Advertisement

Stop griping about gridlock, Clinton tells March on Washington crowd

Share

WASHINGTON -- Martin Luther King Jr. didn’t live and die to hear his heirs “whine about political gridlock,” former President Clinton said Wednesday.

Standing on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial to mark the 50th anniversary of King’s “I Have a Dream” speech, Clinton said Americans should do less griping and more working to make things better.

“It is time to stop complaining,” he said, and “put our shoulders against the stubborn gates” that are holding the American people back.

Advertisement

Just paces away sat President Obama, the nation’s first black president, who has frequently called out Republicans in Congress for blocking much of what his administration has tried to accomplish. Obama frequently tells audiences not to give up in the face of political intransigence, but he also doesn’t hesitate to point it out when he thinks he spots it.

Clinton suggested that Americans can stand up even when the law tilts against them, as it did for black Americans trying to exercise their right to vote in the Jim Crow South.

“They showed up, stood in lines and voted anyway,” Clinton said.

VOICES: The March on Washington

But he voiced support for Obama’s efforts to reform the U.S. healthcare system, as well as his attempts to pass federal gun control legislation.

“A great democracy does not make it harder to vote than to buy an assault weapon,” he said.

Clinton spoke as a son of the white South, recalling how he listened to the King speech in 1963 alone in his Arkansas home.

Advertisement

In a speech almost as heavy on politics, former President Carter, a native of Georgia, urged the crowd to take action today just as King would if he were alive.

“We all know how Dr. King would have reacted,” Carter said, to the Supreme Court’s decision to strike down a crucial provision of the Voting Rights Act, as well as to high black unemployment and to “our country being awash in guns.”

He would have kept working for the cause of freedom, Carter said.

“In truth,” he said, “he helped to free all people.”

ALSO:

Unemployment, Trayvon ruling cast shadow over March

March anniversary a chance to honor civil rights pioneers

50 years on, civil rights movement has changed with the times

Advertisement

Follow L.A. Times National on Twitter

Advertisement