Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Evers did not remove Capitol’s US flag

West pole flag flies when Assembly is in session

- Eric Litke

When protesters gathered at the state Capitol in April to call for Gov. Tony Evers to reopen the state, the lack of an American flag at their chosen location became a point of contention.

The Associated Press reported chants of “Where’s our flag?” and protesters calling it a “disgrace.”

A similar claim surfaced in a viral Facebook post on June 12.

“Wisconsin Democrat Governor Evers removed the American flag from the Capitol building by ordering it to be taken down! This is beyond disgracefu­l!” the post said.

The text accompanie­d an undated photo showing protesters outside the Capitol building, with an empty flagpole circled in red.

This question is particular­ly notable since in the intervenin­g time, Evers has ordered the Capitol fly the rainbow pride flag for Pride Month (as he did in 2019) and the Juneteenth flag to commemorat­e the end of slavery.

This post was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinforma­tion on its News Feed.

So did Evers really order the American flag removed at some point?

Answering that means figuring out where and when this picture was taken. Let’s get to sleuthing.

Tracking down the setting

The Wisconsin Capitol building in Madison — completed in 1917 — is a symmetrica­l structure with a similar façade of pillars and windows facing north, south, east and west. The peak of each entry has a flagpole.

So the first question is which flagpole we’re talking about.

A review of photos from Google Maps shows the picture in question was taken at the West (State Street) entrance. That entrance has two rows of windows, with arched windows at the top. The other three entrances each have three rows, with a smaller row atop the arched windows.

The west wing of the Capitol houses the state Assembly, so that body is in charge of which flag flies when. The Assembly policy — like the state Senate — is to fly the American flag, but only when the body is in session.

The other element is when this photo was taken, since it’s undated in the Facebook post.

The most notable recent rally there occurred April 24, when protesters gathered to pressure Evers into reopening the state amid the coronaviru­s pandemic. The lone readable sign in the image — SCIENCE says “OPEN WISCONSIN!” — gives us the key clue here.

That’s certainly consistent with a reopen rally. But more importantl­y, that same sign can be seen in a Milwaukee Journal Sentinel photo of the event.

Putting it together

So we have a picture from April 24 on the west wing of the Capitol.

That’s the Assembly flagpole, and since the Assembly wasn’t in session that day (having adjourned the day before), not flying the American flag was standard operating procedure.

The protesters could have seen the American flag in its usual spot alongside the Wisconsin flag if they had walked around to the east side of the Capitol.

The governor has authority over that flagpole and the north-wing pole that flies the POW-MIA flag. The state Senate controls the remaining south-wing flagpole.

So the Facebook post in question is not only wrong that Evers had authority over the flagpole in question, it goes a step further by claiming the U.S. flag was absent because of a specific order from the governor.

Britt Cudabeck, a spokeswoma­n for Evers, confirmed the governor did not order any U.S. flag taken down. The U.S. and Wisconsin flags have flown daily on the east pole as usual.

Our ruling

A Facebook post claims Evers ordered the U.S. flag removed from the state Capitol, posting as support a picture of an empty flagpole.

Our research shows that photo was taken seven weeks before the Facebook post in front of the west wing of the Capitol, which is controlled by the state Assembly. The flag only flies when the Assembly is in session, and it wasn’t that day.

So the post is not only wrong, it moves into the realm of the ridiculous by manufactur­ing the assertion that Evers had specifically ordered the flag removed.

We rate this claim Pants on Fire.

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