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Passage of Martin Luther King Jr. Day
Great Seal of the United States
Long title A bill to amend title 5, United States Code, to make the birthday of Martin Luther King, Jr., a legal public holiday.
Enacted by the 98th United States Congress
Legislative history
  • Introduced in the House as A bill to amend title 5, United States Code, to make the birthday of Martin Luther King, Jr., a legal public holiday. (H.R. 3706) by Katie Hall (DIN) on July 29, 1983
  • Committee consideration by Post Office and Civil Service
  • Passed the House on August 2, 1983 ([1])
  • Passed the Senate as the "A bill to amend title 5, United States Code, to make the birthday of Martin Luther King, Jr., a legal public holiday." on October 19, 1983 ([2])
  • Signed into law by President Ronald Reagan on November 2, 1983


A United States federal statute honoring Martin Luther King Jr. and his work in the civil rights movement with a federal holiday was enacted by the 98th United States Congress and signed into law by President Ronald Reagan on November 2, 1983, creating Martin Luther King Jr. Day. The final vote in the House of Representatives on August 2, 1983 was 338–90 (242–4 in the House Democratic Caucus and 89–77 in the House Republican Conference) with 5 members voting present or abstaining, while the final vote in the Senate on October 19, 1983 was 78–22 (41–4 in the Senate Democratic Caucus and 37–18 in the Senate Republican Conference), both veto-proof margins.

Prior to 1983 there had been multiple attempts following the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. to have a holiday created in his honor with Representative John Conyers introducing legislation in every legislative session from 1968 to 1983. In 1979 a vote was held on legislation that would have created a holiday on the third Monday in January, but it failed to receive two-thirds support and was later rescinded following an amendment changing its date.

While attempts were made to have a federally recognized holiday, numerous U.S. states recognized holidays in honor of King. Connecticut did so in 1973. Illinois adopted a commemoration day in 1969, and made it a paid holiday also in 1973. Other states continued to adopt state holidays up through Utah in 2000.

History

National

Prior attempts

1983 U.S. House vote on MLK Jr
United States House of Representatives vote on the bill
1983 U.S. Senate vote on MLK Jr. Day
United States Senate vote on the bill

During the 90th Session of Congress following the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. on April 4, 1968, Senator Edward Brooke and Representatives John Conyers and Charles Samuel Joelson introduced multiple bills that would create a holiday to honor King on either January 15 or April 4, but none of their bills went to a vote.

In 1971, Ralph Abernathy, the second president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and a close friend of King, submitted multiple petitions to Senator Adlai Stevenson III asking for a national holiday honoring King on his birthday to be created. On February 10, 1971, Senators George McGovern and Jacob Javits introduced a bill in the Senate to recognize King's birthday as a national holiday and issued a joint statement in support of it, but the bill failed to advance. In September 1972, Representative Conyers introduced another bill in the House along with 23 co-sponsors; this was approved by the House Judiciary committee but was not voted on by the full House.

On September 28, 1979, Representative Conyers introduced another bill to create a federal holiday in honor of King, and on October 19, Representative John Joseph Cavanaugh III stated that the U.S. House Committee on Post Office and Civil Service was planning to report the bill to the House floor. On October 23, the bill was reported to the House floor, but Conyers later had the bill delayed on October 30 as he felt that the bill would not reach the two-thirds vote needed for passage, without the addition of amendments that could weaken the bill. Representative Robert Garcia served as the floor manager of the bill and on November 13, the House voted 253 to 133 in favor of the bill, falling short of the two-thirds vote needed for passage. The House voted to amend the bill to move the date of the holiday from Monday to Sunday by a vote of 207 to 191 on December 6, but the bill was rescinded by its sponsors and the Congressional Black Caucus later criticized President Jimmy Carter for not being supportive enough of the bill.

Passage

On July 29, 1983, Representative Katie Hall introduced a bill to recognize the third Monday in January as a federal holiday in honor of King. On August 2, the House voted 338 to 90 in favor of the bill, passing it on to the Senate. During the Senate deliberation on the bill, Senator Jesse Helms attempted to add amendments to kill the bill and distributed a 400-page FBI report on King describing him as a communist and subversive, leading Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan to throw the report on the ground and refer to it as garbage. Senator Ted Kennedy accused Helms of making false and inaccurate statements, causing Helms to attempt to have Kennedy punished for a violation of rules that prohibit senators from questioning each other's honor. Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker only made Kennedy replace the word "inaccurate". The Senate rejected an attempt to kill the vote by a vote of 76 to 12 on October 18 and later approved the bill by a vote of 78 to 22 on October 19. President Ronald Reagan signed the bill into law on November 2, 1983, and on January 20, 1986, Martin Luther King Jr. Day was celebrated as a federal holiday for the first time.

