Posted on March 5, 2019

Arkansas Governor Backs Removing Confederate Link to Flag

Andrew DeMillo, Associated Press, March 4, 2019

Arkansas’ governor on Monday backed an effort to change the meaning of a star on the state flag that honors the Confederacy to instead have it acknowledge Native Americans’ contributions to the state.

Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson told The Associated Press that he’d support the proposal to change state law regarding Arkansas’ flag if it comes up again during the legislative session. The proposal, which wouldn’t have changed the design of Arkansas’ flag, failed before a state House committee last week.

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The proposal would have changed the legal meaning of the blue star above Arkansas’ name on the state flag. The star currently represents the Confederate States of America. The bill instead would have it represent the Native American tribes that inhabited the state, including the Quapaw, Osage and Caddo.

Hutchinson said the four blue stars on the flag are meant to represent the countries that have had dominion over what is now the state of Arkansas. The other three blue stars on the flag represent the United States, France and Spain.

“I don’t know that we need to recognize Arkansas in a state of rebellion,” Hutchinson said. “I think we’d be better off recognizing those nations, from the Indian tribes to others, that we’ve been under.”

Hutchinson said that having the star represent the Confederacy is painful for many in the state.

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Democratic state Rep. Charles Blake, who proposed the change, said Monday that he’s inclined to try again with the measure before the House panel. Blake, who is black, is the top Democrat in the majority-Republican state House. {snip}

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Hutchinson in 2017 signed into law a measure removing Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee from the state holiday honoring civil rights icon the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. That proposal had repeatedly failed during a 2015 legislative session and Hutchinson made it part of his legislative agenda two years later.

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