Mississippi Today
When Black candidates are on the ballot, Mississippians typically turn out in droves
More Mississippians often vote in elections where race is at least a subtext if not out front and center.
And when Black candidates are on the ballot, in particular, Mississippi voters typically clock record or near-record turnout.
In the 1971 gubernatorial race, Charles Evers of Fayette made history as the first Black Mississippian in the modern era to run for governor. Evers, the brother of slain civil rights leader Medgar Evers, was a civil rights leader in his own right and was the first Black Mississippian in the modern era to win the office of mayor of a biracial town.
Evers ran as an independent against Democrat Bill Waller. In that 1971 governor’s race, Waller earned 601,222 votes โ still the most votes for a gubernatorial candidate in the history of the state.
Remember, in 1971, Mississippi’s population was 2.2 million compared to just under 3 million today, and that 1971 election is still a high water mark in terms of the most votes garnered by a candidate for governor.
It should be stressed that Bill Waller was no segregationist. As a matter of fact, he was a racial moderate, even enlightened on the issue.
As Hinds County district attorney, Waller twice prosecuted Byron De La Beckwith, who years later was finally convicted of assassinating Medgar Evers. In the racially contentious 1960s, both of Waller’s efforts to prosecute De La Beckwith ended in mistrials when all-white juries did not reach a unanimous verdict. Still, his effort to bring Evers’ killer to justice has been described as heroic. As governor, Waller tried to heal racial wounds and appointed Black Mississippians into state government.
To Waller’s and to Mississippians’ credit, he defeated avowed segregationists in the 1971 Democratic primary for governor, and he did not make race an issue against Evers in the general election.
But the unprecedented vote Waller received in the general election cannot be ignored.
To understand the significance of Waller’s vote total, a little historical perspective is needed. For much of the history of the state after the Civil War and Reconstruction, the Democratic Party held all the power.
Normally in those times, the election that decided the winner of any contest was the Democratic primary. The winners of the Democratic primary most often ran unopposed or with token opposition in the November general election.
For instance, the most votes the Democratic gubernatorial nominee received in the general election in the two races before and after the Waller-Evers contest in 1971 was the 413,620 votes William Winter (another racial moderate) received in the 1979 general election. Winter’s total was almost 200,000 less than what Waller garnered in 1971. For the record, in 1979, the losing candidate against Winter โ Republican Gil Carmichael โ received 263,702 votes compared to Evers receiving 172,712 in 1971.
Something different was bringing voters to the polls in November 1971, and the most obvious difference was the color of Evers’ skin.
To further illustrate the importance of race on the ballot during the time period, the 654,509 Mississippians who flocked to the polls in the 1968 presidential election were significantly more than the number who voted in 1964 or 1972. What was significant about 1968 is that segregationist Alabama Gov. George Wallace was running as a third-party candidate and carried Mississippi that year.
Skip ahead to more modern times in 2011, when Republican Phil Bryant won with the second-most votes amassed in a November general election for Mississippi governor. Bryant’s opponent โ Hattiesburg Mayor Johnny DuPree โ was the first Black Mississippian elected by a major party to be a gubernatorial nominee.
On the flip side, the two Democrats other than Waller to receive the most votes in Mississippi were Black candidates: Mike Espy in the 2020 U.S. Senate race and Barack Obama in the 2012 presidential election. But the difference between now and 1971 is that the Republican Party is the dominant party, and Black Mississippians now vote at a much higher rate than they did in 1971, when they had gained the right to vote only a few years earlier.
The candidate who has received the most votes in the history of the state is Donald Trump in the 2020 presidential election, when 756,764 Mississippians cast their ballot for him. Many would argue that Trump has dabbled, to say the least, in racial politics.
This historic Mississippi electoral backdrop occurs against the quickly approaching 2024 presidential election, when Trump is running against Democrat Kamala Harris, the first Black woman to run for president as a major party nominee.
The outcome of that race in Republican-heavy Mississippi is all but a foregone conclusion.
But given the state’s history when Black candidates are on the ballot, it will be fascinating to assess the vote totals.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
On this day in 1917
Oct. 6, 1917
Fannie Lou Hamer was born on a Mississippi Delta plantation with her sharecropping family, the youngest of 20 children. She became involved with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, and after registering to vote, she was kicked off the plantation.
A fearless civil rights leader, her singing became a source of inspiration and strength among civil rights workers.
In 1964, she burst onto the national scene when she challenged the all-white Mississippi delegation at the 1964 Democratic National Convention. She spoke about Black Americans being harassed, beaten, shot at and arrested for trying to vote. On television, she asked, โIs this America, the land of the free and the home of the brave where we have to sleep with our telephones off the hooks because our lives (are) threatened daily because we want to live as decent human beings โ in America?โ
She continued to remain active in the civil rights movement until her death in 1977. Her hometown of Ruleville built a statue to honor her.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
On this day in 1870
Oct. 5, 1870
The first Reconstruction Legislature, made up of 27 Black lawmakers and 150 white lawmakers, met in Richmond, Virginia โ a state that had been devastated more by the Civil War than any other state.
