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Hobnob ’24: Mississippi’s top two lawmakers pitch Medicaid expansion, tax cuts; remain divided on details

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mississippitoday.org – Taylor Vance – 2024-10-31 15:14:00

House Speaker Jason White and Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann on Thursday both pitched plans to cut state taxes and expand coverage to the working poor but differed on their specific approach, offering a preview of crucial legislation that will headline the 2025 legislative in January. 

White, a Republican from West, told business at the Mississippi Economic Council’s annual Hobnob , that he will propose legislation to eventually eliminate Mississippi’s 4% tax on all earned income over $10,000 and reduce the state’s sales tax on groceries from 7% to 3.5% over time. 

“We are hoping to construct a tax system that, yes, prioritizes certain needs in our state but it also protects and rewards taxpayers,” White said. 

Hosemann, the two-term Republican leader of the Senate, did not mention the income tax in his speech but said he is encouraging the Senate next year to introduce legislation that will cut the grocery tax. He did not say how much the tax should be reduced or how long it would take to phase in the tax cut. 

“When we get through doing this, in the eight years you’ve hired me to work, we will have decreased taxes in Mississippi by over $1 billion a year,” Hosemann said. 

The two legislative leaders also renewed calls to expand Medicaid, a policy that sputtered in the final days of the 2024 session after negotiations broke down between the House and the Senate. 

White and the House last year passed Medicaid expansion — a plan to expand health care coverage to 138% of the federal poverty level, covering upwards of 200,000 and accepting $1 billion a year in federal money to cover it, as most other states have done.

The Senate pitched a more restrictive — some said unfeasible — program. It would have the state turn down the federal money and expand Medicaid coverage to around 40,000 more people. It would have required stringent proof that recipients are working 30 hours a , a requirement the federal government likely would not approve.

Although he has said for years he’s open to the idea, Hosemann last year said he couldn’t muster enough votes to pass standard Medicaid expansion in the Senate.

At Thursday’s annual Hobnob, Mississippi politicians, including some running for office this year, spoke to hundreds of members of MEC, the state’s chamber of commerce.

Incumbent U.S. Sen. Roger Wicker, who is running for reelection, and Ty Pinkins, his Democratic challenger, both spoke. 

Wicker, a , encouraged business leaders to vote for Republican candidates on Election Day so that political leaders in Washington can pass new laws to reduce federal taxes, strengthen the nation’s military and reduce the number of undocumented immigrants entering the country.  

Pinkins, a Rolling Fork resident, said voters should elect him as the next U.S senator because he would apply lessons he learned from his military and combat service to the job. He also criticized several of Wicker’s votes during his tenure in Washington. 

Six of the state’s eight statewide , all Republicans, spoke at the annual event. Gov. Tate Reeves and Secretary of State Michael Watson did not attend. 

This was also the first Hobnob since the Mississippi Economic Council, the Mississippi Manufacturers Association and the Business and Industry Political Education Committee announced plans to consolidate their organizations into a new entity. 

Mississippi Economic Council CEO Scott Waller told that the three organizations are in the early planning stages of potentially joining the organizations and are visiting other states to study how their manufacturing and business advocacy groups are structured. 

If the organizations band together, it would likely increase their lobbying strength at the Mississippi Capitol and create a more unified voice for business interests in the state. 

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Mississippi Today

‘It’s been a long time coming’: Kamala Harris wants to be the first HBCU president

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mississippitoday.org – Nadra Nittle, Education reporter, The 19th – 2024-10-31 14:47:00

Vice President Kamala Harris not only grew up in San Francisco’s East Bay Area with the divorced mother who raised her but with various play-aunts and uncles too. These fictive kin included her Uncle Sherman, who taught her chess so she would know how to move in the world, and her Aunt Chris, who attended Howard University in the 1950s.

“She was one of my incredible role models growing up, and that was one of the big reasons I wanted to go to Howard University and pledge Alpha Kappa Alpha,” Harris revealed on the Club Shay Shay podcast Monday. 

Earlier this month, Harris made it clear that she intends “to be the first HBCU president,” a possibility that has energized community members from historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs) as the Harris-Walz campaign in October toured these academic institutions in battleground states. The HBCU students and faculty mobilizing for Harris hope that her candidacy draws attention to the unique experiences their schools . At the same time, they recognize how voter suppression, a gender divide and disinformation may shape this groundbreaking election in the end.

“Vice President Harris understands the importance of speaking directly to HBCU students and alumni about the issues that matter most to them,” Marcus W. Robinson, a Democratic National Committee senior spokesperson, told The 19th in a statement. “Democrats and the Harris-Walz campaign are listening to the voices of Black voters — and specifically young Black voters — who know that the stakes of this election are immensely high.”