Congressional vote

1979 U.S. House vote: Party Total votes
Democratic Republican
Yes 213 40 253  (58.3%)
No 33 100 133  (30.6%)
Not Voting 30 18 48  (11.1%)
Vacant 0 0 1
Result: Failed
Vote By Members
Roll call votes on the 1979 Martin Luther King Jr. Day vote
Representative Seat Vote
Don Young
AK at-large
No
Jack Edwards
AL 1st
No
William Louis Dickinson
AL 2nd
No
Bill Nichols
AL 3rd
No
Tom Bevill
AL 4th
Yes
Ronnie Flippo
AL 5th
No
John Hall Buchanan Jr.
AL 6th
Not voting
Richard Shelby
AL 7th
Yes
William Vollie Alexander Jr.
AR 1st
Yes
Ed Bethune
AR 2nd
Yes
John Paul Hammerschmidt
AR 3rd
Yes
Beryl Anthony Jr.
AR 4th
Yes
John Jacob Rhodes
AZ 1st
Yes
Mo Udall
AZ 2nd
Yes
Bob Stump
AZ 3rd
No
Eldon Rudd
AZ 4th
No
Harold T. Johnson
CA 1st
Yes
Donald H. Clausen
CA 2nd
Yes
Bob Matsui
CA 3rd
Yes
Vic Fazio
CA 4th
Yes
John Burton
CA 5th
Not voting
Phillip Burton
CA 6th
Yes
George Miller
CA 7th
Yes
Ron Dellums
CA 8th
Yes
Pete Stark
CA 9th
Not voting
Don Edwards
CA 10th
Yes
William Royer
CA 11th
No
Pete McCloskey
CA 12th
Not voting
Norman Mineta
CA 13th
Yes
Norman D. Shumway
CA 14th
No
Tony Coelho
CA 15th
Not voting
Leon Panetta
CA 16th
Yes
Chip Pashayan
CA 17th
Not voting
Bill Thomas
CA 18th
No
Robert J. Lagomarsino
CA 19th
No
Barry Goldwater Jr.
CA 20th
Not voting
James C. Corman
CA 21st
Yes
Carlos Moorhead
CA 22nd
No
Anthony Beilenson
CA 23rd
No
Henry Waxman
CA 24th
Yes
Edward R. Roybal
CA 25th
Yes
John H. Rousselot
CA 26th
No
Bob Dornan
CA 27th
No
Julian Dixon
CA 28th
Yes
Augustus Hawkins
CA 29th
Yes
George E. Danielson
CA 30th
Yes
Charles H. Wilson
CA 31st
Yes
Glenn M. Anderson
CA 32nd
Yes
Wayne R. Grisham
CA 33rd
No
Dan Lungren
CA 34th
No
James F. Lloyd
CA 35th
Yes
George Brown Jr.
CA 36th
Yes
Jerry Lewis
CA 37th
No
Jerry M. Patterson
CA 38th
Yes
William E. Dannemeyer
CA 39th
No
Robert Badham
CA 40th
No
Bob Wilson
CA 41st
Yes
Lionel Van Deerlin
CA 42nd
Yes
Clair Burgener
CA 43rd
No
Pat Schroeder
CO 1st
Not voting
Tim Wirth
CO 2nd
Yes
Ray Kogovsek
CO 3rd
Yes
James Paul Johnson
CO 4th
Not voting
Ken Kramer
CO 5th
No
William R. Cotter
CT 1st
Yes
Chris Dodd
CT 2nd
Yes
Robert Giaimo
CT 3rd
Yes
Stewart McKinney
CT 4th
Yes
William R. Ratchford
CT 5th
Yes
Toby Moffett
CT 6th
Yes
Earl Hutto
FL 1st
Not voting
Don Fuqua
FL 2nd
Not voting
Charles E. Bennett
FL 3rd
No
Bill Chappell
FL 4th
Yes
Richard Kelly
FL 5th
No
Bill Young
FL 6th
No
Sam Gibbons
FL 7th
Yes
Andy Ireland
FL 8th
Yes
Bill Nelson
FL 9th
Yes
Skip Bafalis
FL 10th
No
Dan Mica
FL 11th
Yes
Edward J. Stack
FL 12th
Yes
William Lehman
FL 13th
Yes
Claude Pepper
FL 14th
Yes
Dante Fascell
FL 15th
Yes
Ronald 'Bo' Ginn
GA 1st
Yes
Dawson Mathis
GA 2nd
Yes
Jack Brinkley
GA 3rd
No
Elliott H. Levitas
GA 4th
Yes
Wyche Fowler
GA 5th
Yes
Newt Gingrich
GA 6th
Yes
Larry McDonald
GA 7th
No
Billy Lee Evans
GA 8th
Yes
Ed Jenkins
GA 9th
No
Doug Barnard Jr.
GA 10th
Not voting
Thomas B. Evans Jr.
DE at-large
Yes
Cecil Heftel
HI 1st
Yes
Daniel Akaka
HI 2nd
Yes
Jim Leach
IA 1st
Yes
Tom Tauke
IA 2nd
No
Chuck Grassley
IA 3rd
No
Neal Edward Smith
IA 4th
Yes
Tom Harkin
IA 5th
Yes
Berkley Bedell
IA 6th
No
Steve Symms
ID 1st
No
George V. Hansen
ID 2nd
No
Bennett Stewart
IL 1st
Yes
Morgan F. Murphy
IL 2nd
Yes
Marty Russo
IL 3rd
Yes
Ed Derwinski
IL 4th
No
John G. Fary
IL 5th
Yes
Henry Hyde
IL 6th
Yes
Cardiss Collins
IL 7th
Yes
Dan Rostenkowski
IL 8th
Yes
Sidney R. Yates
IL 9th
Yes
Vacant
IL 10th
Vacant
Frank Annunzio
IL 11th
Yes
Phil Crane
IL 12th
Not voting
Robert McClory
IL 13th
Yes
John N. Erlenborn
IL 14th
No
Tom Corcoran
IL 15th
No
John B. Anderson
IL 16th
Not voting
George M. O'Brien
IL 17th
No
Robert H. Michel
IL 18th
Not voting
Tom Railsback
IL 19th
Yes
Paul Findley
IL 20th
No
Edward Rell Madigan
IL 21st
No
Dan Crane
IL 22nd
No
Melvin Price
IL 23rd
Yes
Paul Simon
IL 24th
Yes
Adam Benjamin Jr.
IN 1st
Yes
Floyd Fithian
IN 2nd
Yes
John Brademas
IN 3rd
Yes
Dan Quayle
IN 4th
Yes
Elwood Hillis
IN 5th
Yes
David W. Evans
IN 6th
No
John T. Myers
IN 7th
No
H. Joel Deckard
IN 8th
Yes
Lee H. Hamilton
IN 9th
Yes
Phillip Sharp
IN 10th
Yes
Andrew Jacobs Jr.
IN 11th
Yes
Keith Sebelius
KS 1st
Not voting
James Edmund Jeffries
KS 2nd
No
Larry Winn
KS 3rd
No
Dan Glickman
KS 4th
Yes
Bob Whittaker
KS 5th
No
Carroll Hubbard
KY 1st
Yes
William Natcher
KY 2nd
Yes
Romano Mazzoli
KY 3rd
Not voting
Gene Snyder
KY 4th
No
Tim Lee Carter
KY 5th
No
Larry J. Hopkins
KY 6th
Yes
Carl D. Perkins
KY 7th
Yes
Bob Livingston
LA 1st
No
Lindy Boggs
LA 2nd
Not voting
Dave Treen
LA 3rd
Not voting
Buddy Leach
LA 4th
Yes
Jerry Huckaby
LA 5th
Yes
Henson Moore
LA 6th
No
John Breaux
LA 7th
Not voting
Gillis William Long
LA 8th
Yes
Silvio O. Conte
MA 1st
Yes
Edward Boland
MA 2nd
Yes
Joseph D. Early
MA 3rd
Yes
Robert Drinan
MA 4th
Yes
James Shannon
MA 5th
Yes
Nicholas Mavroules
MA 6th
Yes
Ed Markey
MA 7th
Yes
Tip O'Neill
MA 8th
Not voting
Joe Moakley
MA 9th
Yes
Margaret Heckler
MA 10th
