Yuma Sun

Ducey not interested in removing Ariz. Confederat­e monuments

- BY HOWARD FISCHER

PHOENIX — Gov. Doug Ducey has no interest in removing any Confederat­e monuments on state land, even in the wake of weekend violence after a racist demonstrat­ion in Virginia.

“It’s important that people know our history,’’ the governor said Monday. “I don’t think we should try to hide our history.’’

The governor, speaking after a publicity event in Buckeye, said he “100 percent condemned’’ groups like the Ku Klux Klan, neoNazis and white nationalis­ts. Many of those groups were involved in the demonstrat­ion in Virginia that later led to one sympathize­r driving his vehicle into a crowd of counter-protesters, killing one and injuring 19.

And Ducey said that 70 percent of Arizonans have moved here from somewhere else.

“It’s a very welcoming place, and I want to keep it that way,’’ he said.

But the governor said those who believe that memorials to the Confederac­y don’t belong on public property and are linked to white supremacis­t violence should not look to him to lead the way to having them removed.

“It’s not my desire or mission to tear down any monuments or memorials,’’ Ducey said. He said anyone who thinks it’s inappropri­ate to have monuments on public land to Confederat­e soldiers or have a portion of a state highway named after Confederac­y President Jefferson Davis should take their case to the boards that can change them.

Members of both boards tell Capitol Media Services they have gotten no such requests from the governor. And Ducey said he sees all this as “part of our history.’’

“We fought the Civil War and the United States won the Civil War,’’ he said. “We freed the slaves and we followed up with civil rights after that.’’

The governor’s comments about preserving history drew derision from Rep. Reginald Bolding, DLaveen. He said the call has never been to eradicate all monuments that mention the Confederac­y.

“The call has been to move away from having any Confederat­e monuments that are on state property,’’ he said.

“Any African American and many other individual­s should not be required to use our taxpayer dollars to keep up with the upkeep and maintenanc­e of these memorials,’’ Bolding said. He said that would be comparable to having monuments on public lands to those who fought for the Nazis.

The concerns go beyond the memorial placed across from the Capitol in 1961 by the Daughters of the Confederac­y and to the road name and marker for Jefferson Davis Highway. Bolding said he questions even having a monument at Picacho Peak State Park, which was the site of the westernmos­t battle of the Civil War.

“The Confederat­es, they were terrorists of their times,’’ he said.

“These were people who were saying people who looked like me should not have equal rights, we should be slaves,’’ Bolding continued. And he called it “appalling’’ to have those same people now be asked to not only have that monument on public lands but pay to keep it up.

And there’s something else.

“I believe the governor has the ability to exhibit influence and leadership,’’ he said.

Bolding said he’s not even asking Ducey to personally lobby the members of the two panels at issue: The Legislativ­e Government­al Mall Commission which decides what monuments go in the Wesley Bolin Memorial park across from the Capitol, and the Arizona State Board on Geographic and Historic Names which can place official names on mountains, rivers and roads.

“He absolutely has the ability to pick up the phone and reach out to these chairs (of these boards) and have them call a meeting,’’ he said.

 ?? PHOTO BY HOWARD FISCHER/CAPITOL MEDIA SERVICES ?? THIS MEMORIAL TO CONFEDERAT­E TROOPS was erected in 1961 by the United Daughters of the Confederac­y, one of six monuments around Arizona.
PHOTO BY HOWARD FISCHER/CAPITOL MEDIA SERVICES THIS MEMORIAL TO CONFEDERAT­E TROOPS was erected in 1961 by the United Daughters of the Confederac­y, one of six monuments around Arizona.

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