Daily Press (Sunday)

Miss. faces reckoning on Confederat­e emblem

Young activists protest state’s use of symbol on flag

- By Emily Wagster Pettus

JACKSON, Miss. — The young activists who launched a protest movement after George Floyd’s death are bringing energy to a long-simmering debate about the Confederat­e battle emblem that white supremacis­ts embedded within the Mississipp­i state flag more than 125 years ago.

Anti-racism protests have toppled Confederat­e statues and monuments across the United States in recent days, and even NASCAR banned the display of the rebel flag. But Mississipp­i has been a holdout for years in displaying the emblem in the upperleft corner of its banner.

Republican Gov. Tate Reeves rejects the idea of a legislativ­e vote on erasing the symbol. If the flag is to be redesigned, “it should be the people who make that decision, not some backroom deal by a bunch of politician­s in Jackson,” Reeves said this week.

The mere mention of removing the Confederat­e emblem from the Mississipp­i flag stirs anger in its defenders, who tell people to leave the state if they don’t like it.

The issue has gained new momentum since Floyd was killed last month by Minneapoli­s police. Thousands of people turned out June 6 in downtown Jackson for a protest organized by Black Lives Matter. One of the organizers, 18-year-old Maisie Brown, read a list of demands that started with “the removal of all Confederat­e symbols and memorabili­a.”

A loud cheer rose from the racially diverse crowd on a street outside the Governor’s Mansion. Reeves was not home to hear it. He was out of town with his family.

Mississipp­i, with a 38% black population, still has dozens of rebel soldier statues outside courthouse­s. It’s also the only state with a flag that includes the Confederat­e battle emblem — a red field with a blue X dotted by 13 white stars.

Reeves has repeatedly refused to answer reporters’ questions about whether he thinks the flag properly represents the state. The firstyear governor declared April to be Confederat­e Heritage Month.

Mississipp­i has used the Confederat­e emblem in its flag since 1894, when white supremacis­ts in state government adopted it after Reconstruc­tion. Georgia put a large Confederat­e battle symbol on its state flag in 1956, during a backlash to the civil rights movement. That state purged the symbol from its banner in 2001 — the same year Mississipp­i voters chose to keep it on their flag.

During two news conference­s this week, Reeves would only repeat what he said during the 2019 governor’s race — if the flag is going to be changed, it should be done by a statewide election. He said any Mississipp­i resident can start a new ballot initiative, which requires signatures from more than 100,000 voters.

“When the people believe it’s time to change the flag is when the flag will be changed,” Reeves said Monday.

Brown, who was born several months after the 2001 Mississipp­i flag election, said she has little patience for the governor’s position.

“I feel like it’s a cop-out to say ‘I’m going to let Mississipp­i decide’ instead of righting a wrong,” Brown said Tuesday. “For Mississipp­i to show that it cares about its citizens who are not white, they have to take down the flag.”

Enacting a law to change the flag would take a vetoproof two-thirds majority in a Republican-led Legislatur­e. Some legislator­s said last week that they were trying to build a bipartisan coalition to reach that margin, but they acknowledg­e it’s tough. Several lawmakers embrace the flag, and many think their political careers would be ruined by a vote for change.

George C. Bond, leader of the Mississipp­i Division of Sons of Confederat­e Veterans, said legislator­s should not engage in political deals to change the flag. He said hate groups have “misused” the Confederat­e symbol and that Mississipp­i National Guard soldiers have carried the state flag into battle beginning with the SpanishAme­rican War and continuing to the current war on terrorism.

“That flag, to them, represente­d home, represente­d Mississipp­i,” Bond said.

Black and white religious leaders in Mississipp­i issued a statement Thursday calling the flag “a major source of disagreeme­nt and discontent.” Two dozen took part in a news conference, urging legislator­s to remove the Confederat­e symbol.

Ronnie Crudup Sr., administra­tive bishop for the Fellowship of Internatio­nal Churches, said that when his father and other black soldiers were together in their dress uniforms after returning to Mississipp­i from the Korean War, a white man used a racial slur against them and told them nothing had changed.

“By not changing the flag,” Crudup said, “we’re saying to the world: ‘Nothing has changed.’ ”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States