john lewis or do you want to be on the side of bull conor? i thought it was a stark comparison, but it was one that was necessary in order to jolt the imagination about where we are in this time in history. congresswoman terri sewell of alabama representing the three cities that are the crucible of the civil rights movement, thank you very, very much for coming to the sunday show. well, thank you so far. and as we are about to celebrate martin luther king s birthday, i hope that people will not just reflect but that they will act. tomorrow should be a day of action. a day of action. thank you very much. joining me now, the reverend al sharpton, host of politics nation. and author of righteous troublemakers untold stories of the social justice movement in america. rev, thank you as always for coming to the sunday show. thank you for having me, jonathan. all right. so you also were at the speech in atlanta.
color and the reverend al sharpton, host of nbc s politics nation and president of the national action network. he is also the author of the new book righteous troublemakers, untold stories of the social justice movement in america. thank you both for coming to the sunday show. eliza, let me start with you. what are some differences we see with black voters who went to college and black voters who did not? yeah, thank you for having me. so, in my report i looked at a number of different issues. i looked at social and cultural issues and then a number of economic issues like raising the minimum wage. and my report found that on a lot of social and cultural issues, black non-college voters espoused more conservative views than their college-educated counterparts. on some issues they weren t significant education divides like on some economic issues. so i think it s really important to study those differences and figure out where black voters are divided along educational