SC Senate votes to remove flag from Statehouse grounds
William Cheek, left, Nelson Waller, center, and Jim Collins, right, protest proposals to remove the Confederate flag from the grounds of the South Carolina Statehouse on Monday, July 6, 2015, in Columbia, S.C. The General Assembly returns Monday to discuss Gov. Nikki Haley's budget vetoes and what to do with the rebel flag that has flown over some part of the Statehouse for more than 50 years. |
COLUMBIA, S.C.
(AP) -- The South Carolina Senate voted Monday to pull the Confederate
flag off the Capitol grounds, clearing the way for a historic measure
that could remove the banner more than five decades after it was first
flown above the Statehouse to protest integration.
A
second vote will be needed Tuesday to send the proposal to the House,
where it faces a less certain future. But Monday's 37-3 vote was well
over the two-thirds majority needed to advance the bill.
If
the House passes the same measure, the flag and flagpole could be
removed as soon as Gov. Nikki Haley signs the papers. The flag would be
lowered for the last time and shipped off to the state's Confederate
Relic Room, near where the last Confederate flag to fly over the
Statehouse dome is stored.
The vote came at
the end of a day of debate in which several white senators said they had
come to understand why their black colleagues felt the flag no longer
represented the valor of Southern soldiers but the racism that led the
South to separate from the United States more than 150 years ago.
As
the senators spoke, the desk of their slain colleague, Clementa
Pinckney, was still draped in black cloth. Pinckney and eight other
black people were fatally shot June 17 during Bible study at a historic
African-American church in Charleston. Authorities have charged a gunman
who posed for pictures with the rebel banner. Police say he was driven
by racial hatred.
Several senators said the grace shown by the families of the victims willing to forgive the gunman also changed their minds.
"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, a
Republican.
After the vote, Sen. Vincent
Sheheen, a Democrat whose suggestion that the flag be taken down while
running for governor last year was called a "stunt" by Haley, was given a
high-five from a fellow legislator.
"I thought it would happen, but never this fast," Sheheen said.
Republican
Sen. Larry Martin, who for decades fought off attempts to remove the
flag from Statehouse grounds, said the church shooting drew him to the
same conclusion that his black colleague arrived at long ago - that the
rebel flag "has more to do with what was going on in the 1960s as
opposed to the 1860s."
Martin, who is white,
had family who came to South Carolina's then-rugged northern backcountry
from Scotland in the early 1800s. That was about the time the enslaved
relatives of Sen. Darrell Jackson, a black Democrat, involuntary ended
up near Columbia.
Jackson helped write the
compromise that took the Confederate flag off the Statehouse dome in
2000 and put it in its current location on a pole on the Capitol's front
lawn.
On Monday, he said his
great-grandfather's brother fled a plantation and joined the Union army
when Gen. William Sherman came storming through Columbia.
Jackson
said he regretted not going further to get rid of the flag completely
15 years ago. But he welcomed the chance now to honor his
great-grandfather, Ishmael Jackson, who escaped to freedom.
"You
said we lost the war. No we didn't. Not Ishmael Jackson and the 57
percent of people who looked like him. As far as they are concerned,
they won the war," Jackson said.
The Senate
rejected three amendments. One would have put a different Confederate
flag on the pole. A second would fly the flag only on Confederate
Memorial Day, and the third 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 murder in the church shootings and who
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.
The flag still has at
least a few days to fly, even with Haley, business leaders and civil
rights proponents wanting it down as soon as possible. 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.
House Minority Leader Todd Rutherford vowed that no Democrat would vote for a bill that leaves the flagpole up.
The
bill is expected to be sent directly to the House floor Wednesday with
several amendments offered, said Republican Rep. Greg Delleney, chairman
of the Judiciary Committee, which would normally receive the bill
before it got to the floor.
If any amendments pass, a conference committee would probably be needed to hash out differences.
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