Columbia, SC – SC Senate Votes To Take Down Confederate Flag; House OK Still Needed

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    Randy Saxon, left and Wayne Whitfield, both of Anderson, S.C., discuss the Confederate flag on the South Carolina Statehouse grounds with Brodrick S. Hall of Atlanta, right, on Monday, July 6, 2015. Lively discussions on the flag took place on the grounds took place outside the state house where lawmakers debated whether the flag should be removed from the downtown Columbia complex.  ( AP Photo/ Meg Kinnard)Columbia, SC – 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.

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    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 flew since the early 1960s and moving it to beside a monument honoring 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, R-Beaufort.

    Lawmakers had largely ignored the flag until the killing of nine black people during a Bible study at a historic African-American church 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.

    State Sen. Lee Bright, who 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.

    “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.

    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 two-thirds majority required by law to alter the flag’s position. But the survey by The Post and 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 Gov. Nikki 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.

    Outside the Statehouse, dozens of protesters began to arrive, all watched by even more officers inside and outside the capitol. Some called for the flag to come down. Others, such as Nelson Waller in his rebel flag tie, said the state was giving in to Northern liberals and civil rights activists.


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    8 years ago

    Gavaldik, so now no more race issues
    In the USA

    I didnt know we had such a simpel salution !!!!!!!

    8 years ago

    If they say get rid of that flag, then I say get rid of the Democratic party. They were the ones that attacked the Union at Fort Sumter and sought the destruction of our nation. The Democrats carried that confederate flag and they supported slavery.
    Quoting Lincoln; “It is for us the living, rather to be dedicated here to the unfinished work that they who fought here so nobly advanced.” Yet, despite all the dead and destruction caused by the rebels, the federal government after April 1865 when the war came to an end did not ban the confederate flag from flying. Gen. Robert Lee was permitted to walk out with his sword after he surrendered to Gen. Ulysses Grant. The rebel soldiers were not prosecuted. “With Malice toward none, with charity for all, . . . ” The Southern position was defeated, but their symbols remained preserved with respect. That too is a part of this nations heritage! Those that want to destroy that beautiful American heritage are the modern day rebels against the United States. They disgrace the late President Abraham Lincoln. The Confederate Flag should be permitted to fly in the South, and the modern day rebels should not be permitted to succeed!!