Not voting
Brian J. Donnelly
MA 11th
Yes
Gerry Studds
MA 12th
Yes
Robert Bauman
MD 1st
No
Clarence Long
MD 2nd
Yes
Barbara Mikulski
MD 3rd
Not voting
Marjorie Holt
MD 4th
No
Gladys Spellman
MD 5th
Yes
Beverly Byron
MD 6th
Yes
Parren Mitchell
MD 7th
Yes
Michael D. Barnes
MD 8th
Yes
David F. Emery
ME 1st
Yes
Olympia Snowe
ME 2nd
Not voting
John Conyers
MI 1st
Yes
Carl Pursell
MI 2nd
Yes
Howard Wolpe
MI 3rd
Yes
David Stockman
MI 4th
Not voting
Harold S. Sawyer
MI 5th
No
Milton Robert Carr
MI 6th
Yes
Dale Kildee
MI 7th
Yes
J. Bob Traxler
MI 8th
Yes
Guy Vander Jagt
MI 9th
Yes
Donald J. Albosta
MI 10th
Not voting
Robert William Davis
MI 11th
No
David Bonior
MI 12th
Yes
Charles Diggs
MI 13th
Yes
Lucien Nedzi
MI 14th
No
William D. Ford
MI 15th
Yes
John Dingell
MI 16th
Yes
William M. Brodhead
MI 17th
Yes
James Blanchard
MI 18th
Yes
William Broomfield
MI 19th
No
Arlen Erdahl
MN 1st
No
Tom Hagedorn
MN 2nd
No
Bill Frenzel
MN 3rd
No
Bruce Vento
MN 4th
Yes
Martin Olav Sabo
MN 5th
Yes
Rick Nolan
MN 6th
Yes
Arlan Stangeland
MN 7th
No
Jim Oberstar
MN 8th
Yes
Bill Clay
MO 1st
Yes
Robert A. Young
MO 2nd
Yes
Dick Gephardt
MO 3rd
Not voting
Ike Skelton
MO 4th
Yes
Richard Walker Bolling
MO 5th
Yes
Tom Coleman
MO 6th
Not voting
Gene Taylor
MO 7th
No
Richard Howard Ichord Jr.
MO 8th
No
Harold Volkmer
MO 9th
Yes
Bill Burlison
MO 10th
Yes
Jamie Whitten
MS 1st
Not voting
David R. Bowen
MS 2nd
Not voting
Sonny Montgomery
MS 3rd
No
Jon Hinson
MS 4th
No
Trent Lott
MS 5th
No
Pat Williams
MT 1st
Yes
Ron Marlenee
MT 2nd
No
Walter B. Jones Sr.
NC 1st
Not voting
Lawrence H. Fountain
NC 2nd
Yes
Charles Orville Whitley
NC 3rd
Yes
Ike Franklin Andrews
NC 4th
Yes
Stephen L. Neal
NC 5th
Yes
L. Richardson Preyer
NC 6th
Yes
Charlie Rose
NC 7th
Yes
Bill Hefner
NC 8th
Yes
James G. Martin
NC 9th
No
Jim Broyhill
NC 10th
No
V. Lamar Gudger
NC 11th
Yes
Mark Andrews
ND at-large
No
Doug Bereuter
NE 1st
No
John Joseph Cavanaugh III
NE 2nd
Yes
Virginia D. Smith
NE 3rd
No
Norman D'Amours
NH 1st
Yes
James Colgate Cleveland
NH 2nd
Not voting
James Florio
NJ 1st
Yes
William J. Hughes
NJ 2nd
Yes
James J. Howard
NJ 3rd
Yes
Frank Thompson
NJ 4th
Yes
Millicent Fenwick
NJ 5th
Not voting
Edwin B. Forsythe
NJ 6th
No
Andrew Maguire
NJ 7th
Yes
Robert A. Roe
NJ 8th
Yes
Harold C. Hollenbeck
NJ 9th
Yes
Peter W. Rodino
NJ 10th
Yes
Joseph Minish
NJ 11th
Yes
Matthew John Rinaldo
NJ 12th
Yes
Jim Courter
NJ 13th
No
Frank Joseph Guarini
NJ 14th
Yes
Edward J. Patten
NJ 15th
Yes
Manuel Lujan Jr.
NM 1st
No
Harold L. Runnels
NM 2nd
No
James David Santini
NV at-large
Yes
William Carney
NY 1st
No
Thomas Downey
NY 2nd
Yes
Jerome Ambro
NY 3rd
Yes
Norman F. Lent
NY 4th
Yes
John W. Wydler
NY 5th
No
Lester L. Wolff
NY 6th
Yes
Joseph P. Addabbo
NY 7th
Yes
Benjamin Stanley Rosenthal
NY 8th
Not voting
Geraldine Ferraro
NY 9th
Yes
Mario Biaggi
NY 10th
Yes
James H. Scheuer
NY 11th
Yes
Shirley Chisholm
NY 12th
Yes
Stephen Solarz
NY 13th
Yes
Fred Richmond
NY 14th
Yes
Leo C. Zeferetti
NY 15th
Yes
Elizabeth Holtzman
NY 16th
Not voting
John M. Murphy
NY 17th
Yes
Bill Green
NY 18th
Yes
Charles Rangel
NY 19th
Yes
Theodore S. Weiss
NY 20th
Yes
Robert Garcia
NY 21st
Yes
Jonathan Brewster Bingham
NY 22nd
Yes
Peter A. Peyser
NY 23rd
Yes
Richard Ottinger
NY 24th
Yes
Hamilton Fish IV
NY 25th
Yes
Benjamin Gilman
NY 26th
Yes
Matthew F. McHugh
NY 27th
Yes
Samuel S. Stratton
NY 28th
Yes
Gerald Solomon
NY 29th
Yes
Robert C. McEwen
NY 30th
No
Donald J. Mitchell
NY 31st
Yes
James M. Hanley
NY 32nd
Yes
Gary A. Lee
NY 33rd
Not voting
Frank Horton
NY 34th
Yes
Barber Conable
NY 35th
No
John J. LaFalce
NY 36th
Not voting
Henry J. Nowak
NY 37th
Yes
Jack Kemp
NY 38th
Not voting
Stan Lundine
NY 39th
Yes
Bill Gradison
OH 1st
No
Tom Luken
OH 2nd
Yes
Tony P. Hall
OH 3rd
Yes
Tennyson Guyer
OH 4th
No
Del Latta
OH 5th
No
Bill Harsha
OH 6th
No
Bud Brown
OH 7th
Yes
Tom Kindness
OH 8th
No
Thomas L. Ashley
OH 9th
Not voting
Clarence E. Miller
OH 10th
No
J. William Stanton
OH 11th
Yes
Samuel L. Devine
OH 12th
No
Donald J. Pease
OH 13th
Yes
John F. Seiberling
OH 14th
Yes
Chalmers Wylie
OH 15th
No
Ralph Regula
OH 16th
No
John M. Ashbrook
OH 17th
No
Douglas Applegate
OH 18th
No
Lyle Williams
OH 19th
Yes
Mary Rose Oakar
OH 20th
Yes
Louis Stokes
OH 21st
Yes
Charles Vanik
OH 22nd
Yes
Ronald M. Mottl
OH 23rd
Yes
James R. Jones
OK 1st
Yes
Mike Synar
OK 2nd
Yes
Wes Watkins
OK 3rd
No
Tom Steed
OK 4th
Yes
Mickey Edwards
OK 5th
Yes
Glenn English
OK 6th
No
Les AuCoin
OR 1st
Yes
Al Ullman
OR 2nd
Yes
Robert B. Duncan
OR 3rd
No
Jim Weaver
OR 4th
Yes
Michael Myers
PA 1st
Yes
William H. Gray III
PA 2nd
Yes
Raymond Lederer
PA 3rd
Yes
Charles F. Dougherty
PA 4th
Yes
Richard T. Schulze
PA 5th
No
Gus Yatron
PA 6th
Yes
Robert W. Edgar
PA 7th
Not voting
Peter H. Kostmayer
PA 8th
Not voting
Bud Shuster
PA 9th
No
Joseph M. McDade
PA 10th
Yes
Dan Flood
PA 11th
Not voting
John Murtha
PA 12th
Yes
Lawrence Coughlin