Supporters cheer as Vice President Kamala Harris arrives to speak at South Carolina University during a campaign on February 2, 2024. Credit: Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images

Harris is a 1986 graduate of Howard, which is in Washington. D.C., and counts the late Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall among its distinguished alumni. Nearly four years ago, she was sworn in as vice president with his Bible. Howard opened in 1867, a time when most White colleges excluded students of color. 

“HBCUs place an emphasis on growing the student, nurturing the student, helping them to develop the skills to flourish in society and contribute to elevating justice and the human spirit,” said Silas Lee, an adjunct professor in the sociology department of Xavier University of Louisiana, the nation’s only Catholic HBCU. “They focus on the potential that students have and removing that sense of doubt and insecurity that many may have, so that is a critical element that they may not receive at other institutions, because what you have is culturally competent and responsive education at HBCUs.”

Black students who attend HBCUs are more likely to graduate from college than their counterparts at predominantly White institutions (PWIs), according to the White House, which estimates that HBCUs account for 70 percent of Black doctors and 80 percent of Black judges. During Harris’ tenure as vice president, the White House has directed $17 billion in federal funding to HBCUs, more than any other administration. 

Howard University senior Christina Pierre-Louis, a political science major from New Jersey, is overjoyed to be casting her first ballot in a presidential election for a fellow Bison, the school’s mascot. She considers Harris to be a kindred spirit.

Born to immigrant parents — an Indian mother and a Jamaican father — Harris studied law and served as San Francisco’s district attorney and California’s attorney general before becoming a senator and vice president. The 21-year-old shares the vice president’s Caribbean background and interest in the law, with plans to attend law school to become a civil rights attorney.

“Honestly, the big word for me is ‘representation.’ As a young Black woman who is attending her alma mater, who is studying some of the same things she studied, it just solidifies the idea that there’s no limit to what I can achieve,” said Pierre-Louis, the social justice director for Howard’s chapter of the National Council of Negro Women, a nonprofit that has advocated for Black women, families and communities since 1935. Its founding president, Mary McLeod Bethune, established Bethune-Cookman University, an HBCU in Florida. 

Elsie L. Scott, director of the Ronald W. Walters Leadership & Public Policy Center at Howard, said that after Harris became the Democratic presidential candidate, student sentiment about the election shifted from indifference to enthusiasm. Women make up over 70 percent of students and they especially “are feeling like this is real empowerment for them,” Scott said. “The major issue where she’s captured their attention has been around abortion rights.”

Vice President Harris speaks at a Rally for Reproductive Rights at Howard University on April 25, 2023 in Washington, D.C. Credit: Kent Nishimura/Los Angeles Times/Getty Images

Harris has made reproductive justice a focal point of her campaign in contrast to former President Donald Trump, who appointed three conservative judges to the Supreme Court, which led to the reversal of in 2022 and left abortion rights to the states. During campaign events, Harris has discussed Amber Thurman, a 28-year-old Black woman who left Georgia to obtain the abortion pill but died after experiencing rare complications because her medical care was reportedly delayed under the state’s abortion ban. 

Concerned about the stakes of the presidential election, Howard students are taking action. In mid-October, Scott arranged transportation for a busload of them to engage in nonpartisan canvassing in battleground Pennsylvania. Meanwhile, Pierre-Louis is organizing an event to raise awareness about voter suppression.  

“I’ll have a station with really long lines,” she said. “I’ll have some students come up and give me their Bison ID, and I’ll tell them it’s invalid and have them go to the back of the line.”

In 36 states, the public must present identification to vote, with acceptable forms of ID varying from one state to another. In Georgia, for example, IDs from the state’s public colleges and universities are accepted while those from private institutions are not, a restriction that may be unfamiliar to students.  

Judith Browne Dianis, executive director of the Advancement Project, a national civil rights organization, recommends that voters verify their registration, address and ID before Election Day. College students casting absentee ballots should not wait until November 5 to put them in the mail either because some states require that votes be received by Election Day rather than postmarked by then. The Advancement Project encourages anyone who can early vote in-person to do so to address hiccups ahead of time. Early also helps to reduce lines on Election Day.

“Right now, Georgia does have this rule in place that you cannot provide food and water to people standing in line within 150 feet of a polling place,” Browne Dianis said, noting that during the 2020 election, voters queued up for as long as 10 hours. “What we’ve seen again and again is that Black people and students turn out in record numbers, and then what we see is the next year laws and policies are passed to do away with the things that made voting easier and more accessible.”

