[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 106 (Thursday, July 9, 2015)]
[House]
[Pages H4963-H4964]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CONFEDERATE FLAG AMENDMENTS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Maryland (Mr. Hoyer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, there are days in this House when morality
and the values of our country, as articulated in the Declaration of
Independence and in the Constitution of our country, summon us to vote
as Americans, as moral representatives, and as representatives of the
values of our country. Today is such a day, my colleagues.
Three Democratic amendments were adopted earlier in the consideration
of the Interior bill that would end the practice of displaying or
selling Confederate battle flags and flag merchandise in national parks
and National Park Service cemeteries. Those amendments were adopted by
voice vote. They reflect the strong consensus in this country and,
hopefully, in this Congress, that a symbol of slavery, sedition,
segregation, and secession has no place in our national parks or in the
cemeteries whose grounds have been hallowed by the veterans who rest
there after having served and given their lives in defense of freedom
and justice and the values of our country.
Unbelievably, however, Mr. Speaker, several hours ago, in the dark of
night, the chairman of the Interior Subcommittee offered an amendment
on this floor that would effectively strike those amendments which
surely reflect the values to which all of us have risen our hand and
sworn to protect.
Today, on the anniversary of the ratification of the 14th Amendment
to our Constitution--how ironic that we would meet this vote on this
day--which enshrined the principle of equality for all Americans, we
have this shameful Confederate battle flag amendment on our floor.
This amendment would keep in place a policy that allows Confederate
battle flags in our national parks and National Park Service
cemeteries, a symbol, as my colleague Jim Clyburn, the assistant leader
and the chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus and an extraordinary
Representative in South Carolina, said yesterday was so offensive and
hurtful to so many millions of our fellow citizens and our fellow
colleagues in this body.
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.
Certainly--certainly--on this day we ought not to see a Republican-
led Congress move in the opposite direction. My colleagues, together,
not as Republicans and Democrats, but as Americans deeply committed to
the values of
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equality and justice and opportunity for all, we ought to remove that
flag from our national parks, the cemeteries where our veterans rest
and, I would say further, all public places. That includes the United
States Capitol.
And I support my friend Representative Thompson's resolution that
sits now in the House Administration Committee that would remove the
flag of Mississippi, which contains the Confederate battle flag, until
such time as Mississippians, as South Carolinians did yesterday, make a
statement and remove that from their flag.
I urge my colleagues, my fellow Americans, the 434 of my colleagues
that have raised their hand and sworn to protect and defend the
Constitution of the United States of America, I urge my colleagues, let
us do the right thing and reject this amendment and send a powerful
message about what America truly represents: equality, justice, respect
for one another, freedom for all.
Let us make America--every American--proud of us this day and reject
the amendment adopted in the dead of night.
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