Washington (CNN)In an embarrassing setback for the Republican Party, which is trying to make inroads with minority voters, House Republican leaders abruptly yanked a spending bill off the floor after a blow up over the Confederate flag.
House members would have been voting on a proposal to allow the continued display of the flag at National Park Service cemeteries. The amendment was to be attached to the annual spending bill funding the Interior Department.
Democrats pounced on the political opening.
"Even in South Carolina today, where the Confederacy was born, that flag is being taken down from the state capitol grounds after both Republican-controlled houses of that state's assembly voted to remove it," said Rep. Steny Hoyer (D-Maryland), the minority whip. "Certainly on this day we ought not to see a Republican-led Congress move in the opposite direction."
"You cannot go halfway -- you have to go the whole way," Lewis said when asked about Boehner's proposal to try to come up with a compromise, saying it was time for the flag to come down altogether "just do it - do the right thing."
IMO this is getting ridiculous. Are they next going to want to remove confederate headstones that have the confederate flag engraved in them?
I don't think you have any idea what you're talking about.
The bill would have permitted displays of the confederate flag
in federal cemeteries. It had nothing to do with private property and what is or is not acceptable there.
The property belongs to all of us collectively, and we all have a say in what happens there. That includes, for example, black families who probably don't want to be seeing symbols of slavery and segregation on their way to mourn their deceased loved ones. There are
lots of regulations and restrictions concerning burials in federal cemeteries, so it's not like we're venturing into uncharted waters. If people don't wish to comply with those regulations they can have their loved ones buried elsewhere and do whatever they want with flags or headstones or anything else, so long as whoever owns that property is OK with it.