Civil rights leaders and King family mark MLK Day as a special call to 
		action as Trump takes office
		
		 
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		 [January 20, 2025]  
		By MATT BROWN 
		
		WASHINGTON (AP) — When President-elect Donald Trump is sworn in as 
		president of the United States inside the Capitol’s rotunda, he will do 
		so facing a bust of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. on the federal 
		holiday commemorating King’s legacy. 
		 
		It's a disquieting contrast for some civil rights advocates who wish to 
		fulfill the late reverend's dream of non-violent social revolution. 
		 
		Events honoring King and advocating for his vision of a just society 
		will occur across the nation as many in the U.S. observe the peaceful 
		transfer of power in the capital. The concurrent events have been met 
		with mixed feelings by civil rights leaders, who broadly reviled Trump’s 
		rhetoric and stances on race and civil rights during his third 
		presidential campaign. 
		 
		But many leaders, including King's own family, see the juxtaposition as 
		a poignant contrast and a chance to refocus the work of advancing civil 
		rights in a new political era. 
		 
		“I’m glad it occurred on that day because it gives the United States of 
		America and the world the contrast in pictures. Is this the way you want 
		to go — or is this the way you want to go?” said the Rev. Bernice King, 
		the late King’s youngest daughter and CEO of the King Center. 
		 
		“It’s not a day that he can be the star, which he loves to be,” King’s 
		daughter said of Trump. “He has to contend with that legacy on that day, 
		regardless of how he manages it and handles it in his presentation. I 
		hope those around him are advising him well to honor the day 
		appropriately in his speech.” 
		
		
		  
		
		This is the third time in the nearly 40 years since the federal King 
		holiday became law that it coincides with a presidential inauguration. 
		Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama also were sworn in for their 
		second terms on the holiday. Both praised King in their remarks; it is 
		yet to be seen if and how Trump — who falsely claimed his first 
		inauguration had larger crowds than King's March on Washington — will 
		acknowledge the day. 
		 
		“Will he sound a message of unity and a presidency for all, or will he 
		continue to focus on his base and some of the divisive policies he's 
		championed, like an anti-DEI stance, rounding up immigrants and cutting 
		important parts of the social safety net through this DOGE (Department 
		of Government Efficiency) process?” asked Marc Morial, president of the 
		National Urban League civil rights group. 
		 
		Morial added that Trump's inauguration landing on MLK Day represented “a 
		contradiction of values.” 
		 
		Many civil rights leaders will spend the day commemorating King’s legacy 
		after a week of public and private organizing, giving speeches and 
		strategizing how to respond to the incoming administration’s agenda. 
		 
		“It’s the best of times and the worst of times,” said Derrick Johnson, 
		president of the NAACP, an organization whose members mentored, 
		collaborated and clashed with King throughout the Civil Rights Movement. 
		 
		“Our mission doesn’t change. Our job is to make democracy work for all, 
		to make sure that equal protection is ensured under the law,” Johnson 
		said. He added that the group “doesn’t want to assume” the Trump 
		administration can’t be a partner on advancing civil rights or racial 
		justice. 
		 
		On Wednesday, Johnson and other civil rights leaders met with 
		Congressional Black Caucus members on Capitol Hill to discuss how to 
		work with and to oppose the Trump administration. That same day, the 
		National Action Network, a civil rights group founded by the Rev. Al 
		Sharpton, hosted a breakfast at which Vice President Kamala Harris urged 
		attendees to stay motivated. 
		
		
		  
		
		“Ours is a journey," she said. “Whatever the outcome of any particular 
		moment, we can never be defeated. Our spirit can never be defeated, 
		because when that happens, we won't win.” 
		
		Martin Luther King III, the late King's eldest son, prayed with Harris 
		on stage. King had campaigned for Harris in the fall and called her an 
		advocate who “speaks to our better angels” and “embodies Dr. King's 
		legacy.” 
		 
		Many racial justice advocates are set to organize demonstrations, vigils 
		and community service events to mark the holiday and prepare for what 
		they consider an adversarial administration. 
		 
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            Vice President Kamala Harris, left, holds hands and sings "We Shall 
			Overcome" with Rev. Al Sharpton and Martin Luther King III, at a 
			National Action Network event in Washington, Jan. 15, 2025. (AP 
			Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File) 
            
			
			  
		Some groups are reflecting on parallels and differences with how King 
		organized in the face of explicitly white supremacist state and local 
		governments and geopolitical tumult. 
		 
		“The hostility is similar, particularly in that there is a mobilized, 
		active and aggressive extremist-right hell bent on unraveling rights and 
		any sense of shared purpose, shared problems or shared solutions,” said 
		Maya Wiley, CEO of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights. 
		What differs, Wiley said, is the understanding "there has to be 
		opportunity for everyone.” 
		 
		King himself worried the legal protections he dedicated his life to 
		realizing would not be followed by greater anti-discrimination efforts 
		or social programs. He proposed it would take white Americans embracing 
		a deeper kinship with Black Americans and engaging in economic and 
		social solidarity to see change. 
		 
		A year before his 1968 assassination, King wrote in his final book that 
		giving a Black person their "due” often required “special treatment.” 
		 
		“I am aware of the fact that this has been a troublesome concept for 
		many liberals, since it conflicts with their traditional ideal of equal 
		opportunity and equal treatment of people according to their individual 
		merits,” King wrote in the 1967 book, “Where Do We Go From Here: Chaos 
		or Community." "But this is a day which demands new thinking and the 
		reevaluation of old concepts.” 
		 
		King's advocacy for “new concepts” found an heir in the enactment of 
		affirmative action policies in workplaces and schools. Many advocates of 
		diversity, equity and inclusion policies see such programs as realizing 
		his vision, though that argument has come under withering scrutiny from 
		conservative activists. 
		 
		Trump's views on race have been criticized for decades. The federal 
		government sued Trump for allegedly discriminating against Black 
		apartment seekers in the 1970s. He was instrumental in promoting the 
		“birther” conspiracy theory that Obama was not born in the U.S. And his 
		campaign rhetoric about immigrants and urban communities since 2015 up 
		to November's election has been derided as prejudiced. 
			
		
		  
			
		As president, Trump enacted some criminal justice reform laws that civil 
		rights advocates praised but then proposed harsh crackdowns on 2020 
		racial reckoning protests. 
		 
		In April, Trump did not dispute the notion that “anti-white racism” now 
		represents a greater problem in the U.S. than systemic racism against 
		Black Americans. 
		 
		“I think there is a definite anti-white feeling in this country and that 
		can’t be allowed either,” Trump said during an interview with Time 
		magazine. 
		 
		Janiyah Thomas, a spokesperson for the Trump transition, said Trump’s 
		inauguration would be “monumental, turning a new leaf and ushering in 
		the golden age of America” and said Americans should remember “wise 
		words” from King: “We must learn to live together as brothers or perish 
		together as fools.” 
		 
		At the end of his life, King reflected on the early backlash to civil 
		rights, especially with integrated housing developments, interracial 
		marriage and necessary economic and social programs. He expressed 
		frustration with then-President Lyndon B. Johnson for prolonging the 
		Vietnam War rather than making a greater investment in anti-poverty 
		efforts. 
		 
		“This is where the civil rights movement stands today. We will err and 
		falter as we climb the unfamiliar slopes of steep mountains, but there 
		is no alternative, well-trod, level path,” King wrote. “There will be 
		agonizing setbacks along with creative advances. Our consolation is that 
		no one can know the true taste of victory if he has never swallowed 
		defeat.” 
		___ 
		Associated Press reporter Kate Brumback in Atlanta contributed to this 
		report. 
			
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