National Post

South Carolina senators vote to take down flag

- By Jeffrey Collins

COLUMBIA, S.C. • The South Carolina Senate voted Monday to remove the Confederat­e flag from a pole on the Statehouse grounds, though the proposal still needs approval from the state House and the governor.

The bill requires a two-thirds vote in each chamber; the Senate approved it 37-3. Gov. Nikki Haley has said she wants the flag to come down and will sign the bill.

Monday’s vote comes less than a week after the 15th anniversar­y of South Carolina taking the flag off the Capitol dome where it had flown since the early 1960s and moving it to beside a monument honouring Confederat­e soldiers.

“We now have the opportunit­y, the obligation to put the exclamatio­n point on an extraordin­ary narrative of good and evil, of love and mercy that will take its place in the history books,” said Sen. Tom Davis, a Republican from Beaufort.

Lawmakers had largely ignored the flag until the killing of nine black people during a Bible study at a historic African-American church in Charleston, S.C., on June 17.

Earlier Monday, the Senate rejected a pair of amendments: one that would only fly the flag on Confederat­e Memorial Day, and one that would leave the flag’s fate up to a popular vote.

The only man to speak in support of keeping the flag flying was State Sen. Lee Bright. He suggested the popular vote said the Confederat­e flag has been misused by people like Dylann Roof, who is charged with nine counts of murder in the church shootings and posed in pictures with the rebel banner. Police say the white man was motivated by racial hatred.

“I’m more against taking it down in this environmen­t than any other time, just because I believe we’re placing the blame of what one deranged lunatic did on the people that hold their Southern heritage high,” said Bright, a Republican.

Sen. Darrell Jackson, a black Democrat, helped write the compromise that brought the Confederat­e flag off the Statehouse dome in 2000 and put it in its current loca- tion on a pole on the capitol’s front lawn. South Carolina had been the last state to fly a Confederat­e flag on its Capitol dome.

Jackson said he regretted not going farther to get rid of the flag completely 15 years ago.

A survey asking lawmakers how they intend to vote after Haley’s call to remove the flag found at least 33 senators and 83 House members agreed with her, satisfying the twothirds majority required by law to alter the flag’s position.

But the survey by The Post & Courier newspaper, the South Carolina Press Associatio­n and The Associated Press asked only about whether to keep or lower the flag. It did not include any possible changes that could cause the proposal to lose support.

The flag will not come down Monday, even with the support of Haley. There are indication­s the proposal could have a tougher road in the House. Some powerful Republican­s have not said how they will vote, including Speaker Jay Lucas.

Some Republican­s want to keep the flagpole and put a different flag on it. Suggestion­s have included the U.S. flag, the South Carolina flag and a flag that may have been flown by Confederat­e troops but does not have the same connection­s as the red banner with the blue cross and white stars.

Democrats have said they cannot support any flag linked to the Confederac­y. Haley and business leaders agree.

“There is no good-looking Confederat­e flag. It all stands for the same thing — secession,” said Lonnie Randolph, president of the South Carolina chapter of the National Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Colored People.

 ?? Rainier Ehrhardt / the Associat ed Press files ?? The South Carolina Senate voted 37-3 on Monday to remove the Confederat­e flag from the South Carolina Statehouse in Columbia, S.C. There are indication­s the proposal could have a tougher road in the House.
Rainier Ehrhardt / the Associat ed Press files The South Carolina Senate voted 37-3 on Monday to remove the Confederat­e flag from the South Carolina Statehouse in Columbia, S.C. There are indication­s the proposal could have a tougher road in the House.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada