Posted on October 23, 2018

Report of Abrams Burning Georgia State Flag Resurfaces Weeks Before Election

Morgan Gstalter, The Hill, October 22, 2018

A decades-old news article about Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams (D) burning the state flag, which at the time included the Confederate battle flag, resurfaced on Monday.

Abrams stood on the steps of the Georgia Capitol in 1992 and burned the Georgia state flag, which was viewed as a symbol of white supremacy due to its Confederate design, The New York Times reported.

She was a freshman at Spelman College in Atlanta at the time and now her role in the protest is being reexamined as she faces a close race with her Republican opponent, Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp.

The rivals are scheduled for their first debate on Tuesday.

The June 14, 1992, protest was documented in the local section of the Atlanta Journal and Constitution newspaper the following day.

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The state legislature added the Confederate flag in 1956 as a show of resistance to federal pressure following the Brown v. Board of Education decision to desegregate schools, the Times reported.

The design of the flag was changed in 2001 and the Confederate flag was removed entirely in 2003, the Times noted.

The Democratic candidate’s campaign told the newspaper in a statement that her participating in the 1992 rally was part of a “permitted, peaceful protest against the Confederate emblem in the flag.”

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Since the 1992 protest, she has advocated for the removal of Confederate memorials and monuments.

She has called for the Confederate carving on Stone Mountain just east of Atlanta to be removed because of its ties to white supremacy and the Ku Klux Klan, the Times reported.

Her opponent Kemp has vowed to protect the monument from “the radical left.”