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Mississippi Today

Hosemann, White trade jabs, hint at gubernatorial aspirations at Neshoba Fair

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mississippitoday.org – Bobby Harrison – 2024-07-31 12:29:37

NESHOBA COUNY FAIR — Republicans state Auditor Shad White and Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann threw a little political shade at each other, and both indicated they have 2027 gubernatorial aspirations at the Neshoba County Fair on Wednesday.

Hosemann told a crowd Wednesday that Mississippi’s next step in tax cuts should be reducing the state’s 7% tax on groceries – the highest levy of its kind in the nation.

Hosemann made the commitment Wednesday – the first of two days of political speaking at the historic Neshoba County Fair – to make reducing the grocery tax a priority during the upcoming 2025 legislative session, which begins In January.

White, who spoke before Hosemann under the balmy tin-roofed Founders Square Pavilion, also endorsed a cut to the grocery tax.

“It is time to lower the grocery tax,” Hosemann said before a sparse crowd for the off-election year political speeches. “We can do this. This is the year (2025 session) to do that.”

Hosemann pointed out that a $525 million cut in the income tax passed in 2022 will be completely phased in during the next two years. A cut in business taxes, costing the state about $42 million annually, will be phased in by 2029. He said a reduction in the 7% tax on groceries should be Mississippi’s next step.

White agreed, saying that because of the high cost of food, a reduction in the grocery tax would be big boost for families.

But White blamed Hosemann, as presiding officer of the Senate, for killing legislation that would ban the expenditure of public funds at universities for diversity, equity and inclusion efforts. He said the efforts are a waste of taxpayer money.

State Auditor Shad White speaks during the Neshoba County Fair in Philadelphia, Miss., Wednesday, July 31, 2024. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today

He said some Mississippi Republican officials should act more conservative and “a little less like Joe Biden,” an apparent jab at Hosemann given the context of his speech.

After his speech, Hosemann was asked about White’s comments. He said he did not hear them, but added he was surprised White was at the fair.

“I thought he would be on a book tour,” Hosemann said, referring to the the state auditor releasing a book next week on the misspending of at least $77 million in federal welfare funds, part of an ongoing criminal investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice.

The 77-year-old Hosemann indicated that he intends to seek another political office in 2027 when his second term as lieutenant governor ends. Constitutionally Hosemann cannot seek a third consecutive term as lieutenant governor.

On Wednesday, he did not say which office he might pursue, though, in the past Mississippi Today has reported he is considering a run for governor.

‘We have a vision for Mississippi. We have been at it since 2008 …,” said Hosemann who previously served as secretary of state. “If people still want us, we want to continue to work.”

White was more succinct about his political ambition to media after his speech: “I’ll be honest with you, I am seriously considering a run for governor in the next election.”

Earlier on Wednesday, Democratic Central District Public Service Commissioner De’Keither Stamps called on 81-year-old President Joe Biden to step down and for Vice President Kamala Harris to assume his role. He said Harris should select the Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson as her vice president for the remainder of this term, which ends in January. He said such a move would unify the country.

He said Biden should resign to avoid “tarnishing” his long tenure of public service.

Central District Transportation Commissioner Willie Simmons, also a Democrat, called on the Legislature to appropriate an additional recurring revenue source – presumably a tax increase — for his agency to deal with road and bridge needs. Simmons said the other two transportation commissioners, both Republican, also believe more recurring revenue should be directed to road and bridge needs.

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

Mississippi Today

Mayersville mayor eyes big steps for her small town

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mississippitoday.org – Linda Williams-Short – 2025-02-25 11:19:00

Editor’s note: Linda Williams-Short, the mayor of Mayersville, leads one of Mississippi’s smallest towns. This piece is part of an ongoing Mississippi Today Ideas series showcasing perspectives of mayors across the state.


When you think about the Mississippi Delta, you might not always think about Mayersville.

But this small but mighty town I’m proud to lead is as important as any in the Delta, and we are making great strides. We like to think of Mayersville as being a small town with big dreams. We live by that motto.

Linda Williams Short
Linda Williams-Short Credit: Special to Mississippi Today

Perhaps these strides we have made would be considered baby steps in larger cities, but in Mayersville, population 433, according to the 2020 Census, these steps can be considered monumental to our town’s survival.

We strive to follow the lead of former Mayersville Mayor Unita Blackwell, who was the first Black woman mayor of a Mississippi town. She was a leader for all of us in Mayersville, and she inspired me to enter politics.

And today we still follow her lead in working to improve housing in Mayersville and the overall economic condition of all our residents.

We have faced the adversities of other small Delta towns. Through the decades we also have faced natural disasters, including barely missing a direct hit from the awful 2023 tornado that reaped destruction on many of our south Mississippi Delta neighbors.

The natural disasters Mayersville have faced go way back including the historic and devastating 1927 flood that resulted in the levy that separates our town from the direct access to the Mississippi River that was key to our economy decades ago.

