As long as nobody minds something a little more concrete being poured into the discussion, one good thing to come out of this tragedy was reminding a bunch of Republican state governments that they're
still flying the Confederate battle flag in some places, and y'know, that's kinda offensive to a lot of people.
In a stunning show of sensibility, the South Carolina government including Governor Nikki Haley and the (Republican) majority leaders of both chambers have said
it's definitely coming up for a vote, and Haley at least is adamant on the flag being removed from the state capitol. Better late than never anyway:
The General Assembly's session ended on June 4, but lawmakers are meeting Tuesday to pass a budget compromise, at which point they can vote on extending the session to debate the removal of the Confederate flag. A decision to continue the session would take two-thirds of the vote, as would passing legislation to take down the flag.
If they don't, Haley said she would use her authority to call them back into session to debate on the flag.
"The murderer, now locked up in Charleston, said he hoped his actions would start a race war. We have an opportunity to show that not only was he wrong, but that just the opposite is happening," Haley said. "My hope is that by removing a symbol that divides us, we can move our state forward in harmony, and we can honor the nine blessed souls who are now in heaven."
The call for action is a departure from Haley's original stance on the flag. "Outside groups are free to voice their concerns and problems with it, but revisiting this issue is not part of the governor's agenda," her spokesman, Doug Mayer, told the Post and Courier in 2013. And when Haley ran for re-election last year, she said the flag wasn't an issue.
If you're wondering about the procedural notes, this same debate happened in 2000 and the state legislature struck a compromise vote, the the Confederate flag would replaced with a less famous but virtually identical version, moved across the lawn to a Confederate Soldier memorial (instead of over the capitol itself), but in exchange the flag's placement could not be moved again without a two-thirds majority vote by both chambers. That includes even lowering the flag to half-mast. Which it was not, on the day the governor went outside to talk about it.
Both of South Carolina's federal senators also called for the flag to be permanently removed. They're both interesting characters, for senators. One is Tim Scott, South Carolina's first black Senator and the first from anywhere in the old Confederacy elected since 1881; Scott was appointed by Governor Haley after Jim DeMint left to be a lobbyist, but was reelected by an off-year ballot. The other is Lindsey Graham, one of the twenty-odd people running for President and a hardcore conservative on every imaginable issue; Graham was also originally appointed to his seat when Strom Thurmond finally died after about a century in office, who once ran for President on his own Segregation Party ticket (I shit you not).
Meanwhile, Republican candidates across the country have been auditing their campaign donations for money sent by white-supremacist group leaders who Dylann Roof namechecked. Most of the removed money is being donated to the victims' fund set up by Charleston's mayor Joseph Riley, a weirdly likeable Mayor-For-Life character you'd expect from the Andy Griffith show but without the subtly-racist background of the real 1960s. Likewise, several retail outlets include Walmart are pulling Confederate-flag-themed merchandise from sale, at least as fast as they ever pull anything from sale.
That's all well and good. But the fact that a strong market exists for such things, or that South Carolina wrote into law a supermajority test for even talking about removing the Confederate flag from display, or that the Sons of Confederate Veterans
insists there is no connection between the Confederate flag and people who would commit murder in its name, should tell you that distinctly southern nationalism is not going to quietly vacate American politics any time soon.
Republican politicians across the country are rightfully and thankfully and laudably finally getting on the right side of history and calling for symbols of the Confederacy to be removed from the public. But there's a gulf of difference between denouncing a symbol and denouncing the problem it represents, and there's a lot of people out there who certainly aren't violent but don't kindly to anything they culturally identify with being criticized. For reference, see Governor Haley's terminally rising disapproval ratings even prior to last week. And we're still more than a year away from a very big election, and no story lasts very long. I'm wondering if next summer, anybody in the Presidential debates is going to have the guts to follow Jon Stewart's lead and ask, "Do you believe domestic hate groups are as dangerous to America as foreign terrorists?" I'll be surprised if it happens, but at this point, I'm optimistic that there's at least a chance of it happening.