Resolution honoring Klan leader denounced as 'underhanded'


              FILE - In this July 12, 2015, file photo, Mike Goza, left, helps Mike Junor drape a Confederate battle flag over the base of the statue and tomb of Nathan Bedford Forrest, a rebel general, slave trader and early Ku Klux Klan member, at Health Sciences Park in Memphis, Tenn. State House members said they were surprised that they unwittingly passed a resolution honoring Forrest on April 13, 2017 (Mike Brown/The Commercial Appeal via AP, file)
FILE - In this July 12, 2015, file photo, Mike Goza, left, helps Mike Junor drape a Confederate battle flag over the base of the statue and tomb of Nathan Bedford Forrest, a rebel general, slave trader and early Ku Klux Klan member, at Health Sciences Park in Memphis, Tenn. State House members said they were surprised that they unwittingly passed a resolution honoring Forrest on April 13, 2017 (Mike Brown/The Commercial Appeal via AP, file)

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Lawmakers in Tennessee say they were tricked into voting for a resolution honoring a Confederate general, slave trader and early Ku Klux Klan leader, and they're denouncing it.

Democratic Rep. Antonio Parkinson of Memphis told his House colleagues Thursday it was unfair to include the resolution honoring Nathan Bedford Forrest among a slew of uncontroversial measures about school valedictorians, sports teams and wedding anniversaries.

Parkinson said, "It's sickening, it's underhanded, it's conniving, it's crafty, it's shady."

Republican Rep. Mike Sparks sponsored the resolution that passed days after a separate measure honoring Forrest and the state's first black state lawmaker was defeated in a House committee. Sparks said Thursday that he apologizes to the Black Caucus of State Legislators "if anybody's offended."

Republican leaders say it's too late reconsider the vote.

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