PA 13th
No
William S. Moorhead
PA 14th
No
Donald L. Ritter
PA 15th
No
Robert Smith Walker
PA 16th
No
Allen E. Ertel
PA 17th
Yes
Doug Walgren
PA 18th
Yes
William F. Goodling
PA 19th
No
Joseph M. Gaydos
PA 20th
Yes
Donald A. Bailey
PA 21st
Yes
Austin Murphy
PA 22nd
Yes
William F. Clinger Jr.
PA 23rd
No
Marc L. Marks
PA 24th
Yes
Eugene Atkinson
PA 25th
Yes
Fernand St. Germain
RI 1st
Yes
Edward Beard
RI 2nd
Yes
Tom Daschle
SD 1st
No
James Abdnor
SD 2nd
No
Mendel Jackson Davis
SC 1st
Yes
Floyd Spence
SC 2nd
No
Butler Derrick
SC 3rd
Yes
Carroll A. Campbell Jr.
SC 4th
No
Kenneth Lamar Holland
SC 5th
Not voting
John Jenrette
SC 6th
Yes
Jimmy Quillen
TN 1st
No
John Duncan Sr.
TN 2nd
Yes
Marilyn Lloyd
TN 3rd
Yes
Al Gore
TN 4th
Yes
Bill Boner
TN 5th
Yes
Robin Beard
TN 6th
No
Ed Jones
TN 7th
Yes
Harold Ford Sr.
TN 7th
Yes
Sam B. Hall Jr.
TX 1st
No
Charlie Wilson
TX 2nd
Not voting
James M. Collins
TX 3rd
No
Ray Roberts
TX 4th
No
Jim Mattox
TX 5th
Not voting
Phil Gramm
TX 6th
Yes
Bill Archer
TX 7th
No
Robert C. Eckhardt
TX 8th
Yes
Jack Brooks
TX 9th
Yes
J. J. Pickle
TX 10th
Yes
Marvin Leath
TX 11th
No
Jim Wright
TX 12th
Yes
Jack Hightower
TX 13th
Yes
Joseph P. Wyatt Jr.
TX 14th
Yes
Kika de la Garza
TX 15th
No
Richard Crawford White
TX 16th
No
Charles Stenholm
TX 17th
No
Mickey Leland
TX 18th
Yes
Kent Hance
TX 19th
Yes
Henry B. González
TX 20th
Yes
Tom Loeffler
TX 21st
No
Ron Paul
TX 22nd
No
Abraham Kazen
TX 23rd
Yes
Martin Frost
TX 24th
Yes
K. Gunn McKay
UT 1st
No
David Daniel Marriott
UT 2nd
No
Paul Trible
VA 1st
Yes
G. William Whitehurst
VA 2nd
No
David E. Satterfield III
VA 3rd
No
Robert Daniel
VA 4th
No
Dan Daniel
VA 5th
No
M. Caldwell Butler
VA 6th
No
J. Kenneth Robinson
VA 7th
No
Herbert Harris
VA 8th
Yes
William C. Wampler
VA 9th
No
Joseph L. Fisher
VA 10th
Yes
Jim Jeffords
VT at-large
No
Joel Pritchard
WA 1st
Yes
Al Swift
WA 2nd
Yes
Don Bonker
WA 3rd
Not voting
Mike McCormack
WA 4th
No
Tom Foley
WA 5th
Yes
Norm Dicks
WA 6th
Yes
Mike Lowry
WA 7th
Yes
Les Aspin
WI 1st
Yes
Robert Kastenmeier
WI 2nd
Yes
Alvin Baldus
WI 3rd
Yes
Clement J. Zablocki
WI 4th
No
Henry S. Reuss
WI 5th
Yes
Tom Petri
WI 6th
No
Dave Obey
WI 7th
Yes
Toby Roth
WI 8th
Not voting
Jim Sensenbrenner
WI 9th
No
Bob Mollohan
WV 1st
No
Harley Orrin Staggers
WV 2nd
Yes
John M. Slack Jr.
WV 3rd
No
Nick Rahall
WV 4th
Not voting
Dick Cheney
WY at-large
Yes
1983 U.S. House vote: Party Total votes
Democratic Republican
Yes 249 89 338  (77.9%)
No 13 77 90  (20.7%)
Not Voting 4 2 6  (1.4%)
Vacant 0 0 1
Result: Confirmed
1983 U.S. Senate vote: Party Total votes
Democratic Republican
Yes 41 37 78  (78%)
No 4 18 22  (22%)
Not Voting 0 0 0  (0%)
Vacant 0 0 0
Result: Confirmed
Vote By Members
Roll call votes on the 1983 Martin Luther King Jr. Day vote
Senator State Vote
Ted Stevens
AK
Yes
Frank Murkowski
AK
No
Howell Heflin
AL
Yes
Jeremiah Denton
AL
Yes
David Pryor
AR
Yes
Dale Bumpers
AR
Yes
Dennis DeConcini
AZ
Yes
Barry Goldwater
AZ
No
Alan Cranston
CA
Yes
Pete Wilson
CA
Yes
William L. Armstrong
CO
Yes
Gary Hart
CO
Yes
Chris Dodd
CT
Yes
Lowell Weicker
CT
Yes
William Roth
DE
Yes
Joe Biden
DE
Yes
Lawton Chiles
FL
Yes
Paula Hawkins
FL
Yes
Sam Nunn
GA
Yes
Mack Mattingly
GA
Yes
Spark Matsunaga
HI
Yes
Daniel Inouye
HI
Yes
Roger Jepsen
IA
No
Chuck Grassley
IA
No
James A. McClure
ID
No
Steve Symms
ID
No
Alan J. Dixon
IL
Yes
Charles H. Percy
IL
Yes
Richard Lugar
IN
Yes
Dan Quayle
IN
Yes
Nancy Kassebaum
KS
Yes
Bob Dole
KS
Yes
Walter "Dee" Huddleston
KY
Yes
Wendell Ford
KY
Yes
J. Bennett Johnston
LA
Yes
Russell B. Long
LA
Yes
Ted Kennedy
MA
Yes
Paul Tsongas
MA
Yes
George J. Mitchell
ME
Yes
William Cohen
ME
Yes
Paul Sarbanes
MD
Yes
Charles Mathias
MD
Yes
Donald Riegle
MI
Yes
Carl Levin
MI
Yes
David Durenberger
MN
Yes
Rudy Boschwitz
MN
Yes
John Danforth
MO
Yes
Thomas Eagleton
MO
Yes
John C. Stennis
MS
No
Thad Cochran
MS
Yes
John Melcher
MT
Yes
Max Baucus
MT
Yes
Jesse Helms
NC
No
John Porter East
NC
No
Quentin Burdick
ND
Yes
Mark Andrews
ND
Yes
Edward Zorinsky
NE
No
J. James Exon
NE
No
Gordon J. Humphrey
NH
No
Warren Rudman
NH
No
Frank Lautenberg
NJ
Yes
Bill Bradley
NJ
Yes
Jeff Bingaman
NM
Yes
Pete Domenici
NM
Yes
Chic Hecht
NV
No
Paul Laxalt
NV
Yes
Al D'Amato
NY
Yes
Daniel Patrick Moynihan
NY
Yes
Howard Metzenbaum
OH
Yes
John Glenn
OH
Yes
David Boren
OK
Yes
Don Nickles
OK
No
Mark Hatfield
OR
Yes
Bob Packwood
OR
Yes
John Heinz
PA
Yes
Arlen Specter
PA
Yes
John Chafee
RI
Yes
Claiborne Pell
RI
Yes
Strom Thurmond
SC
Yes
Fritz Hollings
SC
Yes
Larry Pressler
SD
No
James Abdnor
SD
No
Howard Baker
TN
Yes
Jim Sasser
TN
Yes
John Tower
TX
No
Lloyd Bentsen
TX
Yes
Orrin Hatch
UT
No
Jake Garn
UT
No
Paul Trible
VI
Yes
John Warner
VI
Yes
Robert Stafford
VT
Yes
Patrick Leahy
VT
Yes
Daniel J. Evans
WA
Yes
Slade Gorton
WA
Yes
Bob Kasten
WI
Yes
William Proxmire
WI
Yes
Robert Byrd
WV
Yes
Jennings Randolph
WV
No
Alan Simpson
WY
Yes
Malcolm Wallop
WY
No

