Fifty years ago, Republican Barry Goldwater opposed the Voting Rights Act and black voters abandoned the party en masse. Goldwater lost; polling data showed he’d won just 6% of black votes.
In 2012, the GOP did it again. Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney won just 6% of black votes — the lowest share of black voters since Goldwater — and lost the election. Republican leaders quickly got out in front of the story, acknowledged their need and desire to better appeal to minorities.
Three years later at a massive civil rights occasion, the GOP are still noticeably absent.
RELATED: A look at civil rights before and after Selma
More than 100 congressional lawmakers are expected this weekend in Selma, Alabama, to commemorate the signing of the Voting Rights Act, the 50th anniversary of the brutal suppression of civil rights demonstrations known as “Bloody Sunday,” and the Selma-to-Montgomery march in 1965. Just 23 of them are current congressional Republicans, Politico reported — 8% of the 301-person caucus. If exactly 100 congressional lawmakers in total show up, that means 77 Democrats (or Independents who caucus with them) — 31% of the caucus — will be present.
Most Republican leaders won’t be in Selma, either. Senate Majority Leader Sen. Mitch McConnell, House Speaker John Boehner and House Majority Whip Steve Scalise won’t observe the anniversary event. Many thought Scalise would attend in the wake of the controversy over his address to a white supremacist group white in state government, but his office said he had a scheduling conflict and hoped to attend in 2016.
Late Friday, House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy’s office announced the congressman would be travelling to Selma after GOP leaders had faced scrutiny over their planned absence from the event, according to NBC News’ Alex Moe. “It’s his 2nd time and he also hosted a screening of the movie w/ Rep. John Lewis to recruit folks to go,” McCarthy spokesman Mike Long said in an email.








