2000 Alabama Amendment 2

Amendment 2
Alabama Interracial Marriage Amendment
Results
Choice
Votes %
Yes 801,725 59.49%
No 545,933 40.51%
Total votes 1,347,658 100.00%

Source: Secretary of State of Alabama[1]

2000 Alabama Amendment 2, also known as the Alabama Interracial Marriage Amendment, was a proposed amendment to the Constitution of Alabama to remove Alabama's ban on interracial marriage. Interracial marriage had already been legalized nationwide 33 years prior in 1967, following Loving v. Virginia, making the vote symbolic. The amendment was approved with 59.5% voting yes, a 19 percentage point margin, though 25 of Alabama's 67 counties voted against it. Alabama was the last state to officially repeal its anti-miscegenation laws, following South Carolina in 1998.

  1. ^ "Results" (PDF). Secretary of State of Alabama. 2000. Retrieved November 10, 2020.