State

Alabama

George C Wallace
Governor George Wallace

In 1973 Coretta Scott King asked the Alabama Legislature to create a state holiday in her husband's memory on the second Monday in January and Representative Fred Gray, a former civil rights activist, submitted a law to create the holiday according to Coretta's wishes, but it was unsuccessful. In January 1974 Hobson City, Alabama's first self-governed all-black municipality, recognized King's birthday as a town holiday.

On December 22, 1980, the Montgomery County Commission voted 3 to 2 in favor of giving its employees a yearly holiday in honor of King. John Knight and Frank Bray were the first black people to serve on the commission after being inaugurated in November and voted in favor with Joel Barfoot while Mack McWhorter and Bill Joseph voted against it. However, on January 5, 1981 the commission vote 4 to 1 in favor of changing it from a yearly holiday to a one-time observance.

In February 1981 Governor Fob James sent his legislative program to the Alabama legislature which included a plan to decrease the amount of state holidays from 16 to 12, but would also give state employees the option of taking one day off for non-recognized state holidays that included King's birthday or the birthday of any other statesman. On February 13, 1981 Representative Alvin Holmes introduced a bill to create a state holiday in honor of King, but nothing came of it. On September 14 the Mobile County Commission approved a resolution to create a holiday in honor of King alongside an existing holiday honoring General Robert E. Lee with Douglas Wicks, the only black commissioner, submitting and supporting the bill and Jon Archer opposing it due to him favoring reducing the amount of county holidays. In December the Montgomery County Commission voted 3 to 2 against giving county employees a paid holiday in honor of King with Joel Barfoot, Mack McWhorter, and Bill Joseph against it and John Knight and Frank Bray for it.

In 1983 the all black Wilcox County Commission voted to give county employees a holiday for King's birthday while choosing to not observe Alabama's three Confederate holidays honoring Robert E. Lee, Jefferson Davis, and Confederate Memorial Day as well as Washington's birthday and Columbus Day. Representative Alvin Holmes created another bill that would combine Robert E. Lee and Jefferson Davis' birthday for a holiday in honor of King, but later submitted another bill that would only combine a holiday honoring King alongside Robert E. Lee.

On October 21, 1983, Governor George Wallace announced that he supported Holmes' bill to combine Lee and King's birthday holidays. The legislature didn't take action until 1984 when the Alabama House of Representatives voted unanimously in favor of the bill, passed the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee with all six members in favor, passed the Alabama Senate, and on May 8, 1984 Governor Wallace signed into law the bill recognizing Lee-King Day.

Legislative votes
House votes: Vote Total votes
Yes No
1984 75 0 75
Senate votes: Vote Total votes
Yes No
1984 26 4 30

Alaska

On April 4, 1969, a resolution honoring King was submitted on the anniversary of his death, but the resolution was rejected by a vote of 10 to 8 in the Senate. Following the federal recognition of Martin Luther King Jr. Day a bill was introduced in the Alaska legislature to recognize it on January 15, 1987 and on January 20 Governor Bill Sheffield declared it as a holiday. However, state employees were still required to work on the day leading to a union lead lawsuit that was ruled in their favor and the state was ordered to give $500,000 to its employees for overtime pay.

Vote by Members
1969 Senate Resolution vote
Senator Party Vote
Nick Begich Democratic Yes
Christiansen Unknown Yes
Josephson Unknown Yes
Merdes Unknown Yes
B. Phillips Unknown Yes
Rader Unknown Yes
Elton Engstrom Jr. Republican Yes
Keith Harvey Miller Republican Yes
Lowell Thomas Jr. Republican Yes
Blodgett Unknown No
Bradshaw Unknown No
John Butrovich Republican No
Haggland Unknown No
Harmond Unknown No
Kostosky Unknown No
Lewis Unknown No
Palmer Unknown No
Kathryn Poland Democratic No
Bob Ziegler Democratic No
V. Phillips Unknown Absent

Arizona

On January 15, 1971, state Senator Cloves Campbell Sr. introduced a bill to recognize King's birthday as a state holiday, but it failed to advance. In January 1975 a bill was introduced in the senate to recognize King's birthday as a state holiday, and passed the Government and Senate Rules Committees and was passed by the Arizona Senate, but was defeated in the Arizona House of Representatives.

