Amended in Senate September 1, 2015

Amended in Assembly July 16, 2015

Amended in Assembly July 8, 2015

California Legislature—2015–16 Regular Session

Assembly Joint ResolutionNo. 26


Introduced by Assembly Member Weber

(Principal coauthors: Senators Hall and Mitchell)

(Coauthors: Assembly Members Alejo, Brown, Burke, Cooper, Eggman, Cristina Garcia, Gipson, Gonzalez, Holden, Jones-Sawyer, McCarty, Ridley-Thomas, and Thurmond)

(Coauthor: Senator Glazer)

June 30, 2015


Assembly Joint Resolution No. 26—Relative to the Confederate flag and symbols.

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

AJR 26, as amended, Weber. Removal of the Confederate flag and symbols.

This measure would, among other things, memorialize the Congress of the United States to ban the sale or display of any Confederate flag, including the Confederate Battle Flag, on federal property and encourage states to ban the use of Confederate States of America symbolism from state flags, seals, and symbols, and would encourage the donation of Confederate artifacts to museums.

Fiscal committee: no.

P1    1WHEREAS, According to the 1860 United States Census, the
2United States population was 31,443,321. The total number of
P1    1slaves in the Lower South was 2,312,352, comprising 47 percent
2of the total population, and the total number of slaves in the Upper
3South was 1,208,758, comprising 29 percent of the total population;
4and

5WHEREAS, South Carolina had a clear Black majority from
6about 1708 through most of the 18th century. By 1720, there were
7approximately 18,000 people living in South Carolina and 65
8percent of those were African American slaves. South Carolina’s
9slave population grew to match the success of its rice culture.
10Whereas in 1790, there were slightly more Whites than Blacks,
11with 140,178begin delete Whiteend deletebegin insert Whitesend insert and 108,896begin delete Black,end deletebegin insert Blacksend insert living in
12South Carolina. Bybegin delete 1860end deletebegin insert 1860,end insert the Black population had grown,
13with 291,300begin delete Whiteend deletebegin insert Whitesend insert and 412,320begin delete Black,end deletebegin insert Blacks,end insert tobegin delete more
14thanend delete
begin insert nearlyend insert doublebegin delete ofend delete the White population; and

15WHEREAS, The Southern United States, including the States
16of Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi,
17North Carolina, Texas, West Virginia, Virginia, and South
18Carolina, seceded from the greater union in 1860 to join the
19Confederate States of America under President Jefferson Davis
20and General Robert E. Lee; and

21WHEREAS, The symbolism of the Confederate flag when the
22states seceded in 1860 represented, in its personification, secession
23and treason; and

24WHEREAS, The first official national flag of the Confederacy,
25often called the Stars and Bars, was flown from March 4, 1861,
26to May 1, 1863, inclusive. The Stars and Bars flag was adopted
27March 4, 1861, in the first temporary national capital of
28Montgomery, Alabama, and was raised over the dome of that first
29Confederate Capitol; and

30WHEREAS, At the First Battle of Manassas, the first battle of
31the Civil War, the similarity between the Stars and Bars and the
32Stars and Stripes caused confusion and military problems.
33Regiments carried flags to help commanders observe and assess
34battles in the warfare of the era. At a distance, the two national
35flags were hard to tell apart. In addition, Confederate regiments
36carried many other flags, which added to the possibility of
37confusion; and

38WHEREAS, After the battle, General Pierre Gustave Toutant
39Beauregard, a prominent general of the Confederate States Army
40during the Civil War, wrote that he was resolved then to have the
P3    1Confederate flag changed if possible, or to adopt for his command
2a “battle flag,” the Stars and Bars, that would be entirely different
3from any state or federal flag. His aide William Porcher Miles, the
4former chair of the Committee on the Flag and Seal, described his
5rejected national flag design to Beauregard. Miles also told the
6Committee on the Flag and Seal about the general’s complaints
7and request for the national flag to be changed. The committee
8rejected this idea by a four to one vote, after which Beauregard
9proposed the idea of having two flags. He described the idea in a
10letter to his commander General Joseph E. Johnston: “How would
11it do for us to address the War Dept. on the subject for a supply
12of Regimental or badge flags made of red with two blue bars
13crossing each other diagonally on which shall be introduced the
14stars. ... We would then on the field of battle know our friends
15from our enemies”; and

16WHEREAS, Although the soldiers of the Confederacy were
17never tried by the United States government after the Civil War,
18Jefferson Davis and General Robert E. Lee were indicted and later
19acquitted of all charges by President Andrewbegin delete Jacksonend deletebegin insert Johnsonend insert as
20he left office in 1869; and

21WHEREAS, After the Civil War ended, groups such as the Ku
22Klux Klan were formed to promote White supremacy and racial
23hatred. The Ku Klux Klan, perhaps the most infamous, was one
24of the first groups to continue using the Confederate flag after the
25war. The Ku Klux Klan rallied others still vexed after the war to
26instill fear and spout hate against freed African Americans; and

27WHEREAS, The flag was later resurrected in the 1950s to rally
28resistance to the Civil Rights movement and support the South’s
29desire to maintain segregation and further the policies of Jim Crow;
30and

31WHEREAS, In South Carolina, the Confederate flag was moved
32to the top of their State Capitol building in 1962, after President
33John F. Kennedy called on the Congress of the United States to
34end poll taxes and literacy tests for voting, and the United States
35Supreme Court struck down segregation in public transportation;
36and

