The idea of Martin Luther King, Jr. Day as a
holiday was promoted by labor unions in contract negotiations. After
King's death, U.S. Representative John Conyers (a
Democrat from Michigan) and U.S. Senator Edward Brooke (a
Republican from Massachusetts) introduced a bill in Congress to
make King's birthday a national holiday. The bill first came to a vote in the
U.S. House of Representatives in 1979. However, it fell five votes short of the
number needed for passage. Two
of the main arguments mentioned by opponents were that a paid holiday for
federal employees would be too expensive, and that a holiday to honor a private
citizen would be contrary to longstanding tradition (King had never held public
office). Only
two other figures have national holidays in the U.S. honoring them: George
Washington and Christopher Columbus.
Soon after, the King Center turned to
support from the corporate community and the general public. The success of
this strategy was cemented when musician Stevie Wonder released
the single "Happy Birthday" to
popularize the campaign in 1980 and hosted the Rally for Peace Press Conference
in 1981. Six million signatures were collected for a petition to Congress to
pass the law, termed by a 2006 article in The Nation as
"the largest petition in favor of an issue in U.S. history."
Ronald Reagan and Coretta Scott King at the Martin Luther
King, Jr. Day signing ceremony.
Senators Jesse Helms and John Porter
East (both North
Carolina Republicans) led
opposition to the holiday and questioned whether King was important enough to
receive such an honor. Helms criticized King's opposition to the Vietnam War and
accused him of espousing "action-oriented Marxism". Helms
led a filibuster against the bill and on October 3, 1983, submitted a 300-page
document to the Senate alleging that King had associations with communists. New
York Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan declared the
document a "packet of filth", threw it on the Senate floor and
stomped on it.
President
Ronald Reagan originally opposed the holiday, citing cost
concerns. When asked to comment on Helms' accusations that King was a
communist, the president said "We'll know in thirty-five years, won't
we?", in reference to the eventual release of FBI surveillance tapes that
had previously been sealed. But
on November 2, 1983, Reagan signed a bill, proposed by Representative
Katie Hall of Indiana, to create a federal holiday honoring Dr.
King. The
bill had passed the House of Representatives by a count of 338 to 90, a
veto-proof margin. The
holiday was observed for the first time on January 20, 1986.
The bill also established the Martin Luther King,
Jr., Federal Holiday Commission to oversee observance of the holiday, and Coretta Scott King, King's wife, was made a
member of this commission for life by President
George H. W. Bush in May 1989.
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