After the war ended, Black Virginians battled KKK violence and the first round of Jim Crow laws. They tried to reconstruct their own lives, reuniting families, building churches and benevolent groups and starting their own businesses. To the astonishment of many white Virginians, Black Virginians proved adept at democracy and began bringing change.
With many white Virginians refusing to take a loyalty oath to the Union, a โCommittee of Nineโ created a compromise that traded Black support for former Confederates for office if they would support the state’s Reconstruction constitution. Voters backed the constitution, which embraced the 14th Amendment and Black voting.
Before the 1870s ended, the number of Black members of the Legislature grew to 30. In the end, however, โVirginia was never really reconstructed, rebuilt from the ground up,โ the website, Reconstructing Virginia, says. โThe same men ran Virginia after the war as before; the same heroes were worshipped and the same goals led government. As with the rest of the South, however, later generations took the 14th and 15th Amendments created in Reconstruction and resumed the work that Reconstruction in Virginia never had a chance to do.โ
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
Two Delta health centers awarded competitive federal grant for maternal care
Two federally qualified health centers in the Delta will receive a total of $3.6 million over four years from the federal government to expand and strengthen their maternal health services.
Federally qualified health centers are nonprofits that provide health care to under-insured and uninsured patients and receive enhanced reimbursement from Medicare and Medicaid. They offer a sliding fee scale for services for patients.
Delta Health Center, with 17 locations throughout the Delta, and G.A. Carmichael Family Health Center, with six locations across central Mississippi, beat out applicants from several southeastern and midwestern states.
Two organizations in Tennessee and one in Alabama were also awarded funding this year.
The grant is focused on improving access to perinatal care in rural communities in the greater Delta region โ which includes 252 counties and parishes within the eight states of Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri and Tennessee, according to the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA).ย ย
It’s the first of its kind in terms of goal and region, said HRSA Administrator Carole Johnson.
โWe have not had a targeted maternal health initiative for the Delta before this program,โ Johnson told Mississippi Today. โWe’ve had a national competition for rural areas focused on maternal health, but what we were able to do here, in partnership with congressional leaders from the Delta region, was secure some resources that would go directly to the Delta region to be able to address this very important need.โ
Johnson said Mississippi applicants stood out because of their ability to identify the most pressing issues facing mothers and babies.
โWhat we saw from the applicants and awardees in Mississippi was a real commitment to prenatal care and early engagement in prenatal care, reducing preterm births, as well as expanding access to midwives and community-based doula services,โ she said. โAnd all of those pieces together really resonate with the ways we’ve been looking at how to address maternal health services.โ
At G.A. Carmichael Family Health Center, the funds will be directed mainly to expanding services in the three Delta counties in which the center has clinics โ Humphreys, Yazoo and Leflore.
Yazoo and Humphreys counties are maternity care deserts โ meaning they have no hospitals providing obstetric care, no OB-GYNs and no certified nurse midwives โ and Greenwood Leflore Hospital closed its labor and delivery unit in 2022. While OB-GYNs still practice in Leflore County, mothers have to travel outside of it to deliver their babies.
Solving the transportation issue will be a top priority, according to the center’s CEO James L. Coleman Jr.
โWe have situations where mothers have to travel 100 or so miles just for maternal health care,โ Coleman said. โEspecially in times of delivery, especially in times of emergency, that is unacceptable.โ
Health care deserts pervade Mississippi, where 60% of counties have no OB-GYN and nearly half of rural hospitals are at risk of closing.ย
Inadequate access to prenatal care has been linked to preterm births, in which Mississippi leads the nation. Preterm births can lead to chronic health problems and infant mortality โ in which Mississippi also ranks highest.ย
That’s why Delta Health Center is committed to using its funds to work together with affiliated organizations โ including Delta Health System; Northwest Mississippi Regional Medical Center; Aaron E. Henry Community Health Center; and Converge โ to โmove the dialโ on maternal health indicators across the Delta region, said John Fairman, the center’s CEO.
โWe face many challenges including the recruitment and retention of OB-GYNs to the area,โ Fairman said, โand will be exploring models of care that are being implemented in other areas of the country that can be adopted to provide greater access and efficiencies for perinatal health care โ with the overall goal of significantly decreasing rates of low birthweight and preterm birth in the Delta.โ
The United States currently has the highest rate of maternal deaths among high-income countries, and Johnson said this grant is part of a continued effort from the Biden administration to change that.ย
โThe president and the vice president have made maternal health a priority since day one and have really called on all of us across the Department of Health and Human Services to lean in and identify where we can put resources and policy,โ Johnson said. โOne death is one death too many.โ
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
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