Bruce babbitt
Governor Bruce Babbitt

In December 1985 Caryl Terrell asked Tempe's city council to recognize King Day, but it was rejected by the Finance and Personnel Procedures committees. On January 18, 1986, 1,000 people marched from the University of Arizona to El Presidio Park to honor King and in support of the recognition of Martin Luther King Jr. Day along with members of Tucson's city council. On January 20, 1986 5,000 people marched in support of King Day in Phoenix and heard speeches given by Mayor Terry Goddard and Governor Bruce Babbitt who criticized the state legislature for not declaring King's birthday as a state holiday.

On February 7, 1986, the Government Senate Committee voted 4 to 3 in favor of advancing a bill that would create a state holiday in honor of King on the third Monday in January while derecognizing Washington and Lincoln's holidays. On February 19 the senate voted 17 to 13 in favor, but Speaker of the House James Sossaman removed the bill from the agenda after multiple Republicans representatives complained about the bill. The bill was brought back into the house's agenda, but Sossaman stated that it would most likely be defeated and on May 9, 1986 the house voted 30 to 29 against the bill. On May 18 Governor Bruce Babbitt circumvented the state legislature and declared the third Monday of January as Martin Luther King Jr. Day as a state holiday via executive order although only executive office employees would receive a paid holiday. However, Attorney General Robert K. Corbin stated that the governor did not have the power to declare state holidays and only the state legislature could do so although Babbitt stated that he would not rescind his proclamation and would only do so after a legal challenge.

Proposition 300
Arizona Martin Luther King Jr. Day Amendment
Results
Votes  %
Yes 880,488 61.33%
No 555,189 38.67%
Valid votes 1,435,677 100.00%
Invalid or blank votes 0 0.00%
Total votes 1,435,677 100.00%
Results by County
Arizona Martin Luther King Jr. holiday 1992 referendum.png
Source: Secretary of State of Arizona

During the 1986 gubernatorial election former state senator Evan Mecham ran on a platform that included the removing of the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day that was established via executive order by Governor Bruce Babbitt and narrowly won the election due to vote splitting between Democratic Carolyn Warner and William R. Schulz, who had initially run in the Democratic primary, but after dropping out and reentering was forced to run an independent campaign.

On January 12, 1987, Mecham rescinded Babbitt's executive order causing Arizona to become the only state to de-recognize Martin Luther King Jr. Day. The following day presidential candidate and civil rights activist Jesse Jackson met with Mecham at a joint press conference after meeting for twenty minutes and asked him to reinstate the holiday, but Mecham refused and instead called for a referendum on the issue. Later on January 19 10,000 people marched in Phoenix to the state capitol building in protest of the action. On May 28, 1987, Norman Hill, president of the A. Philip Randolph Institute, gave a speech in Tucson at the state's AFL-CIO convention where he stated that unions should tell conventions to boycott Arizona and stated that Mecham's decision "caters to bigotry and encourages polarization (of the races)". The de-recognition resulted in $20 million in tourist business being lost due to multiple organizations canceling their conventions in protest, although some, like the Young Democrats of America, kept their conventions in Arizona.

On January 19, 1988, the Senate Judiciary Committee voted 5 to 4 in favor of sending a proposal that would let voters decide whether to create a paid holiday in honor of King on the third Monday in January or an unpaid holiday on a Sunday, but the bill was rejected in the Senate. On April 4 Mecham was removed from office by the Senate after an impeachment trial for obstruction of justice and misuse of government funds. On April 14 the Senate Government Committee voted 5 to 4 in favor of a bill that would create a holiday in honor of King and combine Washington and Lincoln's holidays, but the Senate voteed 15 to 14 to reject the bill.

Following the failure of the state legislature to pass a bill creating a state holiday for King, Governor Rose Mofford put forward three options that she would look into: issuing the same executive order Babbitt had issued, wait until after the elections to see if there would be a more friendly makeup towards a King holiday, or wait for a special legislative session to include a King holiday in the plan. Mofford later stated that she would wait until after the elections to attempt to create a King holiday. Due to the failure of the governor and state legislature to create the holiday, another movement to boycott Arizona was created with support from Jesse Jackson and Democratic delegates supporting it and planning to perform a demonstration outside of the Democratic National Convention.

The Arizona Board of Regents voted unanimously on September 9, 1988 to create a paid King holiday at the three state universities that would give 20,000 of the state's 40,000 employees a paid holiday. Arizona State University later chose to end its observation of President's Day and replaced it with the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday.

On January 16, 1989, 8,000 people marched in Phoenix in support of the creation of a holiday in honor of King with Governor Rose Mofford, Mayor Terry Goddard, and House Minority Leader Art Hamilton speaking. On February 2, the state house voted in favor of a bill creating a paid state holiday, but Senate President Bob Usdane did not take action on the bill until March 30 when he sent it to the Government Senate Committee where it died in committee. Democratic members of the House included the creation of a holiday inside an economic development bill, but the Commerce Committee voted 7 to 6 to separate the bills.

Another bill was created in the Senate that would end Arizona's observation of Columbus Day in favor of King Day and it passed the Senate Judiciary Committee with 6 to 3 in favor. The bill was passed by the Senate and House and signed by Governor Mofford on September 22, 1989. However, on September 25 opponents of the holiday filed with the Secretary of State to collect signatures to force a referendum on the recently passed bill and submitted enough signatures in December.

On March 13, 1990, the NFL had its annual meeting in Orlando, Florida, and one of the items on its agenda was to determine a host city for Super Bowl XXVII. Among the cities being considered was Tempe, and Arizona civil rights activist Art Mobley was sent to the meeting to make sure that the Arizona ballot initiative was a talking point at the discussion. The vote was conducted and Tempe was awarded the game, but committee chairman and Philadelphia Eagles owner Norman Braman warned that if the King Day ballot initiative went against adoption of the holiday, the NFL would pull the game from Arizona and move it somewhere else.

