The Note: The Candidates and the Confederate Flag

— -- By MICHAEL FALCONE

NOTABLES

--SCOTT WALKER: "The placement of a Confederate flag on the Capitol grounds is a state issue and I fully expect the leaders of South Carolina to debate this but the conversation should wait until after the families have had a chance to bury and mourn their loved ones."

--LINDSEY GRAHAM: "I'd have to think long and hard about that, I really would. ... If I thought it's holding my state back, if I think it is an impediment to us moving forward, I would remove it."

--TED CRUZ: "I think that's a question for South Carolina. And the last thing they need is people from outside of the state coming in and dictating how they should resolve it."

--SHOULD THE FLAG COME DOWN? NPR host Steve Inskeep, Democratic strategist Maria Cardona and Republican strategist Sara Fagen debated that question on the "This Week" roundtable. WATCH: http://abcn.ws/1Ldf7OT

IN THE NOTE'S INBOX

CONSERVATIVE, PROGRESSIVE LEADERS JOIN IN FOCUS ON CRIMINAL JUSTICE REFORM. The Coalition for Public Safety -- the nation's largest bipartisan criminal justice reform organization -- is announcing a new campaign today at 11 AM EST on reducing the prison population and breaking down barriers for ex-offenders to successfully re-enter society. According to the group, the campaign, Fair Sentencing and Fair Chances, "lays out a clear baseline for real bipartisan reform at the federal and state level and comes as bipartisan momentum for reforming the nation's criminal justice system continues to grow." Participants on a conference call announcing the initiative include Grover Norquist of Americans for Tax Reform, Alison Holcomb of American Civil Liberties Union, Todd Cox of the Center for American Progress, among others. http://www.coalitionforpublicsafety.org/

THE BUZZ

5 STORIES YOU'LL CARE ABOUT IN POLITICS THIS WEEK. The road to the White House probably won't begin on an escalator in a fancy building with the candidate's name on it. It's more likely to carry an exclamation point than bold letters, though the candidate with his own plane might be more apt to generate headlines -- if not start a war with Mexico. It took something uttered by that same candidate to draw a response from the candidate who Democrats are most likely to hire. With a sad and repugnant act slowing trail activity, here's a glimpse at some of the stories the ABC News political team is tracking the week ahead, courtesy of ABC's RICK KLEIN: http://abcn.ws/1Bv9V6E WATCH: http://abcn.ws/1QKaWP5

WHO'S TWEETING?

@SuzyKhimm: Why the Democratic Party is in trouble--no matter who wins in 2016. My deep dive: http://www.newrepublic.com/article/122062/obama-gap-case-study-electoral-failure ...

@lynnsweet: Former Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. supposed to be transferred from halfway house to home confinement Monday. http://bit.ly/1CmpJnk

@SteveRattner: In @nytimes, I argue keep Hamilton, our grtst finc'l thinker, on $10. Put woman on $20; Jackson almost destroyed econ http://nyti.ms/1Clc6EV

@CNNPolitics: An app called @JoinBrigade is the "Tinder of politics" according to one of its major investors http://cnn.it/1BvUHy2