U.S. House cancels vote to allow Confederate flag in cemeteries

By Susan Cornwell WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican leaders in the U.S. House of Representatives on Thursday abruptly canceled a vote on a measure that would allow the Confederate battle flag to be flown in cemeteries managed by the National Park Service, after an outcry by Democrats on the House floor. The House canceled consideration of a fiscal 2016 spending bill for the Interior Department, which funds the park service. An amendment to that bill, by Republican Representative Ken Calvert of California, was pending and would have continued to allow the limited display of Confederate flags in the cemeteries, many of them adjacent to Civil War battlefields. House Speaker John Boehner, a Republican from Ohio, said he wanted a bipartisan discussion on how to move forward on the issue. "That bill is going to sit in abeyance until we can come to some resolution on this," he said of the Interior Department spending bill. The Civil War-era flag is viewed as a symbol of slavery and racism by some in the United States and of Southern heritage by others. Democrats had flocked to the House floor earlier on Thursday to rail against the amendment, displaying the Confederate battle flag as they did so. "The Confederate battle flag is nothing more than a symbol of racial hatred and oppression," declared Representative Hakeem Jeffries, a black Democrat from New York. "I stand here with chills next to it." Jeffries said the Republican amendment, if passed, would reverse House action earlier in the week, when lawmakers adopted by voice vote Democratic amendments to restrict further the flag's display on National Park Service land. But Republican Representative Steve King of Iowa said Confederate symbols were protected by the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which guards freedom of speech. "I grew up in the North," King said, but added: "The Confederate flag always was the symbol of the pride of the South." The controversial amendment's sponsor, Representative Calvert, said it would only have codified National Park Service policy, which includes restrictions on the Confederate flag's display. He said he made the proposal after Republican leaders brought it to him at the request of some Southern Republicans. "Looking back, I regret not conferring with my colleagues on the other side of the aisle," Calvert said in a statement. The slayings of nine black people at a church in Charleston, South Carolina last month sparked an intense dialogue over the legacy of slavery and its symbols, after photos surfaced of Dylann Roof, the white man charged in the shootings. They showed him posing with the Confederate battle flag on a website displaying a racist manifesto. In Columbia, South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley signed a bill on Thursday afternoon to remove permanently a Confederate battle flag from the state capitol grounds. Boehner said he did not want the issue to become a "political football." But Democrats were unwilling to let the matter drop even after the vote was canceled. At the White House, spokesman Josh Earnest seized the opportunity to blast House Republicans as "out of step with the vast majority of Americans." House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi of California proposed that any state flag containing any portion of the Confederate battle flag - other than a flag displayed by a lawmakers' office - be removed from the U.S. Capitol grounds. Republicans used their majority to sideline her proposal to committee. Mississippi's state flag has the Confederate battle flag in its upper left-hand corner. Other state flags, such as Alabama's and Florida's, contain design elements similar to those in the battle flag. (Additional reporting by Richard Cowan; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Jonathan Oatis)