WASHINGTON _ Sen. Roy Blunt Thursday blocked an effort by Senate Democrats to remove Confederate statues from the U.S. Capitol.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., attempted to pass by unanimous consent a bill to remove from the U.S. Capitol 11 statues that commemorate Confederate officials and Vice President John C. Calhoun of South Carolina (1825-1832), a champion of slavery.
Booker noted the statues were added to the Capitol during the Jim Crow era of racial segregation, when the lynching of Blacks was common.
"We cannot separate the Confederate statues from this history and legacy of white supremacy in this country," said Booker, one of only three black senators currently in office.
Blunt, the Missouri Republican who chairs the Senate Rules Committee, objected and blocked the motion. He pointed out that his committee had just been assigned the legislation and that he would like to potentially hold a hearing on it before moving forward.
He also argued that the motion would violate an agreement which gives each state the right to choose two historical figures to be displayed in the Capitol. The rule was adopted during the Civil War.
"Each of these states would have the right to remove these statutes and some are. This is an agreement with the states. It goes back to 1864," Blunt said.
Congress passed a law in 2000 that enabled states to replace statues with approval of governors and state legislatures.
Since that time, several Southern states have replaced Confederate statues with ones that honor Civil Rights leaders, Blunt noted.
States have also swapped statues for other reasons. Missouri passed legislation last year to replace 19th century Sen. Thomas Hart Benton with President Harry Truman.
The Senate bill comes amid a larger debate on racial justice in the United States following the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis.
There is also a push to rename 10 U.S. Army bases named for Confederate officials, a change that Blunt said he was open to supporting because the federal government can make that change on its own under current law.
"I expressed my belief that it would be absolutely appropriate, in my view, to review the names of the forts... that are named after Confederate military leaders and change those names. And we can do that all on our own," Blunt said, contrasting the base names with the statue selections which he argued require state-level approval.
Missouri's other Republican senator, Josh Hawley, has vehemently opposed the effort to rename military bases and has promised to bring an amendment to strip out the provision when the Senate votes on the defense authorization bill in the near future.