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Congregants turn their backs on Mike Bloomberg inside Selma, Ala., church

  • People stand with their backs to Democratic presidential candidate, former...

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    People stand with their backs to Democratic presidential candidate, former New York City mayor Mike Bloomberg as he speaks during a worship event at the Brown Chapel AME Church on Sunday in Selma, Alabama.

  • Democratic presidential candidate and former New York City mayor Mike...

    JOSHUA LOTT/AFP via Getty Images

    Democratic presidential candidate and former New York City mayor Mike Bloomberg (l.) greets Rev. Jesse Jackson (c.) outside Brown Chapel AME in Selma, Ala., on Sunday.

  • Members turn their backs on Mayor Michael Bloomberg in protest...

    Butch Dill/AP

    Members turn their backs on Mayor Michael Bloomberg in protest as he speaks at Brown Chapel AME church Sunday, March 1, 2020, in Selma, Ala. (AP Photo/Butch Dill)

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With Democratic presidential candidates blitzing states set to vote on “Super Tuesday” this week, a handful of congregants at a historic black church in Selma, Ala., delivered a stunning rebuke of Mike Bloomberg on Sunday.

Ten minutes into his remarks about voter suppression and the civil rights movement, about a dozen churchgoers stood up and turned their backs to the candidate, where they silently stayed in place for the duration of the speech.

It was the 55th anniversary of “Bloody Sunday,” when state troopers viciously attacked black civil rights activists who marched over the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma.

Gathered at the Brown Chapel AME Church just blocks away from the bridge, the anti-Bloomberg churchgoers seemed to evoke the legacy of nonviolent protest immortalized on March 7, 1965.

While they didn’t utter a word, the signal they sent was loud and clear: They don’t want the ex-mayor who once championed stop-and-frisk for president.

“I have tried to listen and I have tried to learn,” Bloomberg told the congregation, echoing his November apology for the controversial policing tactic. “I certainly gave people the opportunity to change my mind.”

People stand with their backs to Democratic presidential candidate, former New York City mayor Mike Bloomberg as he speaks during a worship event at the Brown Chapel AME Church on Sunday in Selma, Alabama.
People stand with their backs to Democratic presidential candidate, former New York City mayor Mike Bloomberg as he speaks during a worship event at the Brown Chapel AME Church on Sunday in Selma, Alabama.

“I think that it’s important for Mr. Bloomberg, Mayor Bloomberg, to hear from you, listen to you, to learn from you,” Reverend Leodis Strong said in introducing the former mayor.

Former Vice President Joe Biden had also been scheduled to speak at the church. The attendees included Jesse Jackson and Rev. Al Sharpton.

The ex-veep and Bloomberg have split the endorsements of Alabama’s leading political groups between them. While black voters helped Biden to a landslide victory Saturday in South Carolina’s primary, Bloomberg has struggled to win over the demographic.

Before making a late entrance into the presidential race, Bloomberg took to a predominantly black megachurch in Brooklyn to apologize for his handling of stop-and-frisk, in which officers empowered to search people suspected of illegal activity disproportionately targeted blacks and Latinos.

His track record as mayor from 2002 to 2013 has defined his presidential run, with black leaders sharply divided over his legacy.

Democratic presidential candidate and former New York City mayor Mike Bloomberg (l.) greets Rev. Jesse Jackson (c.) outside Brown Chapel AME in Selma, Ala., on Sunday.
Democratic presidential candidate and former New York City mayor Mike Bloomberg (l.) greets Rev. Jesse Jackson (c.) outside Brown Chapel AME in Selma, Ala., on Sunday.

Super Tuesday, in which 14 states hold Democratic primaries, represents a moment of truth for Bloomberg. After sitting out the first four contests, in which Biden and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) came out on top, the media mogul is polling around the middle of the pack in the biggest states. He came in with support from 12% of likely primary voters in California, according to a CBS News Battleground Tracker/YouGov poll, behind Sanders, who had 31%, Biden at 19% and Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) with 18%.

In Texas, Sanders polled at 34%, Biden at 19% and Bloomberg at 15%, according to a CBS News Battleground Tracker/YouGov poll out Sunday.

Bloomberg’s campaign did not provide comment about the silent protest.

With News Wire Services