At Atlanta’s Spelman College, one of the stops on the Harris-Walz campaign’s HBCU tour, the community has invested heavily in educating students about voting, said Cynthia Spence, associate professor of sociology. During the Spelman and Morehouse College homecoming over the weekend, Planned Parenthood Votes Black Campaigns mobilized 40,000 Georgia voters who pledged to back candidates committed to abortion rights.

Harris has overwhelming support at the women’s college. 

“They, in fact, every day inhabit these intersectional lives of being Black, being female,” Spence said. “They understand that the world responds to them in particular ways using certain racial tropes, certain gender tropes. They can imagine what Kamala Harris’ experiences have been.” 

Members of the Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority leave the Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center after Vice President Harris spoke to approximately 20,000 members of her sorority on July 10, 2024 in Dallas, Texas. Credit: Brandon Bell/Getty Images

At nearby Clark Atlanta University, where the campaign also stopped, senior Jayden Williams said the vice president and her running mate give him hope that equality will remain a priority in this country. The 21-year-old from Stockbridge, Georgia, is a 2024 White House HBCU Scholar, a program that recognizes HBCU students for their academic excellence, civic and campus engagement, or entrepreneurial spirit. Williams named reproductive freedom, human rights, gender rights and student loan forgiveness as his top concerns, but the Harris supporter said he’s encountered some young Black men who are backing Trump. 

“Can you name the policies that he wants to implement?” Williams has asked them. “Can you name his policies that were instrumental to the success of marginalized communities? What has he done for marginalized communities in your area?”

Usually, he said, they can’t answer.  

Twenty-six percent of Black men ages 18-40 said they support Trump, more than double the percentage of Black women (12 percent) who said they would, according to the University of Chicago’s GenForward poll of over 2,300 young adults released October 23. The NAACP, meanwhile, said on a press call Monday that Black men under 50 became less likely to vote for Trump (27-21 percent) and more likely to vote for Harris (51-59 percent) from August to October, according to its polling data in partnership with Hart Research and HIT Strategies. 

Pierre-Louis, the Howard student, said that the young Black men she’s met who support Trump have based that decision on disinformation. They question Harris’ loyalty to the Black community after Trump has repeatedly — and falsely — insinuated that she hasn’t identified as Black throughout her life. Others resent the fact that Harris was formerly a prosecutor, even though Trump intends to militarize law enforcement, ramp up executions and put thousands of people back into prison — policies that would directly affect Black men, who are disproportionately . In contrast, Harris launched a program to lower recidivism as California’s attorney general. 

Some Black Trump supporters tout the former president’s economic policy, Pierre-Louis said. “He gave us a stimulus check,” they’ve told her.  

At an Atlanta rally with Harris on Thursday, former President Barack Obama disputed the notion that the public received stimulus checks from Trump after 2020’s coronavirus lockdowns. Trump’s name appeared on the checks, but signed the legislation responsible for the economic impact payments.  

“Do not fall for that okey-doke,” Obama told the crowd. “Don’t be bamboozled.”

He reminded the crowd that the public received stimulus checks during his presidency, too. An economic impact payment also went out at the beginning of ‘s term, but neither he nor Obama put their names on the checks, which Trump insisted on reportedly.

To boost Black men’s support of her, Harris recently released her Opportunity Agenda for Black Men, which includes initiatives related to  housing, , entrepreneurship and investments in HBCUS.

Beyond ignorance about Trump’s record is how gender factors into this election cycle, Williams said.

“I do think it’s hard for some people to vote for a woman,” he said. “However, we do have to remember that Hillary Clinton did get the popular vote.”

Wesley J. Bellamy, chair of the department of political science and public administration at Virginia State University, which the Harris-Walz campaign’s HBCU tour visited, doubts that young Black men will support Trump in significant numbers. 

Former President Barack Obama speaks during a campaign rally supporting Vice President Kamala Harris in Clarkston, Georgia on October 24, 2024. Credit: Drew ANGERER/AFP/Getty Images

“I’m the National Public Policy chairman for the 100 Black Men of America,” he said. “We’ve been on a 24- tour across the country talking to men about voting, and I will say that 85 to 90 percent of Black men across all age groups have stated their emphatic support for Harris. Will you have the 10 to 12, maybe even 14 percent of individuals who say that they’re not? I think so, but I think that’s also on par with what we saw from the Biden campaign a couple of years back.”

Lee, of Xavier University, chalks up the young Black men voting for Trump to a generational divide. They grew up with a Black president in the 21st Century, a period markedly different from the social upheaval that characterized the 1900s — from the Montgomery Bus Boycott of the 1950s to the Los Angeles Uprising of the 1990s.  

“There’s a different level of social cohesion that they have with the political and social institutions,” Lee said. “Older Black men . . . have been able to observe and live through the social and political changes of racism and discrimination, whereas the Gen Zers and the millennials — they are experiencing what we call, in sociology, laissez faire racism, whereby America may preach ideals, but it is not honest in fulfilling and eliminating those barriers.”

