Nashville, An Epicenter Of Resistance Against Authoritarianism, Will Be The Scene Of National Urban League's 2026 Conference
Marc H. Morial
President and CEO
National Urban League
"Nashville prepared me. If it hadn't been for Nashville, I would not be the person I am now." – Congressman John Lewis
Nashville’s streets have long carried the echoes of America’s most disciplined and courageous civil‑rights activism. It was here, in 1960, that students from local colleges launched a sit‑in campaign so strategic and unwavering that it became a national blueprint for nonviolent resistance. Their actions not only made Nashville the first major Southern city to desegregate its lunch counters—they shaped the moral and tactical core of the civil‑rights movement and helped forge the leadership of icons like John Lewis and Diane Nash. Nashville’s history is not just remembered; it is lived, embedded in the city’s identity, and carried forward by every new generation confronting injustice.
This enduring legacy was powerfully present when I visited Nashville this week to announce that the city will host this summer’s National Urban League Conference. The annual gathering—one of the country’s most influential convenings on civil‑rights, economic empowerment, and racial justice—will bring thousands of leaders, advocates, and changemakers to a city whose past and present make it uniquely positioned to shape the nation’s democratic future. Nashville is not simply a venue; it is a living testament to movement building itself.
Today, the city continues to stand at the crossroads of democracy and civil rights. Tennessee has become a testing ground for voter suppression, and Nashville has been central to pushing back. It was Nashville’s own dynamic young legislator, Justin Jones, who—along with Justin J. Pearson of Memphis and Gloria Johnson of Knoxville—drew national attention to the intertwined crises of gun violence and racism by leading a gun‑safety protest directly on the House floor. Local activists have fought tirelessly against gerrymandering schemes that fracture Black political representation. And when state lawmakers attempted to slash Nashville’s Metro Council in half, the city took the battle all the way to the Tennessee Supreme Court, where the fight for fair governance continues.
It is this spirit of resistance, courage, and collective determination that will energize the thousands attending the National Urban League Conference. As leaders confront an ongoing assault on racial justice and equal opportunity, they will do so in a place where ordinary citizens have repeatedly reshaped the national conversation through their willingness to stand up—and stand together.
Nashville’s example is reflected in cities across the country. In Minneapolis, residents braved tear gas, pepper spray, and subzero temperatures to protest lawless immigration enforcement. In New York City, home the National Urban League’s headquarters, leaders continue to mount a multi‑front pushback against federal overreach, from unlawful militarization to crackdowns on immigrant communities, while strengthening sanctuary protections and reaffirming commitments to diversity and inclusion.
Taken together, these local efforts form a national mosaic of democratic resilience. Each city—through lawsuits, organizing, public‑policy innovation, and mass protest—has played a vital role in defending voting rights and upholding the rule of law.
In an era defined by rapid political shifts and escalating threats to democratic norms, the future of American democracy does not rest in Washington alone. It lives in cities like Nashville, where history meets activism, and where the work of building a more just and equitable nation persists—one protest, one policy, one gathering at a time. This summer’s National Urban League Conference will honor that legacy and propel it forward.
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