Republican gubernatorial candidate John Klar speaks during a press conference at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Monday, January 6, 2020. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger

Editor’s note: This story was updated at 6:39 p.m. with new information about the inclusion of the proposal on the City Council’s agenda.

A Republican gubernatorial candidateโ€™s request this week to have the words โ€œLiberty and Justice for Allโ€ painted next to โ€œBlack Lives Matterโ€ on State Street in Montpelier was denied by city officials.

John Klar, who is challenging Gov. Phil Scott in the GOP primary, applied with the city of Montpelier to close down State Street on July 3 to paint the phrase from the Pledge of Allegiance in front of the Statehouse. The assistant to Montpelierโ€™s city manager told the campaign in an email that the request couldnโ€™t be approved.ย 

โ€œUnfortunately, the City can not approve an application for a street closure, less than 2 days prior to the event,โ€ city officials wrote on Wednesday.ย Street closure applications require 45 days notice. The application is listed as an agenda item for the next City Council meeting, which will be held July 8.

City Manager William Fraser said he had not seen an application for a new painting, but his office had received Klar’s request Monday to close the street.

Last month, with approval from Montpelierโ€™s City Council and Scott, more than 200 people helped paint โ€œBlack Lives Matterโ€ on State Street โ€” as other communities across the country have installed similar street art since the killing of George Floyd in May. The project, led by a Montpelier resident and a council member, came together in about a week.

After Black Lives Matter messaging was washed away from a bridge in Jamaica in June, the Vermont Agency of Transportation changed its policy to allow some street art.

In documents for the upcoming city council meeting, Klar wrote that the proposal is โ€œa sincere bi-partisan effort to embrace and affirm those vital Constitutional tenets of our nationโ€™s history, in support of ending racial division.โ€

The proposal would place the words “Liberty and Justice for all” in red, white and blue capital letters following the “Black Lives Matter” painting. The campaign sought to close State Street between Bailey Avenue and Taylor Street from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. on July 3.

Klar said he wants to appeal to Vermonters from a โ€œcentristโ€ point of view and spur a conversation about how Vermonters can make a โ€œmore perfect union.โ€ He said the message would stand as a middle ground between the status quo and proposals to defund or abolish police forces across the country.

Klar chose the words โ€œLiberty and Justice for Allโ€ because he felt they did not directly conflict with โ€œBlack Lives Matter.โ€ย 

โ€œI was trying to pick something noncontroversial that would celebrate the Fourth of July. And something that would be compatible but perhaps a slightly different message than BLM,โ€ Klar said. โ€œIt concerns me greatly that we’re having racial divisions that are agitating our nation, whether thatโ€™s in Minnesota or in Vermont.โ€ 

Klar said heโ€™s been encouraging people to stop using the term โ€œall lives matter.โ€ But he opposes the idea of abolishing the police, and this message, he says, supports the โ€œgood cops.โ€ย 

More than 200 people helped paint Black Lives Matter on State Street in front of the Vermont Statehouse on June 13, 2020. Photo by Sawyer Loftus/VTDigger

ย City Councilor Conor Casey, who worked with Montpelier resident Noel Riby-Williams to organize the Black Lives Matter painting on State Street, said if the proposal came before City Council, he would vote against it.ย 

โ€œCertainly, it must be election season, because this is an absolute stunt by John Klar, trying to get his name in the press. And I’m hesitant to even comment to give him any publicity,โ€ Casey said. โ€œIโ€™m sure the council would consider this like any other request. I certainly would be voting against it.โ€ 

Casey said it detracts from the Black Lives Matter movement, which he said needs to be highlighted right now.ย 

โ€œI equate this to the sort of same nonsense that people who promote the โ€˜all lives matterโ€™ thing over the Black Lives Matter,โ€ Casey said. โ€œWe say Black Lives Matter for a reason.โ€ 

Gov. Phil Scott said in his Wednesday press conference he would support Klar’s proposal if the city made the request. City officials sought permission from Scott for the Black Lives Matter painting because the jurisdiction of the street that runs by the Statehouse overlaps between Montpelier and the state.

โ€œThat sounds very patriotic, fitting for the Fourth of July,โ€ Scott said. โ€œI wouldn’t say it’s inconsistent with the Black Lives Matter message. I think they’re almost one and the same.โ€ 

Klar said he would like to see the message painted on State Street in red, white and blue. But, the gubernatorial candidate said, he isnโ€™t going to โ€œfight them.โ€

Elizabeth Hewitt contributed reporting.

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