Harris also has detractors who are not Trumpers but progressive students who disapprove of Biden’s aid to Israel during its war in Gaza. They question why the vice president hasn’t committed to policies to stop civilian casualties.

“This is an issue that students have valid concerns about, and I, too, have those concerns,” said Spence, the Spelman professor. “What we’ve attempted to do is to just talk about how complicated these issues are . . . Kamala Harris cannot wave a magic wand and make it all go away, but certainly we do hope that she will become forceful in her position.”

If Harris unites voters with an array of interests to become the first “HBCU” and woman president, the start of her term will coincide with the National Council of Negro Women’s 90th anniversary year. When that organization began, it was inconceivable that a Black woman could achieve what Harris has. 

“It’s been a long time coming,”  Pierre-Louis said of a woman president. “I think even if she doesn’t win, just the Democratic nomination in and of itself is enough for our founder, Mary McLeod Bethune, to be proud.”

To check your voter registration status or to get more information about registering to vote, text 19thnews to 26797.   

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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Mississippi Today

New radio show heightens concerns of Republican influence at Mississippi Public Broadcasting

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mississippitoday.org – Adam Ganucheau – 2024-10-31 13:01:00

Russ Latino, president of Empower Mississippi, testifies in favor of eliminating the state income tax at a joint legislative tax study committee hearing at the Capitol in Jackson, Miss., Thursday, Aug. 26, 2021. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

Russ Latino, a former lobbyist and cheerleader for some of the most radical policies in Mississippi, has been no stranger to lawmakers at the Mississippi Capitol for the past decade.

His extensive advocacy included promoting bills that would expand the flow of taxpayer dollars to private schools and drastically slash state spending, including for public education. In the summer of 2021, he was invited by legislative Republicans to testify in a hearing that Mississippi should eliminate its income tax, which funds about one-third of the state’s general budget.

His political work is also notorious. He helped lead an alliance of Republican Party and special interest groups who successfully fought against a 2015 statewide referendum that would have compelled lawmakers to fully fund public schools. He was also a public proxy for far-right state senator Chris McDaniel’s insurgent and scandal-ridden 2014 bid for U.S. Senate against Thad Cochran.

But Latino’s visit to the Capitol one day late in the 2021 legislative session was not for lobbying purposes. He’d just been nominated by Gov. Tate Reeves to serve on the board of directors of Mississippi Public Broadcasting, the venerated statewide public radio and television network, and he had to stand before the Senate Education Committee for his confirmation hearing.

“Currently, my job is oriented around public policy and thinking through solutions for the state,” Latino told senators in the March 25, 2021, hearing. “… In my mind, there’s a pretty big separation between the things I work on in my public policy work and the work of Mississippi Public Broadcasting. I don’t see any intersection, I don’t see any conflict, and I was comfortable after thinking about it that there wasn’t really any conflict between the two.”

The senators apparently agreed, voting unanimously to confirm his appointment. For the next three-plus years, Latino served on the MPB board and helped oversee the operations and budget of the public television and radio network that generations of Mississippians have come to trust as a champion of critical public education initiatives and journalistic independence.

MPB, an organization which employs about 90 people, was created by the Mississippi Legislature in 1969 to “educational and instructional professional growth and public service programs for the students and citizens of Mississippi.”

Thousands of individual donors give to MPB’s nonprofit foundation, which helps underwrite some programming for the network. But the vast majority of MPB’s annual funding comes directly from the Legislature, which appropriates millions in taxpayer dollars to the state agency each year to operate its statewide network and pay its staff.

This year, lawmakers appropriated $11.2 million for MPB. Though the agency’s annual appropriation from the state fluctuates each year based on need, this year’s appropriation is nearly $1 million less than the agency received a decade ago.

Funding MPB with taxpayer dollars has long been a perilous prospect. Numerous times in recent years, Republicans, who have complete control of the Legislature’s two chambers and the state budget, have threatened to slash the network’s appropriation. In 2024, 23 Republican House members voted against funding MPB altogether — up from 21 House Republicans who voted against funding in 2023 and 15 House Republicans who voted against funding in 2022.

MPB, like most public radio affiliates, airs several National Public Radio shows every day, and some Republican lawmakers have been quick to equate MPB’s local programming with their national counterparts. In reality, though, state dollars do not pay for NPR programming, and MPB’s leadership has for years instructed hosts of local programming to avoid politics altogether. MPB’s newsroom, which operates independently of the network’s other local programming, does closely cover state politics and government.

