Bobby Jindal doesn't think "the time is right" to talk about
taking down the Confederate flag flying over the South Carolina statehouse.
Also speaking up for the Confederate flag: Gov. Bobby Jindal, who was
asked about it by ABC News. Jindal indicated he thought flying the
Confederate flag was a states' rights issue:
Look, the states decide that — and, again, just like with the gun issue, let's have that debate at the right time.
I mean, right now we should all be in mourning. I think flags should be
at half-mast, you know, across our states, across our country. Now's a
time for mourning.
Not sure when Bobby thinks the time might be right seeing as how they've been
talking about it for decades already.
“It’s like getting political Ebola,” said David Woodard, a longtime
Republican political consultant and professor of political science at
Clemson University, of the Confederate flag issue. “Any time you touch
it you’re going to make more enemies than friends.”
Woodard
recalled the hard-fought battle in the late 1990s and early 2000s, when
the NAACP announced a boycott on tourism to the Palmetto State in
protest of the flag and the issue became part of the national
conversation during the Republican presidential primary between John
McCain and George W. Bush.
Then-Gov. David Beasley lost reelection in 1998, in part because of his campaign to take down the Confederate flag, Woodard said.
“It was just a very, very tense situation, and you weren’t going to come
up with a solution that was going to make everybody happy,” Woodard
said.
Tens of thousands of people marched on the Capitol to protest the
flag, and several thousand others from the Sons of Confederate Veterans
stood on the statehouse steps — in uniform, Woodard said.
State
Rep. Rick Quinn, who was the majority leader of the state House of
Representatives at the time, said the fierce debate made for strange
bedfellows: In an effort to stall a compromise, members of the black
caucus who wanted to exorcise the flag from the Capitol grounds joined
forces with lawmakers who refused to vote to have it removed from atop
its dome.
After months of debate and a final marathon session,
Republican leaders wrought the compromise that hard-liners on both
sides had feared: The flags hanging on the dome and in each of the
legislative chambers would be moved to the state museum, and a new one
would be erected on a 30-foot flagpole at the Confederate war memorial
outside the statehouse.
But any other changes to the monument — or
any other in the state — would require the two-thirds vote, and South
Carolina does not have a robust voter referendum system, so a ballot
initiative could not overturn the law.
Fifteen years ago they decided the time wasn't right to do away the flag. Just needed some time for "the healing" to happen. Did the healing happen?
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