Hillary’s Southern Accent Makes Cameo in Selma: ‘When That Spirit Is Breathed into Them!’

The former First Lady was speaking at a voting rights event in Selma, Ala.

This story is cross-posted at our consumer site, Grabien News. Watch it there – without audiomarks.

Hillary Clinton’s occasional southern accent made a well-timed return Sunday in Selma, Ala., where she spoke at an anniversary event of the 1965 “Bloody Sunday” march from Selma to Montgomery.

Clinton — who is known for lapsing into a southern drawl when speaking before southern audiences — occasionally affected a rhetorical tone resembling many of the preachers in attendance. 

Speaking to one, she said, “Reverend Green, when those bones get up, and when that spirit is breathed into them, and they start climbing out of that valley, the first place they go is to register to vote!”

Various Democratic lawmakers — including announced 2020 Democratic candidates Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) and Sen. Bernie Sanders (S-Vt.) — appeared at the Brown Chapel AME Church event, before an annual march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge.

"Oh, this is the day the Lord has made!” she opened. “Let us rejoice and be glad in it! Oh!”

Then, shifting back to her more typical speaking style, she added, “And then let’s get to work.”

Check out the montage above for more.


RELATED: 

— Climate Crazy: Fearful Activists Forsaking Having Kids in Bid to Save Planet

— Sen. Gillibrand: Green New Deal Will Pass on ‘Bipartisan’ Basis

— MSNBC’s Tur Asks Rep. Jackson Lee Six Times in a Row if She’ll Impeach Trump

Video files
Full
Compact
Audio files
Full
Compact