37WHEREAS, According to the Southern Poverty Law Center,
38there are 788 “hate groups” in the United States. Of these, 57 are
39located in the State of California, which is the highest of any state.
40There are a total of 283 of these hate groups in the former
P4    1Confederate states. Nineteen of these hate groups reside in South
2Carolina. Of these 19 hate groups, 16 use the Confederate flag as
3one of their symbols. These hate groups include the Ku Klux Klan,
4Neo-Nazis, and Neo-Confederates; and

5WHEREAS,begin delete Whereas,end delete African Americans make up 15.6 percent
6of the population of the United States, or 45 million people,begin insert butend insert
7 in 2013, they were victims ofbegin delete 32.7 percent, or 14,715,000,end deletebegin insert one-thirdend insert
8 of all hate crimes in the United States, which is the highest number
9of any group in America; and

10WHEREAS, On June 17, 2015, Dylann Roof went to Emanuel
11AME Church in Charleston, South Carolina, and opened fire during
12a Wednesday Bible study, killing nine of the church’s attendees;
13and

14WHEREAS, Over the last five years, friends of Dylann Roof
15had seen him become increasingly aligned with White supremacist
16ideologies. They observed his behavior becoming more fanatical
17than that of the most notorious hate groups in his native South
18Carolina. Dylann Roof believed that it was up to him to do the
19work that other hate groups were failing to do. Dylann Roof
20believed that African Americans were “stupid and violent” people
21and viewed Hispanics and Latinos as the “enemy”; and

22WHEREAS, Dylann Roof has been photographed on various
23occasions with the same Confederate flag that many of these hate
24groups proudly display; and

25WHEREAS, Sixty-nine percent of those surveyed by Public
26Policy Polling believe that the shooting attack at Emanuel AME
27Church in Charleston, South Carolina, was a hate crime and 34
28percent surveyed believe it was a form of terrorism; and

29WHEREAS, Since the end of the Civil War, private and official
30use of the Confederacy’s flags, and of flags with derivative designs,
31has continued and generated philosophical, political, cultural, and
32racial controversy in the United States. These include flags
33displayed in states, cities, towns, counties, schools, colleges,begin insert orend insert
34 universities,begin insert or byend insert private organizations, associations,begin delete andend deletebegin insert orend insert by
35individuals; and

36WHEREAS, In some American states the Confederate flag is
37given the same protection from burning and desecration as the
38United States flag. It is protected from being publicly mutilated,
39defiled, or otherwise cast in contempt by the laws of five states:
40Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, and South Carolina.
P5    1However, laws banning the desecration of any flag, even if
2technically remaining in effect, were ruled unconstitutional in 1989
3by the United States Supreme Court in Texas v. Johnson and are
4not enforceable; and

5WHEREAS, In 2000, South Carolina passed a bill to remove
6the Confederate flag from the top of the state house dome. It had
7been placed there since the early 1960s by an all-White South
8Carolina Legislature to mark the 100th anniversary of the Civil
9War. The flag was moved to the north end of the state house as
10part of a compromise. However, to this day, there have been
11protests to have the flag removed from there as well; and

12WHEREAS, To many groups, especially African Americans,
13the Confederate flag is a symbol of hate, racism, exclusion,
14oppression, and violence. Its symbolism and history are directly
15linked to the enslavement, torture, and murder of millions of
16African Americans; and

17WHEREAS, Today, as in the past, public display of the
18Confederate flag is believed to instill fear, intimidation, and a
19direct threat of violence towards others, though a minute number
20of groups disagree, claiming that the Confederate flag
21commemorates Southern heritage; and

22WHEREAS, In 2014, the State of California, through the
23enactment of Assembly Bill 2444, became the first state to ban the
24state sale and display of the Confederate flag. The State of
25California may not sell or display the Battle Flag of the
26Confederacy, also referred to as the Stars and Bars, or any similar
27image, or tangible personal property inscribed with that image
28unless the image appears in a book, digital medium, or state
29museum that serves an educational or historical purpose; and

30WHEREAS, On June 22, 2015, Governor Nikki Haley of South
31Carolina called upon her state to remove the Confederate flag from
32the capitol grounds in the wake of the Emanuel AME Church
33shooting; now, therefore, be it

34Resolved by the Assembly and the Senate of the State of
35California, jointly,
That the Legislature of California encourages
36the United States Congress to identify the states that have a
37Confederate symbol embedded into their state’s flag; and be it
38further

39Resolved, That the Legislature memorializes the United States
40Congress to encourage states to ban the use of the former
P6    1Confederate States of America symbolism and seals from all state
2flags, seals, and symbols; and be it further

3Resolved, That the Legislature memorializes the United States
4Congress to ban the sale and display of any Confederate flag,
5including the Confederate Battle Flag, on federally owned
6properties and buildings and to urge those states that sell or display
7the flag at their capitols to have the flag removed; and be it further

8Resolved, That the Legislature encourages the United States
9Congress to encourage businesses to urge their states to take down
10any Confederate flag, including the Confederate Battle Flag, from
11their capitols; and be it further

12Resolved, That the Legislature encourages the donation of any
13effects representing the former Confederate States of America to
14local, state, and national museums; and be it further

15Resolved, That the Chief Clerk of the Assembly transmit copies
16of this resolution to the President and Vice President of the United
17States, to the Speaker of the House of Representatives, to the
18Minority Leader of the House of Representatives, to the Majority
19Leader of the Senate, to the Minority Leader of the Senate, to each
20Senator and Representative from California, and to the governors
21of the southern states including Alabama, Arkansas, Florida,
22Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina,begin delete Texas, West
23Virginia, Virginia, and South Carolina.end delete
begin insert South Carolina, Tennessee,
24Texas, and Virginia.end insert



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