Latino was an unorthodox board appointee even for Reeves, who has long used his offices to appoint political allies and people who share his political views. Latino had scant professional experience in either an educational or journalistic setting — a typical qualification for MPB board members. Nonetheless, after his confirmation, he was an active board member during his term, routinely engaging in important conversations about organizational matters and eventually serving as vice chair of the board.

Among the major moves MPB made during Latino’s board term was the hiring of a new MPB executive director named Royal Aills.

A potential conflict of interest

In late 2022, with about a year-and-a-half left on Latino’s board term, an announcement shocked several MPB employees and seemed to counter Latino’s assurance to senators that his term would be free of conflict: He was launching a digital news organization called The Magnolia Tribune.

The Magnolia Tribune, Latino told friends and in a December 2022 email, would seek to disrupt Mississippi’s existing landscape — one that prominently included the newsroom that fell under his purview at MPB.

“Faith in traditional media has been undermined by blatant bias and often by careless reporting of complex issues,” Latino wrote in his announcement. “We will work to restore trust… While our commentary will often appeal to conservatives, we will not shy from providing a platform for divergent viewpoints.”

The potential for conflict between the mission of his upstart newsroom and MPB’s newsroom was apparent enough to Latino that he requested an opinion from the Mississippi Ethics Commission in January 2023.

“My question relates not to any pecuniary benefit, but to whether there is a conflict of interest in the Ethics Commission’s mind of being involved in providing news at (The Magnolia Tribune) when (MPB) also provides news,” Latino wrote to the Ethics Commission. “In my estimation, there is not. We have very different revenue models, very different products, and different audiences. It’s not inconceivable that there could occasionally be overlap in coverage or audience, though.”

Latino may not have been worried about any potential conflict, but staffers at the state agency he oversaw certainly were, current and former MPB staffers who spoke with Mississippi Today said. They expressed concerns with their colleagues about Latino’s new media venture and that they feared senior MPB leaders might become influenced by their board member’s views about the media at large.

“It’s no wonder trust in the media is plummeting. The industry is in crisis, but simultaneously self-satisfied, smarmy, and condescending toward critics.”

Russ Latino on Oct. 22, 2024

In response to Latino’s request, the Ethics Commission, a board appointed completely by the state’s top Republican Party elected , ruled that there was no conflict of interest and that Latino could continue serving on the MPB board with one caveat.

“(Latino) may not use his position on the board to obtain or attempt to obtain any pecuniary benefit for himself…, ” the Ethics Commission wrote in an April 7, 2023, opinion. “(Latino) also states (The Magnolia Tribune) will not enter a contract with or provide services to (MPB). If those circumstances change during (Latino’s) term of office on the board or within one year thereafter, a violation of Section 109, Miss. Constitution of 1890, and Section 25-4-105(2) and (3)(a) could arise. In that event, (Latino) would need to seek a supplemental opinion.”

Cleared then of any conflict by the Ethics Commission, Latino remained on the MPB board while continuing to launch his own newsroom.

Anti-press, anti-public education views

During the course of The Magnolia Tribune’s existence, Latino has published columns and fired off social media posts that are deeply critical of Mississippi journalists, news outlets and the American press at large.

Latino often rushes to critique unfavorable coverage of Mississippi’s Republican politicians, in particular, fueling speculation about Latino’s true motives with his news outlet. Several on MPB’s staff, they told Mississippi Today, paid close attention to their board member’s constant criticism of the press.

“… It is understandable that a Republican politician might begin to believe that it does not matter how reasonable their answer, they are better off not trusting media to be fair,” Latino wrote during the 2023 gubernatorial campaign.

“It’s no wonder trust in the media is plummeting,” Latino wrote just this month, repeating his regular refrain. “The industry is in crisis, but simultaneously self-satisfied, smarmy, and condescending toward critics.”

Latino has also used his outlet as the homepage for proponents of what he calls “school choice” — a Republican-parroted catchphrase that includes various measures that would ultimately pump public dollars into private schools. Latino spent years advocating for these causes on behalf of Americans for Prosperity, a national Koch brothers-founded dark money organization. After he left AFP, he lobbied for the same issues as senior vice president at Empower Mississippi.

Dozens of supporters of Americans For Prosperity, a group that advocates free markets and small government, listen as state director Russ Latino leads a press conference on Tuesday, Feb. 21, 2017, at the Capitol in Jackson. The group called for reduction of spending and better use of finances by the state. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

For years, MPB staffers quietly watched on as Latino held a board seat for an agency funded by the state under the banner of public education all while using his own news outlet to pressure lawmakers into passing policies that stood to take dollars out of public education coffers.

