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One of the most high-profile and controversial elections campaigns in the autumn of 2018 was that for the governorship of Georgia, which pitted Republican Secretary of State Brian Kemp against former Democratic State Representative Stacey Abrams -- the latter of whom, if elected, would make history as the first black woman in U.S. history to become a state governor. The Abrams campaign accused Kemp of orchestrating voter suppression, a claim we previously investigated, while Kemp's campaign accused Abrams of manufacturing outrage, and President Donald Trump -- of whom Kemp is a staunch supporter -- weighed into the race by calling the Democratic candidate totally unqualified. In the final days of the campaign, the two candidates were virtually inseparable in the polls, according to the web site FiveThirtyEight. On 22 October, the night before a crucial televised debate between the rivals, reports emerged about a protest staged 26 years earlier in which Abrams, then a college student, took part in a public burning of the then-current Georgia state flag, an event of which the New York Times wrote: One post, written by the conservative Georgia blogger and broadcaster Erick Erickson, created the potential for confusion by stating in its headline that Abrams had burned the flag, only specifying in the body of the article itself that the flag was the Georgia state flag and not that of the United States. In particular, social media users, especially conservative opponents of Abrams, began sharing a photograph which appeared to show Abrams (third from the left) taking part in the flag-burning: The photograph is authentic. Abrams did indeed take part in a flag-burning protest in Atlanta in June 1992, a fact her campaign acknowledged and defended in October 2018. The widely-shared photograph was published in the Atlanta Constitution on 15 June 1992 alongside an article which reported that Abrams and several other members of the group Students for African-American Empowerment had burned the then Georgia state flag during a peaceful protest on the steps of the State Capitol, because the flag incorporated the Confederate battle symbol: When the Confederate flag flew in the Civil War, it stood for white dominance and slavery, said 21-year-old SAAE member Kevin Donaldson. As a state flag, it still flies for white dominance and slavery. In a later Atlanta Constitution article, Abrams' father Robert said his 18-year-old daughter, a freshman at Spelman College in Atlanta, had received abusive phone calls at home in the aftermath of the protest: Students for African-American Empowerment was formed in May 1992 by members of the Atlanta University Center (an association of black students of four historically black colleges in Atlanta), after the acquittal of four Los Angeles police officers charged in the brutal, video-taped beating of Rodney King, an event which sparked protests and rioting in Los Angeles and other cities throughout the United States, including Atlanta. The 1956 Georgia state flag The flag that Abrams and her fellow activists burned was introduced in Georgia in 1956 and incorporated the Confederate battle flag, which is widely perceived by African Americans as a symbol of white supremacy and racism. The 1956 flag was designed by John Sammons Bell, an attorney, World War II veteran, former chairman of the Georgia Democratic party, and a fervent critic of federally-enforced racial integration (including the landmark 1954 Supreme Court ruling in Brown vs. the Board of Education). According to an analysis commissioned by the Georgia State Senate in 2000, Bell was regarded in 1956 as one of the nation’s staunchest pro-segregationist public officials. The analysis concluded that, despite arguments to the contrary by those who supported changing the state flag, the incorporation of the Confederate battle flag into the new flag in 1956 was part of a backlash against the federal government's imposition of racial integration in public life during that decade: The 1956 flag was replaced in 2001, but its successor proved unpopular, and the current Georgia state flag -- which completely removed the Confederate battle flag -- was definitively adopted after voters endorsed it in a March 2004 referendum. The Abrams campaign did not respond to our request for comment but gave a statement to the New York Times, acknowledging and defending the gubernatorial candidate's participation in the flag-burning protest:
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