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U.S. Rep Marc Veasey, D-Fort Worth, joined a bipartisan delegation in Selma this weekend, listening to Obama and visiting historic sites.
He posted on Facebook about his visit to Brown Chapel AME Church, which served as a triage site 50 years ago for those injured in the march.
"While we have made great strides in the voting rights movement, fifty years later we continue to fight restrictive voter ID laws and heavily gerrymandered districts," he wrote. "It is my hope that we can look back on history and apply these lessons we learned to today."
Still, watching an African-American president speak on the spot where African-Americans were beaten for protesting the right to vote, Rep. Marc Veasey (D-Texas) said he was thinking about his 103-year-old grandmother.
"For individuals like her that lived through Edmund Pettus, that lived through separate washrooms, that lived through voting lines being drawn to at-large districts where African-Americans never had any real power," Veasey said. "For them to finally see that, to see their work come to fruition, it's very moving for me."
There's no place that U.S. Rep Marc Veasey would rather be this weekend than Selma, Ala.
Rep. Marc Veasey of Fort Worth was among the Democrats who did attend, along with Reps. Sheila Jackson Lee and Gene Green of Houston and Henry Cuellar of Laredo.
"We must show our country's continued commitment and support to Israel, who is a solid ally of the U.S. in the Middle East," Veasey said. "That's especially true right now, when there are significant challenges in that region of the world."
AIPAC enjoys great sway on US Middle East policy, but its wings were clipped with two stinging defeats over the past 18 months.
In September 2013 it backed Obama's effort to strike Syria in response to Bashar al-Assad's use of chemical weapons, but Congress did not go along. Then last month, facing opposition from Obama, an Iran sanctions bill backed by AIPAC was delayed.
AIPAC's annual lobby effort remains one of the most organized and effective in the nation, according to several lawmakers who engage the activists on the Jewish group's policy recommendations.
AIPAC's annual lobby effort remains one of the most organized and effective in the nation, according to several lawmakers who engage the activists on the Jewish group's policy recommendations.
"AIPAC has been a very aggressive driving force in educating members of Congress," House Republican Mario Diaz-Balart told AFP.
"It is unique, and it has the impact," added Democrat Marc Veasey. "AIPAC does a fantastic job of informing and engaging."
Today in Veasey v. Abbott, attorneys at the Campaign Legal Center, who serve as co-counsel for plaintiffs Congressman Marc Veasey, LULAC, and a group of Texas voters, filed a brief urging the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals to uphold a District Court ruling striking down Texas' voter photo ID law (SB 14), the most restrictive and burdensome voter ID law in the nation.