bus boycott that lasted more than a year. Monday's King holiday will be the first that Obama, the first black president, will commemorate as the nation's leader.
[Associated
Press;
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