South Carolina governor: Confederate flag comes down Friday 
  
 
 | 
| South
 Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley signs a bill into law as former South 
Carolina governors and officials look on Thursday, July 9, 2015, at the 
Statehouse in Columbia, S.C. The law enables the removal of the 
Confederate flag from the Statehouse grounds more than 50 years after 
the rebel banner was raised to protest the civil rights movement. | 
COLUMBIA, S.C.   
  (AP) -- Saying South Carolina's history has forever changed, Gov. 
Nikki Haley signed a bill Thursday to relegate the Confederate flag to 
the state's "relic room," more than 50 years after the rebel banner 
began flying at the Statehouse to protest the civil rights movement.
 
Compelled
 to act by the slaughter of nine African-Americans at a church Bible 
study, Gov. Nikki Haley praised lawmakers for acknowledging that the 
long-celebrated symbol is too painful and divisive to keep promoting.
"The
 Confederate flag is coming off the grounds of the South Carolina 
Statehouse," Haley said before signing the bill. "We will bring it down 
with dignity and we will make sure it is stored in its rightful place."
Police
 then surrounded the rebel flag with barricades and rope, a siege of 
sorts that will end Friday after the banner is furled for the last time 
at a 10 a.m. ceremony.
South Carolina's 
leaders first flew the battle flag over the Statehouse dome in 1961 to 
mark the 100th anniversary of the Civil War. It remained there to 
represent official opposition to the civil rights movement.
Mass
 protests against the flag decades later led to a compromise in 2000 
with lawmakers who insisted that it symbolized Southern heritage and 
states' rights. They agreed then to move it to a 30-foot pole next to a 
Confederate monument out front.
But even from 
that lower perch, the flag was clearly visible in the center of town, 
and flag supporters remained a powerful bloc in the state.
The
 massacre 22 days ago of state Sen. Clementa Pinckney and eight others 
inside Charleston's Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church suddenly 
changed this dynamic, not only in South Carolina but around the nation.
Police
 said the killings were racially motivated. By posing with the 
Confederate flag before the shootings, suspect Dylann Storm Roof, who 
has not yet entered a plea to nine counts of murder, showed that the 
flag also has symbolized white supremacy and racial oppression.
Haley
 moved first, calling lawmakers to vote the flag down. Very quickly 
thereafter, Republican leaders in other states who have long cultivated 
the votes of Confederate flag supporters announced that Civil War 
symbols no longer deserve places of honor.
"These
 nine pens are going to the families of the Emanuel Nine," Haley said 
after signing the bill into law. 
"Nine amazing individuals who have 
forever changed South Carolina history."
The 
governor said the way the victims welcomed the gunman into their Bible 
study, and the forgiveness survivors expressed when the suspect later 
appeared in court, have inspired change nationwide.
"Nine
 people took in someone who did not look like them or act like them. And
 with true love and true faith and acceptance, they sat and prayed with 
him for an hour. That love and faith was so strong that it brought grace
 to them and the families," Haley said.
"We 
saw the families show the world what true grace and forgiveness look 
like," she added. "That set off an action of compassion by people in 
South Carolina and all over this country. They stopped looking at their 
differences and started looking at their similarities."
The
 flag removal bill passed easily in the Senate, where the Rev. Pinckney 
served, but then stalled as House members proposed dozens of amendments.
 Any changes could have delayed the flag's removal and blunted momentum 
for change.
The debate stretched on for more 
than 13 hours as representatives shared anger, tears and memories of 
their ancestors. Flag supporters talked about grandparents passing down 
family treasures. Some lamented that the flag had been "hijacked" or 
"abducted" by racists.
Rep. Mike Pitts 
recalled playing with a Confederate ancestor's cavalry sword while 
growing up, and said the flag reminds him of dirt-poor Southern farmers 
who fought Yankees, not because they hated blacks, but because their 
land was being invaded.
Black Democrats, frustrated at being asked to honor those who fought for slavery, offered their own family histories.
Rep.
 Joe Neal traces his ancestry to four brothers, brought to America in 
chains and bought by a slave owner named Neal who pulled them apart from
 their families.
"The whole world is asking, 
is South Carolina really going to change, or will it hold to an ugly 
tradition of prejudice and discrimination and hide behind heritage as an
 excuse for it?" Neal said.
Rep. Jenny Horne, a
 white Republican who said she is a descendent of Confederate President 
Jefferson Davis, scolded her party members for stalling.
"I
 cannot believe that we do not have the heart in this body to do 
something meaningful such as take a symbol of hate off these grounds on 
Friday," she shouted. "For the widow of Sen. Pinckney and his two young 
daughters, that would be adding insult to injury and I will not be a 
part of it!"
The bill ultimately passed by a 
93-27 vote - well above the two-thirds supermajority needed to make 
changes to the state's "heritage" symbols.
Republican
 Rep. Rick Quinn said he was satisfied after lawmakers promised to find 
money - perhaps millions of dollars -for a special display in the 
state's Confederate Relic Room for the flag being removed, as well as 
the one taken down from the dome in 2000.
"It's
 just like the conclusion of the war itself," Pitts said Thursday 
afternoon after the vote. "The issue was settled, and the nation came 
back together to move on."
But Republican Rep.
 Jonathon Hill, who voted against removing the flag, said he fears a 
larger movement has begun to eliminate Civil War-era history.
"Hopefully it ends here, and we move forward, and we can put all of this behind us," Hill said.
Some
 groups are already seeking to do just that. The National Association 
for the Advancement of Colored People will consider ending its 15-year 
boycott of South Carolina's economy at its national convention this 
weekend. The NCAA, which honored that ban, said it will resume holding 
championship events in the state.
 
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