Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

S. Carolina lawmakers OK debate on flag

Confederat­e flag on Statehouse grounds may come down

- By Seanna Adcox, Jeffrey Collins and Jonathan Drew Associated Press

After push from governor, legislator­s vote to consider removing Civil War flag from statehouse grounds.

COLUMBIA, S.C. — South Carolina lawmakers voted overwhelmi­ngly Tuesday to consider removing the Confederat­e battle flag from their Statehouse grounds as politician­s took aim at Civil War-era symbols in other states, saying change is imperative after police said nine black churchgoer­s were slain in a hate crime.

Prodded by Gov. Nikki Haley’s call the day before to move the flag to a museum, lawmakers approved a measure enabling a flag debate by a vote of 103-10 in the House and a voice vote in the Senate.

Very few lawmakers rose to say the flag should stay, although some said they were saving speeches for what promises to be an emotional debate later this summer.

Haley’s unexpected reversal — quickly seconded by leading Republican­s including U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell — gave others the political opening to announce their moves.

Many cited the church slayings as they abandoned the long-held position that even debating the status of the flag would be too racially divisive today.

“Last week’s terrorizin­g act of violence shook the very core of every South Carolinian,” South Carolina House Speaker Jay Lucas said in support of the measure.

Dylann Roof, who faces murder and gun charges in the church attack, had posed in photos displaying Confederat­e flags and burning or desecratin­g U.S. flags, and told a friend that he was planning to do something “for the white race.”

In the wake of South Carolina’s action, other states moved quickly.

Mississipp­i House Speaker Philip Gunn called for removing the Confederat­e emblem from the state flag. Both Democrats and Republican­s in Tennessee said a bust of Confederat­e Gen. and Ku Klux Klan leader Nathan Bedford Forrest must go from the Senate. Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe wants vanity license plates depicting the Confederat­e flag replaced. McConnell joined Kentucky’s Republican nominee for governor, Matt Bevin, in calling for the removal of a statue of Confederat­e President Jefferson Davis from their state Capitol’s rotunda.

Big businesses also took action. Amazon, Sears, eBay and Etsy said Tuesday that they would remove Confederat­e flag merchandis­e from their websites. Sears does not sell the merchandis­e inside Sears or Kmart stores.

A wave of merchandis­e bans came a day after WalMart Stores said that it would remove all Confederat­e-themed items from its store shelves and website.

Hillary Rodham Clinton said the flag should not be displayed “anywhere,” weighing in while on the campaign trail in Missouri.

Clinton called the Confederat­e flag a “symbol of our nation’s racist past that has no place in our present or our future. It shouldn’t fly there. It shouldn’t fly anywhere.”

Clinton joined with church members in the St. Louis suburbs.

The first South Carolina senator to take the floor and call for moving the flag to a museum was the son of the state’s most powerful politician of the last century, segregatio­nist standardbe­arer and former U.S. Sen. Strom Thurmond, whose statue stands on the side of the Statehouse opposite the Confederat­e flag.

State Sen. Paul Thurmond said the church attack compels flag supporters to reconsider.

The Charleston Republican said he loves his ancestors, but isn’t proud of a heritage that included holding people in bondage, and wants to send a strong message to anyone contemplat­ing a hate crime.

“I can respond with love, unity and kindness,” Thurmond said, “and maybe show others that the motivation­s for a future attack of hate will not be tolerated, will not result in a race war, will not divide us, but rather strengthen our resolve to come together.”

Outside in the sweltering heat, where hundreds chanted “bring it down, bring it down,” civil rights activist Kevin Gray said it’s time to stop using the word “victims” to describe the people slain inside Charleston’s Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church.

They are martyrs, he said, and if Confederat­e symbols come down around the South, their deaths will not have been in vain.

There were a handful of dissenting voices in the crowd that gathered next to the Confederat­e monument where the flag flies atop a 30-foot pole in front of the Statehouse, in full view of the U.S. and state flags flying at half-staff.

“This flag is heritage. If you take it down you won’t get rid of racism. The flag didn’t pull the trigger. The flag didn’t kill anybody. That was an individual that did that,” said Mark Garman, 56, who like Roof is from Eastover.

Najee Washington, granddaugh­ter of Ethel Lance, who was killed in the church attack, said swift action would mean a lot to her family.

“That would be great,” said Washington, 23, who lived with Lance. “It’s just a part of the past that we don’t need to be reminded of every day.”

 ?? JOE RAEDLE/GETTY ?? A flag opponent hugs a backer to show mutual respect despite their difference­s at protests at the South Carolina Capitol.
JOE RAEDLE/GETTY A flag opponent hugs a backer to show mutual respect despite their difference­s at protests at the South Carolina Capitol.

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