The bill eliminating Columbus Day was titled as Proposition 301 and another bill was passed by the legislature that would combine Washington and Lincoln's Birthdays and create a King Day was titled as Proposition 302. On November 6, 1990, both referendums were defeated with Proposition 301 being defeated in a landslide due to more effort being spent on Proposition 302 which was narrowly defeated by 50.83% to 49.17%. In March 1991 the house and senate passed a bill that would place a referendum on the creation of a King state holiday onto the 1992 ballot in an attempt to keep the Super Bowl in Arizona. On March 19, 1991, NFL owners voted to remove the 1993 Super Bowl from Phoenix due to the rejection of both referendums. It was estimated that the state lost at least $200 million in revenue from Super Bowl lodging and $30 million from the numerous convention boycotts. On November 3, 1992, Proposition 300 was passed with 61.33% to 38.67% and Super Bowl XXX was later held in Tempe, Arizona in 1996.

Legislative votes
House votes: Vote Total votes
Yes No Not voting
1986 29 30 1 60
1989 35 24 1 60
1989 37 21 2 60
1991 40 11 9 60
Senate votes: Vote Total votes
Yes No Not voting
1975 16 13 1 30
1986 17 13 0 30
1988 14 15 1 30
1989 17 11 2 30
1991 25 4 1 30
Vote by Members
1988 Senate vote
Senator Party Vote
John Hays Republican No
Tony Gabaldon Democratic Yes
James Henderson Jr. Democratic Yes
Bill Hardt Democratic Yes
Jones Osborn Democratic Yes
Alan Stephens Democratic Yes
Peter Rios Democratic Yes
Carol Macdonald Republican No
Jeff Hill Republican No
Jesus Higuera Democratic Yes
Jaime Gutierrez Democratic Yes
John Mawhinney Republican No
Greg Lunn Republican Yes
Bill De Long Republican No
Hal Runyan Republican Not voting
Wayne Stump Republican No
Pat Wright Republican No
Tony West Republican Yes
Jan Brewer Republican No
Lela Alston Democratic Yes
Carl Kunasek Republican No
Manuel Peña Democratic Yes
Carolyn Walker Democratic Yes
Pete Corpstein Republican No
Jacque Steiner Republican Yes
Peter Kay Republican No
Doug Todd Republican No
Robert Usdane Republican No
Jack Taylor Republican No
Jamie Sossaman Republican No
Referendum Results
1990 Proposition 301 Results
Choice Votes Percentage
No 768,763 75.36%
Yes 251,308 24.64%
Totals 1,020,071 100.00%
1990 Proposition 302 Results
Choice Votes Percentage
No 535,151 50.83%
Yes 517,682 49.17%
Totals 1,052,833 100.00%
1992 Proposition 300 Results
Choice Votes Percentage
Yes 880,488 61.33%
No 555,189 38.67%
Totals 1,435,677 100.00%

Arkansas

In February 1983 the House and the Senate before being signed into law by Governor Bill Clinton allowing state employees to choose to take a holiday off on Martin Luther King Jr., Robert E. Lee, or their own birthday. In 1985 the state legislature voted to combine King and Lee's birthdays and stayed combined until March 14, 2017 when Governor Asa Hutchinson signed a bill separating the holidays.

Legislative votes
House votes: Vote Total votes
Yes No Not voting
1991 66 11 23 100

Connecticut

Thomas Meskill
Governor Thomas Meskill

In 1971 a bill to recognized King's birthday as a holiday was passed by both the Connecticut House of Representatives and Connecticut Senate, but was vetoed by Governor Thomas Meskill, who had initially supported the bill, citing the cost of having another paid holiday with it being around $1.3 million. The bill was reintroduced by Representative Irving J. Stolberg in 1972 and it passed in the senate again, but was defeated in the House. In 1973 Governor Meskill issued a proclamation recognizing King's birthday and Representative Maragaret Morton, the first black women in the state's assembly, later introduced a bill to create a holiday in honor of King, but it was shelved by the General Law Committee as they felt that Meskill would veto it again.

Supporters of the King holiday created a petition and in February 1973 it had received enough signatures from legislators to force public hearings on a bill for the holiday. Although the law initially put forward by the petition failed, an amended version passed the house 124 to 17 in favor and the senate with unanimity, and Governor Meskill signed it into law on June 14, 1973, making Connecticut the first state to recognize a holiday in honor of Martin Luther King Jr.

On March 4, 1976, Governor Ella Grasso stated that she would support moving the holiday from the second Sunday to January 15. The house and senate both passed a bill to change the holiday's date and make it a paid holiday, and on May 4, 1976, Grasso signed the bill making Martin Luther King Jr. Day fall on January 15 and as a paid holiday for Connecticut's 40,000 state employees.

Legislative votes
House votes: Vote Total votes
Yes No
1971 97 41 138
1972 56 86 142
1973 124 17 141
1976 121 24 145
Senate votes: Vote Total votes
Yes No
1971 25 9 34
1972 17 16 33
1976 32 4 36

Illinois

Washington h
Illinois representative, Harold Washington

In 1969 Harold Washington, then a state representative from the 26th district, introduced a bill to create a holiday in honor of Martin Luther King Jr. On April 9, 1969 the House executive committee voted to advance the bill, both state legislative chambers voted in favor of the bill and Governor Richard B. Ogilvie signed the bill creating a commemorative holiday in honor of King that would allow school services to be held in his honor.

In 1970 Representative Washington proposed a bill to make the commemorative holiday a paid legal holiday but was unsuccessful. In 1971 Washington reintroduced the bill and it passed the house with 121 to 15 in favor and the senate with 37 to 7 in favor, but was vetoed by Governor Ogilvie. In 1972 the Chicago Public Schools system started to observe King's birthday.

In January 1973 Washington, Susan Catania, and Peggy Martin reintroduced the bill in the House along with Senator Cecil A. Partee. On April 4, 1973, the Illinois House of Representatives voted 114 to 15 in favor of the bill, the Illinois Senate later voted in favor of it as well, and on September 17, 1973 Governor Dan Walker signed the bill.

Kentucky

Sen Wendell Ford of Ky
Governor Wendell Ford

On January 15, 1971, Mayor Leonard Reid Rogers of Knoxville declared a holiday in honor of King in the city. In February 1972 state Senator Georgia Davis Powers introduced a bill that would create a state holiday in honor of King, but it did not make it through the committee although they told Davis to offer an amendment to a holiday bill currently in the legislature. However, Davis was absent when the bill came to the senate, but was able to offer an amendment to another holiday bill although the bill was defeated after her amendment passed.

On January 15, 1974, Powers and state Representative Mae Street Kidd proposed bills to create a state holiday in honor of King and both bills passed through each chambers' committees. The Kentucky Senate and Kentucky House of Representatives passed the bill and on April 1, 1974 Governor Wendell Ford signed it into law which recognized King Day as a state holiday. Although the King holiday was not officially paired with Robert E. Lee Day both days would occasionally fall on the same day whenever the third Monday in January was on the 19th.

In 1975 Governor Julian Carroll declared the first King Day in Kentucky, but state employees were not given the day off with Carroll citing an economic crisis as the reason.

