House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi has
ramped up calls to remove "reprehensible" Confederate statues from the
halls of Congress -- but left unsaid in her public denunciations is that
her father helped dedicate such a statue decades ago while mayor of
Baltimore.
It was May 2, 1948, when, according to a Baltimore Sun article from that
day, “3,000” looked on as then-Governor William Preston Lane Jr. and
Pelosi’s father, the late Thomas D’Alesandro Jr., spoke at the
dedication of a monument to honor Confederate generals Robert E. Lee and
Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson.
The article said Lane delivered a speech, and Mayor D’Alesandro
“accepted” the memorial.
“Today, with our nation beset by subversive groups and propaganda which
seeks to destroy our national unity, we can look for inspiration to the
lives of Lee and Jackson to remind us to be resolute and determined in
preserving our sacred institutions,” D’Alesandro said in his dedication.
“We must remain steadfast in our
determination to preserve freedom, not only for ourselves, but for the
other liberty-loving nations who are striving to preserve their national
unity as free nations.”
He added: “In these days of uncertainty and turmoil, Americans must
emulate Jackson’s example and stand like a stone wall against aggression
in any form that would seek to destroy the liberty of the world.”
With President Trump cautioning that the drive to purge Confederate
statues could represent a slippery slope, the White House has flagged
Pelosi's family history as she fuels the statue opposition.
Counselor Kellyanne Conway tweeted an earlier article from
RedAlertPolitics noting Pelosi's father's role.
"That's rich," she wrote.
Follow
Kellyanne Conway ✔ @KellyannePolls
That's rich. https://twitter.com/redalert/status/900337325368111104 …
8:53 AM - Aug 23, 2017
Last week, more than a half century after Pelosi’s father honored the
Lee-Jackson monument, it was removed from its post along with three
other Confederate statues in Baltimore, according to the Baltimore Sun.
The removal came as numerous monuments were removed, vandalized or
otherwise being debated in the wake of the white supremacist rally in
Charlottesville, Va., where a counter-protester was killed.
Pelosi’s office did not respond to Fox News’ request for comment on her
father’s involvement with one of the Baltimore monuments.
But Pelosi, D-Calif., has been outspoken in fueling the backlash toward
symbols of the Confederacy. Last week, she urged House Speaker Paul
Ryan, R-Wis., to remove the 10 Confederate statues memorialized on
Capitol Hill “immediately” if “Republicans are serious about rejecting
white supremacy.”
When asked why Pelosi, after serving as House speaker for years, never
pushed to remove the 10 figures, her office noted that she directed the
relocation of the Robert E. Lee statue from Statuary Hall to the
basement of the Capitol, known as the crypt.
“As Speaker, we relocated Robert E. Lee out of a place of honor in
National Statuary Hall – a place now occupied by the statue of Rosa
Parks,” Pelosi said last week.
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