Get the USA TODAY app Flying spiders explained Start the day smarter ☀️ Honor all requests?
Montana

'Who doesn’t want to have a great gun flag?': Republican wanted to add firearms to Montana state flag

Iris Samuels
The Associated Press

HELENA, Mont. — A proposal to change the Montana state flag to prominently feature firearms failed Friday to pass a vote by the state House, after a Republican lawmaker said such a change would honor the state’s history.

“Who doesn’t want to have a great gun flag?” Republican Rep. Caleb Hinkle asked during a hearing on his proposal.

The proposal came days after 10 people lost their lives in a mass shooting in Colorado that rekindled a national discussion on gun control measures.

Hinkle suggested the change after Democratic Rep. Moffie Funk advanced a bill to study the possibility of designing a new state flag, which could then be put to the voters for approval.

“Maybe we want to just look at our flag and think, ‘does this truly represent our diversity and our magnificence and our integrity?’ ” Funk said, adding that the flag could be simplified.

Police:2 dead and 8 injured in 'chaotic' Virginia Beach oceanfront shootings

A veteran of the Montana Army National Guard, Hinkle said Funk’s measure “is nothing more than another attempt to erase our history on par with tearing down national monuments across the nation.”

The current flag of Montana features the state seal -- which includes mountains, plains, forests, a river, a plow, a pick and a shovel -- against a blue background with the name of the state in yellow lettering.

Hinkle offered to amend Funk’s proposal to add firearms to the state flag, saying Montana’s “pioneers, miners, soldiers, Native tribes, hunters, ranchers and more have been touched by 200 years of firearms diversity.”

The new flag could feature several firearms, Hinkle said, including semi-automatic rifles, “such as the AR-15” – a weapon style that has been used in several mass shootings in recent years.

The idea elicited a fiery response from Democratic Rep. Jonathan Windy Boy, a member of the Chippewa Cree tribe.

“When you’re talking about firearms and the history of Native Americans here, we’re always at the end of the firearms,” he said, urging lawmakers to vote against the measure.

Hinkle’s idea failed to gain traction among his Republican colleagues, even in a year they have worked to remove gun restrictions in the state. Twelve representatives voted in favor of the amendment, with 88 opposed.

Funk’s proposal to create a committee to consider changing the state flag also failed in a 37-63 vote.

Samuels is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.

Colorado shooting:Family said Colorado suspect had 'mental illness.' Experts say that's rarely the cause of mass shootings.

More:Atlanta police arrest man with 5 guns, body armor inside Publix grocery store at Atlantic Station

Featured Weekly Ad