The Georgia Senate Resolution honoring "Hanoi Jane" Fonda, proposed by state senator Steen Miles, was withdrawn Thursday morning after meeting with unexpected resistance.
Miles "said a representative for Fonda, who is out of the country, asked that she avoid the controversy the effort had stirred."
The actress and activist's seditious activities protesting the Vietnam War, including a trip to North Vietnam in 1972, have given her a well-earned and long-lasting stigma in patriotic circles.
The resolution, "which Miles said is one of several she has pushed honoring Georgia women during Women's History Month, cruised through the Senate on Wednesday before some members realized it was part of a stack of mostly non-controversial resolutions approved because no one objected to them.
Sen. John Douglas, R-Social Circle, later asked that the vote be reconsidered.
"I can think of no living American who is less worthy of this honor," Douglas, chairman of the chamber's Veterans and Military Affairs committee, said Thursday. "She is as guilty of treason as Benedict Arnold and Tokyo Rose."
Miles said she is sympathetic to concerns of military members. She said her brother and ex-husband both served in Vietnam and her daughter currently serves in the Army reserve. But she said Fonda's good works for the past three decades outweigh any negatives associated with her Vietnam-era actions.
The Senate voted 48-1 to reconsider the measure _ a necessary procedure before Miles could withdraw it. Sen. Michael Meyer von Bremen, D-Albany, cast the only vote against reconsideration.
Miles then withdrew the effort before senators considered the resolution itself."
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