| NOTE: A MEDIA
AVAILABILITY TIME WILL BE HELD DURING THIS EVENT FROM NOON-1 P.M.
ON TUESDAY, SEPT. 20, ON THE STEPS OF REESE PHIFER HALL.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- The University of Alabama branch of Alabama
Students for Constitutional Reform will host a reading of the Alabama
Constitution over two days Tuesday-Wednesday, Sept. 20-21, on the
steps of Reese Phifer Hall.
The reading of the Alabama Constitution will begin at 8 a.m. Tuesday
and will be led by Matthew Lewis of Prattville, UA sophomore and
ASCR president.
Some 45 students and community members are expected to take part
in the reading of the document that will continue throughout the
night Tuesday and all day Wednesday, concluding at 9 p.m.
Lewis said the student group hopes to raise awareness about the
need for constitutional reform in Alabama. “We are not targeting
one particular group with this rally. We want to engage the entire
state in discussion on the reasons why a new constitution would
be beneficial to our state,” he commented
The Alabama Constitution was written in 1901 and is the longest
constitution in the United States with over 700 amendments. “Even
though we are reading the Constitution over a two-day period, I
have no expectations of finishing it within those hours,” Lewis
said, adding, “I hope that this will prove to students, faculty,
voters and legislators how desperately our constitution needs reform.”
Along with emphasizing the length of the Alabama Constitution,
ASCR aims to call attention to some of the outdated amendments
and language in the constitution. “It is ridiculous that
our constitution still has Jim Crow-era segregationist language
in it,” Lewis said. “Alabama cannot reach its potential
in the 21st century with archaic language in its constitution.”
Lewis is also hoping to get UA students involved in the rally
in hopes that the younger voters will become aware of issues affecting
Alabama and their future. “UA students are some of the best
and brightest in the state and they are the future of Alabama,” Lewis
said. “I want UA students to realize how great this state
is and how much potential it has to be a leader among the states.”
Lewis is a double major in political science and history at UA.
Along with being president of College Democrats, he is involved
with UA’s Honors College, HIPSA and the Collegiate Summit.
For more information or to participate in the reading of the Alabama
Constitution, contact Matthew Lewis at lewis132@bama.ua.edu.
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