Politics
May 20, 2026
Hakeem Jeffries Echoes NAACP's Call for College Sports Boycott Over Voting Rights
US House Democrat leader Hakeem Jeffries has amplified calls for Black athletes to boycott public u…
The Call for a College Sports Boycott
Hakeem Jeffries, the top US House Democrat, has amplified calls for Black athletes to boycott public universities in states that have moved to limit voting rights, saying an “unprecedented moment, featuring an unprecedented attack on Black political representation” requires an “unprecedented response”.
The NAACP's 'Out of Bounds' Campaign
Jeffries’s comments came Tuesday as the NAACP launched its “Out of Bounds” campaign. The campaign targets universities in eight states – Tennessee, Louisiana, Alabama, Florida, Mississippi, South Carolina, Texas and Georgia – whose athletic programs generate more than $100m in revenue. Those eight states have moved to draw new voter maps after the supreme court’s Louisiana v Callais decision severely weakened the Voting Rights Act.
The Southeastern Conference in the Spotlight
The minority leader specifically called out the powerhouse Southeastern Conference. Twelve of the SEC’s 16 member schools are in the eight targeted states.
The Boycott's Objectives
The campaign calls on football and basketball players being recruited by programs in those states to withhold their commitments until the states “restore fair congressional maps and meaningful Black representation”.
It also urges athletes and coaches already enrolled at those universities to use their platforms to elevate voting rights causes.
It asks fans, alumni and donors to stop financially supporting those programs.
The Impact on High-Valued Athletic Programs
The SEC is home to nine of the 15 highest-valued athletic programs in the country, according to CNBC, including leader Texas ($1.48bn), Georgia, Alabama and Florida.
A Legacy of Activism
Athletes at Missouri and Mississippi, both SEC schools, have led successful campaigns in recent years putting pressure on universities and state governments for social justice causes. Jeffries referenced Bill Russell, Muhammad Ali and Jackie Robinson in his remarks, calling on this generation to carry on the legacies of previous activist athletes.
The Congressional Response
Jeffries and members of the Congressional Black Caucus earlier this week voiced their opposition to the Score act, a bill intended to set national standards for college athletes’ compensation. The bipartisan proposal, which has support from the NCAA, was to be brought to the House floor for a vote this week, but the CBC opposed the bill to protest the silence of the universities on voting rights. House Republicans decided on Tuesday to postpone a vote on bill, the second time in less than a year that it has been stalled.
#Hakeem Jeffries
#NAACP
#Voting Rights
Read More