COLUMBIA, S.C. - Presidential candidate Wesley
Clark thinks all of his fellow Democrats should take a stand against
the Confederate flag.
"The Confederate flag undermines the values that Americans care
deeply about - equality, diversity and inclusion," Matt Bennett, the
retired general's campaign spokesman, said Sunday. "The general
strongly believes that every Democratic candidate needs to condemn
the divisiveness represented by the Confederate flag."
The statement came after comments by former Vermont Gov. Howard
Dean, also a Democratic presidential hopeful, that he wanted "to be
the candidate for guys with Confederate flags in their pickup
trucks."
In a telephone interview quoted in Saturday's Des Moines
Register, Dean said, "We can't beat George Bush unless we appeal to
a broad cross-section of Democrats."
Dean said Saturday that he was intending to encourage the return
of Southern voters who have abandoned the Democrats for decades but
are disaffected with Republicans.
The Confederate flag is a hot issue in South Carolina, where it
flies on Statehouse grounds. In 2000, under pressure from the
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and other
groups, the state Legislature removed the flag from the Capitol dome
and House and Senate chambers.
The compromise that put the banner at the Confederate Soldier
Monument satisfied some protesters, but the NAACP continues its
boycott of the state because of the flag's prominent
display.