“What’s certain is that self-avowed ‘conservatives’ were not actively working to torpedo efforts to empower parents in (neighboring) states,” Latino wrote in a March 2023 piece that blasted Mississippi’s Senate Republicans for rejecting a Reeves political appointee who unabashedly supported allowing public dollars to benefit private schools. “The time for half-measure and obfuscation is over. It’s time for leaders to publicly declare if they will stand with parents and for children, or for a status quo that has held many students back from finding success.”

“It’s not only good policy. It’s good politics,” Latino wrote shortly before the 2024 legislative session began. “Mississippi has made tremendous strides in education in recent years. It need not take its foot off the accelerator. Effective choice programs that empower parents are one more tool in the arsenal to continue growth.”

After a year-and-a-half of both serving on the MPB board and running his news outlet, Latino’s term on the board expired on June 30, 2024.

Gov. Reeves then appointed Cory Custer, the governor’s current deputy chief of staff who serves as a spokesman for the governor’s office. Before he joined Reeves’ staff, Custer served as a Trump administration appointee.

Custer carries the same “liberal media bias” torch as Latino, routinely issuing public statements on behalf of Reeves that attempt to discredit news outlets and individual journalists. 

During Custer’s first MPB board meeting in July, three senior staff members from National Public Radio joined via video conference. According to board minutes, Custer “pressed NPR staff about bias in their newsroom. He asked for specific changes that have been implemented to combat bias. that discussion, Custer requested that MPB leadership continue to hold NPR accountable for implementing legitimate observable and quantifiable changes to combat bias in their newsroom.”

Around the time of that same board meeting, plans for a new MPB radio show were underway.

A ‘new and interesting’ MPB show is born

Senior MPB staffers were informed over the summer by Aills, the executive director who Latino helped hire, that their former board member would soon be getting his own radio show.

MPB staffers across several internal departments were tasked with working with Latino to develop the concept.

It would be a weekly interview show called “The Sit Down with Russ Latino,” featuring conversations with politicians. Despite a years-long edict from MPB leadership that in-house programming must remain free from overt politics, the new show would not avoid mention of major political issues. Latino would have editorial control of his show, and he’d get the 10 a.m. hour every Wednesday morning.

Aills told Mississippi Today that the show was his idea.

Royal Aills (MPB)

“I have been discussing the idea for this type of show for a while, along with other staff members who, in their current roles, make content and programming decisions at MPB,” Aills said in an emailed response to several questions for this article. “… I think that it is important to have a show like this, not because Russ Latino is hosting the show necessarily — it really could be anyone — but I think this type of show is important because it provides something new and interesting to our current lineup.”

Latino, who said he is not being compensated for the show by MPB or its foundation, told Mississippi Today he hopes the show will “create content that makes people think deeply about the issues that matter and to more fully embrace the wonderful aspects of Mississippi’s culture.”

As MPB executive director, Aills lives in a state of political difficulty.

On one hand, he must navigate an incredibly media-hostile Legislature that almost totally controls his agency’s annual budget. Concerns over the threat of politically-inspired budget cuts at MPB have long been openly discussed among staff across all departments, and that pressure is felt most directly in the MPB executive suite.

On the other hand, Aills has a loyal donor base and listenership in Mississippi that relies on and deeply appreciates NPR programming.

Asked if the creation of Latino’s show was an effort to provide what some may consider “political balance” to satisfy certain Mississippi politicians, Aills was blunt in his denial.

“No. At MPB, we serve all of Mississippi — that means sharing the thoughts and opinions of everyone who makes up the state, not just the ones who share similar political viewpoints or beliefs,” Aills said. “This is not a measure to appease any select group. This is trying to create programs that offer a little something for everyone… In order to grow our audience, we believe that we have to expand our programming offerings to entice new audiences with new content.”

A skeptical MPB staff presses for answers

Internal conversations at MPB tell a slightly different story than the one Aills laid out in his answers to Mississippi Today: He has for months been considering changes to local programming amid the political pressure.

In an at times contentious July 2024 all-staff meeting, Aills was asked by colleagues how he was responding to political pressure from Republicans. In response, Aills dwelled on local programming changes and directly acknowledged criticism from some lawmakers over their perceived notion of liberal bias, according to audio of the meeting shared with Mississippi Today.

“I do hear the Legislature because they do fund us,” Aills told his colleagues in the meeting. “We’re no different than the state Department of Health. If (lawmakers) say do something, you gotta do it. I don’t get to say, ‘No wait a minute, we have a right to let the people hear.’ You have to do what (lawmakers) tell you to do because (they) fund you. And if you don’t, (they) won’t fund you. I like my job, and I think you like your job, and I want to keep you in your job. So the goal is to keep the job. But I do hear them, we are going to respond in some way, but we’re not going to throw the baby out with the bathwater.”

