Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Juneteenth swap

Sen. Ron Johnson proposes new holiday take place of Columbus Day.

- Craig Gilbert

In response to bipartisan efforts to make Juneteenth a federal holiday, Republican Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin has proposed eliminatin­g a different federal holiday “in exchange.” His choice?

Columbus Day.

“We support celebratin­g emancipati­on with a federal holiday but believe we should eliminate a current holiday in exchange. We chose Columbus Day as a holiday that is lightly celebrated, and least disruptive to Americans’ schedules,” Johnson said in a statement Wednesday.

Johnson and fellow Republican James Lankford of Oklahoma will be seeking to amend a bill making Juneteenth a federal holiday.

Johnson said adding to the number of federal holidays would give federal workers an additional day of paid leave and increased the government’s costs. He called his amendment a “counterpro­posal that does not put us further in debt.”

Juneteenth, celebrated on June 19, commemorat­es the end of slavery. The Emancipati­on Proclamati­on had outlawed slavery more than two years earlier, but enforcemen­t largely was a function of where Union troops had advanced. On June 19, 1865, federal orders finally reached — and were proclaimed — in Texas.

Efforts to make it a federal holiday have intensified amid the protests against racial inequality in the aftermath of the killing of George Floyd by police in Minneapoli­s.

Columbus Day honors Christophe­r Columbus and has been recognized as a federal holiday since 1934. Originally, it fell on Oct. 12, but President Lyndon Johnson in 1968 moved it to the second Monday in October.

For many Italian-American groups and communitie­s, it’s a day set aside to celebrate their heritage. But it has been a source of growing controvers­y in recent years because of the killing and enslavemen­t of indigenous people in the Americas by European explorers and settlers.

Last year, Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers by executive order designated Indigenous Peoples Day to run on the same day as the federal holiday. Earlier this year, Chicago Public Schools stopped recognizin­g Columbus Day entirely, instead giving students off the same day and calling it Indigenous Peoples Day, drawing objections from Italian American groups.

A spokesman for Johnson said the senator was not denigratin­g Christophe­r Columbus or making a value judgment about his legacy, only seeking to avoid increasing the number of federal holidays for cost reasons.

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