Legislative votes
House votes: Vote Total votes
Yes No
1974 50 6 56
Senate votes: Vote Total votes
Yes No
1974 30 1 31

Maine

On February 13, 1986, a bill to create a paid holiday in honor of King was defeated in the house, but was later modified to make it optional and passed the Maine Senate and Maine House of Representatives before being signed by Governor Joseph E. Brennan and going into effect on July 16, 1986.

Legislative votes
House votes: Vote Total votes
Yes No Not voting
1986 77 61 13 151
Senate votes: Vote Total votes
Yes No Not voting
1986 24 5 6 35

Massachusetts

In 1974 members of the Massachusetts Black Caucus introduced a bill to recognize Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday as a state holiday, but it died in committee. However, the bill was revived by state Senator Joseph F. Timilty who changed it to a half-holiday that would allow businesses to stay open, but governmental offices would close. The bill passed both the House and Senate before being signed into law by Governor Francis Sargent on July 8, 1974.

Legislative votes
House votes: Vote Total votes
Yes No Not voting
1974 160 53 27 240

Missouri

On January 7, 1971, Mayor Alfonso J. Cervantes of St. Louis signed into law a bill that would create a city holiday in honor of Martin Luther King on January 15.

New Hampshire

On February 11, 1999, Jesse Jackson spoke in Portsmouth where he stated that he was considering a presidential run and asked for New Hampshire to recognize a state holiday in honor of King. On April 8, 1999 the Senate voted in favor of a bill renaming Civil Rights Day to Martin Luther King Jr. Civil Rights Day and was later passed by the House before being signed by Governor Jeanne Shaheen on June 7.

Legislative votes
House votes: Vote Total votes
Yes No Not voting
1999 212 148 40 400
Senate votes: Vote Total votes
Yes No Not voting
1987 19 5 0 24

North Dakota

In 1985 Governor George A. Sinner appointed a commission to coordinate the state's federal observation of Martin Luther King Jr. Day, but state employees were not given the day off. In 1987 a bill was introduced to recognize it as a state holiday and was passed by the House and Senate before being signed by Governor Sinner on March 13, 1987.

Legislative votes
House votes: Vote Total votes
Yes No Not voting
1987 64 39 3 106
Senate votes: Vote Total votes
Yes No Not voting
1987 27 26 0 53

Ohio

On January 14, 1975 Cincinnati's city council recognized a city holiday in honor of King and approved a resolution in support of a statewide holiday bill created by state Senator Bill Bowen. Bowen's bill passed the Senate and House before being signed into law by Governor Jim Rhodes on May 2, 1975.

Legislative votes
House votes: Vote Total votes
Yes No Not voting
1975 57 33 9 99
Senate votes: Vote Total votes
Yes No Not voting
1987 24 5 4 33

Wyoming

In 1973 state Representative Rodger McDaniel introduced a bill that would create a holiday in honor of Martin Luther King Jr., but nothing became of the bill. In 1986 another bill creating a King holiday was introduced by state Representative Elizabeth Byrd, but on February 21 it was rejected.

In 1989 Governor Mike Sullivan signed an executive order that would have Wyoming observe a holiday in honor of King only for 1990. On January 2, 1990 the Albany County Commission voted to observe King Day for only 1990.

In 1990 another bill creating a holiday in honor of King that would end Wyoming's observation of Columbus Day was introduced. An attempt to change its name from Martin Luther King Jr. Day to Wyoming Equality Day was defeated by a vote of 32 to 29 although it was later renamed as Martin Luther King, Jr./Wyoming Equality Day as a compromise to allow it to pass. The bill passed the House and Senate and on March 15, 1990 Governor Sullivan signed the bill into law.

Legislative votes
House votes: Vote Total votes
Yes No Not voting
1990 48 16 0 64
Senate votes: Vote Total votes
Yes No Not voting
1990 21 9 0 30

Timeline

Timeline of Passage of Martin Luther King Jr. Day
Year State Action Percent of states
April 4, 1968
TN
Death of Martin Luther King Jr. 0.00%
June 18, 1971
CT
Vetoed 0.00%
September 28, 1971
IL
Vetoed 0.00%
June 14, 1973
CT
Recognized 2.00%
September 17, 1973
IL
Recognized 4.00%
April 1, 1974
KY
Recognized 6.00%
July 8, 1974
MA
Recognized 8.00%
1975
RI
Recognized 10.00%
May 2, 1975
OH
Recognized 12.00%
May 4, 1976
CT
Amended date and paid 12.00%
1977
NJ
Recognized 14.00%
1977
MI
Recognized 16.00%
1977
LA
Recognized 18.00%
1978
MD
Recognized 20.00%
1978
PA
Recognized 22.00%
1978
SC
Recognized 24.00%
1979
MO
Recognized 26.00%
1982
WV
Recognized 28.00%
1983
WI
Recognized 30.00%
March 7, 1983
AR
Recognized 32.00%
1983
CA
Recognized 34.00%
1983
NC
Recognized 36.00%
November 2, 1983
USA
Recognized Federal Holiday to begin in 1986 36.00%
1984
VA
Recognized 38.00%
1984
TN
Recognized 40.00%
1984
NY
Recognized 42.00%
1984
MN
Recognized 44.00%
1984
GA
Recognized 46.00%
1984
DE
Recognized 48.00%
May 8, 1984
AL
Recognized 50.00%
1985
CO
Recognized 52.00%
1985
KS
Recognized 54.00%
1985
NE
Recognized 56.00%
1985
OK
Recognized 58.00%
1985
OR
Recognized 60.00%
1985
WA
Recognized 62.00%
1986
VT
Recognized 64.00%
1986
IN
Recognized 66.00%
May 18, 1986
AZ
Recognized 68.00%
July 16, 1986
ME
Recognized 70.00%
1987
MS
Recognized 72.00%
1987
NV
Recognized 74.00%
1987
NM
Recognized 76.00%
January 12, 1987
AZ
Derecognized 74.00%
January 20, 1987
AK
Recognized 76.00%
March 13, 1987
ND
Recognized 78.00%
1987
TX
Recognized 80.00%
1988
HI
Recognized 82.00%
1988
FL
Recognized 84.00%
1989
IA
Recognized 86.00%
1990
ID
Recognized 88.00%
1990
SD
Recognized 90.00%
March 15, 1990
WY
Recognized 92.00%
November 6, 1990
AZ
Referendum 92.00%
November 6, 1990
AZ
Referendum 92.00%
1991
MT
Recognized 94.00%
November 3, 1992
AZ
Referendum 96.00%
June 7, 1999
NH
Recognized 98.00%
2000
UT
Recognized 100.00%
March 14, 2017
AR
Separated holidays 100.00%


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