The reality of the political pressures aside, several MPB staffers told Mississippi Today they had grown uncomfortable with Aills’ apparent effort to court Reeves and the governor’s office. In the same July staff meeting, Aills celebrated the governor’s selection of Custer, who has sharply criticized the press on behalf of his boss, as the newest board member.

“The governor supports us, believe it or not,” Aills told his staff. “He actually put a new board member on our board because he likes us that much. He could have appointed anybody … He put one of his staff members on there … that is awesome for us.”

Not long after that staff meeting, Aills informed senior leaders at MPB that Latino would be getting his own show.

When the full MPB staff caught wind of the new show, some began acknowledging to one another that their fear about how the politically-appointed board of directors might influence senior executives appeared to have been realized.

The outcome, in their minds, was bleak, and Aills had gone against what he vowed in that staff meeting.

A man who has been paid to lobby for cutting government spending and to fight against efforts to increase funding for public education would be handed a microphone at MPB, an agency funded through the state’s public education budget.

A man who has spent his career cozying up to some of the same Republican politicians who threatened to cut MPB’s budget was welcomed with open arms into their respected studio.

A man who has spent years sowing distrust of and discontent with the press would share airwaves with a newsroom of award-winning journalists who were working to hold all elected officials accountable.

A special guest for the first episode

If there was any hope remaining that Latino’s show would not veer in the direction some at MPB feared, that vanished about 15 minutes into the very first episode that aired on Oct. 23.

Latino’s guest for his first episode was none other than Tate Reeves, the governor who appointed Latino to MPB’s board three years prior and thus started the relationship that ultimately led to the show’s creation.

Russ Latino interviews Gov. Tate Reeves for the first episode of “The Sit Down With Russ Latino.” Credit: MPB

After a few questions about Reeves’ upbringing and political start, Latino steered the interview toward a topic dear to his heart: education. He teed up Reeves, a longtime supporter of “school choice” legislation himself, with several leading questions about finding new solutions to the state’s public education problems.

“The conversation around school choice is an interesting conversation,” Latino said on the show. “You see has just enacted a universal school choice program, Arkansas a years ago enacted a universal school choice program, Alabama’s got something close to that, I think Tennessee and (Governor) Bill Lee are pushing for that. When we look at Mississippi, do you think the time is right for something like what we’ve seen in those surrounding states where parents would have more ability to decide the right (school) setting for their kids?”

The governor, in response, took the opportunity to advocate for similar policies in Mississippi.

Latino and Reeves also used the statewide radio platform to discuss their shared opposition to Medicaid expansion, which countless experts say would help save the state’s struggling rural hospitals and provide to hundreds of thousands of people in America’s poorest and unhealthiest state.

Latino did not push back on any of the governor’s statements — even some commonly-used talking points that were misleading or inaccurate.

While the interview was occurring, Custer, MPB’s newest board member and the governor’s staff handler, stood just outside the studio and listened to his boss chum it up with Latino.

A few minutes earlier, Custer had been pulled aside by the MPB news director, according to people who witnessed the encounter. She asked Custer if the governor, notoriously reluctant to talk to reporters and difficult to pin down for interviews, could visit with the MPB news staff before leaving the property and answer some questions for “Mississippi Edition,” the newsroom’s morning time program.

Custer declined the invitation. Reeves completed his interview with Latino, and he and Custer left the building.

A note from Mississippi Today Editor-in-Chief Adam Ganucheau: I’m a loyal listener of Mississippi Public Broadcasting and greatly respect the history of the organization that is committed to telling the full truth about our home state. For more than 10 years, I’ve worked in the same close quarters as many of MPB’s reporters and greatly respect their service to Mississippi. The newsroom I lead here at Mississippi Today also has close ties to MPB. Our Editor-At-Large Marshall Ramsey has had his own weekly radio show on MPB since June 2013, and our Managing Editor Michael Guidry formerly worked in the MPB newsroom from November 2019 through February 2024. I leaned on institutional knowledge from both Marshall and Michael while I worked on this article, and Michael contributed some of the reporting. I reached out to Russ Latino with several questions for this article, and he shared a statement and requested it be published in its entirety. You can read his statement here.

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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PHOTOS: Bridging language barriers through interpreter training

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mississippitoday.org – Eric J. Shelton – 2024-10-31 06:00:00

Selma Alford, Director of the Bureau of Language Access, speaks about the profession of medical interpreting during the Community Interpreter and Medical Terminology Training in Ridgeland, Miss., on Wednesday, Oct. 4, 2024. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today

Ridgeland — In Mississippi, where an estimated 35,800 residents face language barriers in , a recent event trained professionals to communicate more effectively with limited-English-speaking in an effort to bridge gaps in care.

