Fifty years after the March on Washington, is there still more that unites us than divides us?
The Daily Rundown‘s Chuck Todd sat down with Lonnie Bunch, the founding director of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, and Pulitzer Prize-winning civil rights historian and author Taylor Branch to look at how far the country has–or has not–evolved.
Branch said that the past 50 years since Martin Luther King Jr.’s historic speech had brought “immense advances toward free and equal–what Dr. King called equal votes and equal souls in the United States” and paved the way for other advancements for women and other minorities.
“Basically race has always been the chief barrier, but it’s also the gateway. When people deal forthrightly with race it pays other benefits,” said Branch. “Now here we are, in 2013 we have benefits that make us optimistic we can tackle tough problems, but our politics is in gridlock largely because we don’t deal with race and we don’t acknowledge what we’ve done.”
Bunch called race “the most important issue that divides us” and expressed hope that the Smithsonian’s new museum, slated to open in 2015, could provide a place for all people to come together.
“For us, it’s crucially important to craft a museum that forces us to discuss where we’ve improved in race and where this is a continuing battle for us to wrestle with,” said Bunch.








