Celebrating the two men together has not been popular in recent years in either state.
In Mississippi, Rep. Kabir Karriem, D-Columbus, introduced a bill in 2018 to designate separate days for MLK Day and Lee Day — moving Lee’s Day to the fourth Monday of January.
“Both men had impacts on our history, and I think it’s time to separate the holiday so that King can be observed for the Civil Rights icon he is,” Karriem said in a statement to the Columbus Commercial Dispatch. “I think this change is long overdue.”
The bill, however, died in committee.
Karriem restarted efforts to give King a separate holiday in 2023 with House Bill 825, which would recognize King's birthday on the third Monday of January and remove Robert E. Lee's birthday and Confederate Memorial Day — celebrated on the last Monday in April — as legal state holidays. That bill also died in committee.
Efforts in Alabama have suffered the same fate.
In 2020, a bill sponsored by Sen. Vivian Figures, D-Mobile, wanted to separate the two holidays by moving Lee Day to commemorate the day of his death — Oct. 12, 1870. The bill had bipartisan support, but it died in committee.
In 2023, House Bill 360 looked to remove Lee's holiday from the Alabama calendar completely. The bill was pre-filed by Rep. Chris England, D-Tuscaloosa — a former chair of the Alabama Democratic Party — amid a wave of bills trying to alter the Alabama holiday calendar. Democratic Rep. Kenyatté Hassell introduced the bill on April 20, but it died in committee on the same day.