The program, which began on Oct. 2, was organized by the Mississippi Department of ‘s Office of Health Disparity Elimination and the Bureau of Language Access. It served as a step toward improving access to essential services for Limited English Proficient (LEP) individuals.

“Interpreters are fundamental in ensuring that every individual can fully understand and access the services they need,” said Selma Alford, director of the Bureau of Language Access. “The training is rigorous and essential; it focuses on ethics, cultural competency, and the ongoing development of interpreters’ skills to meet diverse community needs.”

The training program covered a variety of topics essential for effective interpreting, including medical terminology, ethics, and cultural competency, equipping interpreters with the skills necessary for their roles. Each day of training interactive sessions, role-playing exercises, and discussions of real-world scenarios. Participants also engaged in exercises focused on building trust with clients and addressing the nuances of communication in health care settings.

Attendees included medical interpreters, court interpreters, teachers and community health workers, among others.

Gabrielle Miller, a housing case manager with the Gulf Coast Center for Nonviolence, attended to enhance her capacity to serve the Spanish-speaking population. 

“I studied social work and Spanish in undergrad, and I’ve lived in Spanish-speaking countries. Now I’m back here working in the Gulf Coast … There aren’t that many people working in social services who can speak Spanish and interpret for those in the community. So I think it’s really important to get my certification so that I can better serve the community that I in,” Miller said. “… Some of my clients are solely Spanish-speaking, so advocating for them within my role is crucial.”

According to data from the Migration Policy Institute, approximately 1.2% of are considered Limited English Proficient (LEP), meaning they speak English less than “very well.” The top five languages spoken by these individuals in Mississippi are Spanish, Vietnamese, Arabic, Chinese, and Gujarati. While about 96% of people in the speak only English, 3.8% speak a language other than English.” This data underscores the critical need for trained interpreters to facilitate access to essential services.

The training also emphasized the risks of using or family members as interpreters, which can lead to miscommunication. 

“Misunderstandings can have -threatening consequences, especially in medical settings,” Alford said.

Alford and Miller reiterated the need for credentialing and ongoing education to ensure interpreters can effectively support their communities and provide equitable access to critical services. 

Alford urged community members to recognize the importance of professional interpreters as the need for effective communication in health care and social services continues to grow.

 “Every voice matters. We encourage anyone interested in making a difference to pursue certification and help us build a more inclusive Mississippi,” she said. 

Participants in the training received certificates of completion, signifying their readiness to serve as professional interpreters.


Gabrielle Miller, a housing case manager with the Gulf Coast Center for Nonviolence, takes notes during the Community Interpreter and Medical Terminology Training in Ridgeland, Miss., on Wednesday, Oct. 4, 2024. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today
Selma Alford, Director of the Bureau of Language Access, outlines training expectations at the Community Interpreter and Medical Terminology Training in Ridgeland, Miss., on Wednesday, Oct. 4, 2024. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today
Gabi Gardine, center, collaborates with Monika Lorinczova, left, and Paola Hernandez during the Community Interpreter and Medical Terminology Training in Ridgeland, Miss., on Wednesday, Oct. 4, 2024. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today
Patricia Namanny, the language access coordinator, discusses ethics and standards during the Community Interpreter and Medical Terminology Training in Ridgeland, Miss., on Wednesday, Oct. 4, 2024. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today
Keysiann Vega and colleagues participate in a group exercise defining community and medical interpreting during the Community Interpreter and Medical Terminology Training in Ridgeland, Miss., on Wednesday, Oct. 4, 2024. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today
Monika Lorinczova, left, and Tania Reyes compare notes during the Community Interpreter and Medical Terminology Training in Ridgeland, Miss., on Wednesday, Oct. 4, 2024. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today
Tania Reyes, from left, Keysiann Vega, Nataly Camacho, and Paola Hernandez work together on a group exercise during the Community Interpreter and Medical Terminology Training in Ridgeland, Miss., on Wednesday, Oct. 4, 2024. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today
Xuan Tran discusses applying ethical principles for community interpreters to common communication barriers during the Community Interpreter and Medical Terminology Training in Ridgeland, Miss., on Wednesday, Oct. 4, 2024. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today
Students complete exercises in their workbooks during the Community Interpreter and Medical Terminology Training in Ridgeland, Miss., on Wednesday, Oct. 4, 2024. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today
Delia Ashley participates in the Community Interpreter and Medical Terminology Training in Ridgeland, Miss., on Wednesday, Oct. 4, 2024. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today
Nataly Camacho highlights the definition of a community interpreter in her workbook during the Community Interpreter and Medical Terminology Training in Ridgeland, Miss., on Wednesday, Oct. 4, 2024. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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