William Barber on Building a Moral Movement
At Hayti Heritage Center, Barber assessed the results of the 2024 election before 300 people.

As much as any theologian of his generation, Barber can lay claim to the moral mantle of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.鈥檚 . The Baptist preacher first came to the nation鈥檚 attention in 2013, when he organized the in North Carolina, highlighted by what became known as the 鈥淢oral Monday鈥 rallies at the state legislative complex in Raleigh, where nearly 1,000 people were arrested.
In 2015, he founded to extend the Moral Monday movement as it grew nationally. In 2018, he helped to spearhead a revival of the 1968 that was originally led by Dr. King.
Barber said the Christian tradition includes the concept of love.
鈥淚 would say if you just felt a need to grieve [on Election Day], you鈥檙e probably a little late.鈥
William Barber
鈥淵ou love people, things, persons, situations, communities, because they need something other than what they have. And they may not give the love back to you. But if you don鈥檛 give it to them, you become them,鈥 he said.
Barber added that he refuses to allow any moment in this country, even when it is at its worst, to turn him into a lesser being.
鈥淚f I become that, then I can鈥檛 be an instrument of [transformation],鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e human. We should hold on to that fury. Faith doubts. Faith has to have doubt within to be authentic faith. Love sometimes struggles with hate. I would say if you just felt a need to grieve [on Election Day], you鈥檙e probably a little late.鈥
Barber said 鈥渨e should have been angry long before now,鈥 adding that what happened on Election Day was the fruition of the 鈥Southern Strategy鈥 deployed by the Republican Party starting in the mid-60s at the height of civil rights legislation.
The strategy, Barber said, created what GOP leaders described as 鈥減ositive polarization鈥 that would 鈥減it people against each other that should be allies.鈥
The anti-poverty leader said it was 鈥渁 planned reality.鈥
鈥淒octor King in 1965, said 鈥榯he greatest fear of the oligarchs in this country is for the masses of poor negroes and poor white people to get together and form a voting bloc that could fundamentally shift the economic architecture of the country.鈥樷
Barber co-authored a recently published book, 鈥,鈥 which focuses on the power of this multiracial coalition.
Barber also offered pointed criticism of the Democratic Party campaign strategy that dismissed the economic hardships of the working-class poor, and years ago abandoned the South鈥檚 most impoverished citizens.
鈥淭he number one economic issue was a living wage everywhere,鈥 Barber said. 鈥淟iving wage was on the ballot. It won. Why wasn鈥檛 living wages a major campaign issue?鈥
He addressed the audience鈥檚 concerns about the election鈥檚 implications, including Lentz-Smith鈥檚 remark that 鈥渨e are bearing witness to a period of intensifying nativism and rancid racism.鈥
鈥淲e are in a crisis of civilization,鈥 Barber said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e got some serious questions to ask about this crisis of civilization.鈥
Barber took to task white evangelicals, who he described as 鈥渙pportunists who wrapped defense of segregation in the language of morality,鈥 and 鈥淐hristian nationalists [who] fail any kind of faith moral test.鈥
鈥淚 believe we ought to take every piece of public policy and ask more questions,鈥 Barber said. 鈥淒oes it establish justice? Does it provide for common defense? Does this policy promote the general welfare?
鈥淏ut I also add this from a Christian religious perspective 鈥 is it rooted in truth? Is it rooted in justice? Is it rooted in love? Is it rooted in mercy?鈥
The civil rights leader said the nation should have grieved for the millions of people who died at the height of the covid epidemic.
鈥淲e lost 350,000 people, not from covid, but from the lack of health care,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd we entered covid [as] the only advanced country 鈥 so-called advanced country 鈥 that did not offer health care based on your humanity rather than your job.鈥
Barber also criticized corporate media titans who declined to endorse a presidential candidate.
鈥淗ow can you not endorse when you have a candidate that everyday violates everything that the Lord hates?鈥 he asked. 鈥淎nd I read in Proverbs 6 where it says the Lord hates proud eyes, a lying tongue, sowing division, hands that shed innocent blood. And then you look at everything Jesus said of a nation ought to be welcoming the immigrant, caring for the least of these.鈥
However, Barber said history shows that the politics of 鈥渁rrogance, pride and injustice always goes too far and creates its own demise and creates the movement that takes it out,鈥 and, he later added, 鈥渨here the extremists go so far, they actually unite us.鈥
He encouraged the audience not to give in to despair.
鈥淵ou鈥檝e just been through an election,鈥 Barber said. 鈥淵ou haven鈥檛 been through 250 years of slavery. You just went through an election, you haven鈥檛 been through 25 years of Jim Crow. So come on now. Let鈥檚 [not] glorify your pain too much.鈥