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The irresistible force is
about to meet the immovable object.
The
Georgia state flag issue is upon us and it isn’t going to go away. The flag
fight in South Carolina pretty much guarantees that.
On one
side of the debate will be a majority of state legislators, representing
constituents tired of having somebody else’s will imposed on them.
On the
other side, a group of mostly black legislators who have been waiting for
this opportunity since 1993. That is when Governor Miller suffered a
rare lapse of political savvy and saw his efforts to change the flag
emasculated.
In the
middle will be the business community. It is a position that business
doesn’t like. To their credit, the Metro Atlanta Chamber of Commerce
has gotten ahead of the issue and already chosen sides: Get rid of the
current flag. The Chamber passed a resolution on the matter in 1992
and that remains their position because it represents the view of a majority
of its members.
It isn’t
going to be as easy for the Georgia Chamber of Commerce. That organization
has members throughout the state – including Atlanta – and is less likely to
be as united on a flag position. The state chamber will spend
the summer getting input from members in a series of “listening sessions.”
They say if they get a strong expression on the flag issue, it could show up
in their legislative package for the 2001 session of the General Assembly.
Speaking
of the session, everyone will be watching to see what Governor Barnes
proposes to do about the flag. For the first time in his term, he runs the
risk of a non-compliant Legislature if he takes the position Governor Miller
did in 1993. Legislators will face an unenviable choice of the bucking the
governor or making their constituents angry. But it is a clear choice for
many. There are few urges stronger than the urge to be reelected.
If Barnes
decides to back a change in the flag, he will expect support from the
business community. That won’t be as easy as the Apple-Pie-and-Motherhood
pap they concocted for his education reform efforts. The public basically
sat on the sidelines and watched a fight between the governor and the
teachers’ unions. Proposing to change the state flag is going to arouse
strong emotions that threaten to split the state and the Legislature. First
to feel the heat will be the poor company lobbyists who will have to face
the wrath of a powerful South Georgia lawmaker who is strongly pro-flag or
an Atlanta legislator on the other side. Members of the General Assembly
have ways of making life very uncomfortable for lobbyists who didn’t support
them once the boss has made nice with the governor and moved on to other
things.
However,
business has no choice but to get involved. The issue will get national
attention. I speak from experience. In my tenure with the Atlanta
Committee for the Olympic Games, the Georgia flag was a favorite subject of
the national media who like to drop in occasionally and cluck about what
rednecks we are. Defending a Confederate battle flag as being
representative of your state doesn’t help matters. Who cares what the
national media reports? How about a few hundred CEO’s who might be
contemplating moving their company and employees to Georgia. It is up to
Georgia’s business leaders to determine if that is the image they want to
project to the nation.
I was in
South Carolina to make a speech recently and saw what the media’s scrutiny
has done to that state. Conventions are being cancelled. Entertainers have
refused to appear and black athletes boycotted a major tennis competition.
Speaking of athletes, I was treated to the spectacle of the head football
and basketball coaches at Clemson and the University of South Carolina
marching together in an anti-flag rally. Can you imagine University of
Georgia coaches Jim Donnan and Jim Harrick strolling down Peachtree Street
in an anti-state flag rally arm-in-arm with archrivals George O’Leary and
Paul Hewitt of Georgia Tech? Let me suggest to the Bulldog and Yellow
Jacket faithful that before you dismiss that idea as far-fetched, you count
the number of black athletes that make up your football and basketball
teams.
Maybe the
coaches will stay out of the line of fire but our business leaders won’t be
able to. If there is one thing that business understands, it is the bottom
line. The bottom line on the state flag is that if Governor Barnes wants to
change it, business will back him to the hilt. |