Tuesday, May 02, 2017

California says citizens can display Confederate flag on state grounds

The San Francisco Chronicle reports:
California prohibits its government agencies from selling or displaying the Confederate flag. But in a settlement of a lawsuit by an artist, who had to wait a year before his Civil War painting that included the Stars and Bars could be shown at a state-sponsored fair, the state has agreed that the ban doesn’t apply to private citizens on state property.

The Legislature and Gov. Jerry Brown approved the flag ban in 2014, saying the Confederate battle emblem symbolized slavery and oppression. A year later, the ban was invoked by officials at the Big Fresno Fair, an annual event on state property, to prevent Timothy Desmond from entering his painting “The Attack,” an 1864 battle scene, in the fair’s art competition because it showed the Confederate flag.

Desmond sued, represented by the Center for Individual Rights, and the state agreed to allow the painting in the 2016 fair. He pressed ahead with the suit and won a settlement Tuesday that promises the same thing won’t happen to anyone else.

The law banning Confederate flag displays “applies only to the state of California and not to private individuals,” Attorney General Xavier Becerra’s office said in a U.S. District Court filing. The state’s lawyers acknowledged that the ban does not affect “the rights of private individuals to carry, display, or sell a Confederate flag or any similar image either on private or government property” and does not authorize the state to restrict private display or sale of the flag or its portrayals.
The Civil War in the news.