Despite the obstacles, town leaders and I are committed to improving the health and well-being of our constituents. As part of this effort, the town of Mayersville became the second smoke-free community in the state of Mississippi.

Since being elected mayor in 2001, we have worked, following in the tradition of Unita Blackwell, to build seven new homes within Mayersville. That might not seem like a big deal, but in a town of our size and with the housing issues we face, we are proud of this accomplishment.

We have strived to repair the town’s failing infrastructure and to bring healthy food options to the community through a partnership with the Mississippi Food Network. We also are working with the Delta Health Center to provide a clinic to assist residents who have limited transportation options.

And like other small Delta towns, tourism is critical. To that end, I helped found the Mayersville Annual Homecoming Festival. This festival brings former and current residents together annually from all over the United States.

These efforts are important to me because Mayersville, which is the county seat for Issaquena County, is important to me. I am a lifelong resident.

I am the youngest daughter of the late Saul & Edie B. Williams. For 29 years I have been married to Larry D. Short. He is my lifelong partner and love of my life. I am the mother of James Jr., Jeremy, JaSona, Kiara, Katerri and the late Jercelle and proud grandmother of 13 grandchildren. I have been a member of one of our great and impactful churches — Rose Hill M.B. Church — for 49 years, and I currently serve as the senior choir director. In addition to being mayor, I am a small business owner operating as Tony’s Grocery and Celle’s Estate Housing complex.

I am passionate, dedicated, driven in terms of my job as mayor of Mayersville.

But my story is not unique. In Mayersville, we all pitch in for the betterment of our town and its residents.

In Mayersville, we live by the motto, “Always service over self.” I am proud to take that motto to heart every single day.

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

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Mississippi Today

City of Clarksdale asks judge to dismiss restraining order against newspaper over editorial

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mississippitoday.org – Taylor Vance – 2025-02-25 10:20:00

The city of Clarksdale on Monday filed a motion to voluntarily dismiss its lawsuit against the Clarksdale Press Register and a judge’s order that required the newspaper to remove an editorial from its website, a court action that stunned free press advocates. 

The motion asks the court to dismiss the lawsuit with prejudice, which means the city cannot refile the same lawsuit against the city in the future. Hinds County Chancellor Crystal Wise Martin would have to agree to the motion. 

The city leaders and the newspaper are scheduled to appear in court on Thursday morning. But if the judge agrees to the dismissal motion before then, the court will likely cancel the hearing. 

“They shouldn’t have filed the lawsuit in the first place,” said Wyatt Emmerich, the newspaper’s owner. “But I’m glad they’re dismissing it.” 

Clarksdale Mayor Chuck Espy and the Board of Commissioners filed the petition last week in Hinds County Chancery Court, alleging that an editorial the local newspaper published criticizing them was “libelous” and saying the editorial would bring “immediate and irreparable injury” to the city.

The editorial criticized the city for conducting a special-called meeting without informing the news outlet beforehand. The purpose of the meeting was to ask the Legislature for permission to enact an additional local tax.  

“Have commissioners or the mayor gotten kickback from the community?” the editorial reads. “Until Tuesday, we had not heard of any. Maybe they just wanted a few nights in Jackson to lobby for this idea — at public expense.” 

READ MORE: Editorial: Someone needs to read the First Amendment to Judge Crystal Wise Martin

The state’s Open Meetings Act requires public bodies to email a notice of the meeting to media outlets and citizens who have asked to be placed on the city’s email distribution list. 

The Clarksdale city clerk, Laketha Covington, filed an affidavit with the city’s petition stating that she forgot to send an email notice about the special meeting to the outlet. Still, she said it was a simple mistake and not intentional.

Angered, the city leaders filed the petition over the editorial in Jackson, around 155 miles from Clarksdale, where the judge issued the temporary restraining order that ordered the newspaper to remove the website from its website. 

A temporary restraining order is typically issued by a judge instructing someone to stop a specific action. It is issued when the judge believes immediate and irreparable loss or damage will occur before the court can conduct a full hearing. 

But Charlie Mitchell, a lawyer and former newspaper editor who has taught media law at the University of Mississippi for years, doubted if the editorial met the irreparable loss burden and said the judge’s order went a step further than a typical restraining order and ordered a “remedy” by demanding the news outlet to take corrective action.

“The opinion expressed in the editorial — government secrecy breeds mistrust — has been voiced countless times throughout American history and is the very root of the First Amendment,” Mitchell said. 

The Mississippi Press Association and other press advocates were alarmed by the ruling, calling it “unconstitutional” and worried that it would set a dangerous precedent for nearly a century of case law that clearly outlawed prior restraint orders.

National news outlets, including the Associated Press and the New York Times, quickly picked up on the story, and legal advocates supported the Clarksdale Press Register. Now, six days after the judge entered her order, the city is dismissing its petition. 

Emmerich believes other government bodies would be hesitant to pursue similar actions against local news outlets in the future because of the swift response from free press advocates nationwide. 

“I’m really inspired by all the support throughout the country and that First Amendment advocates quickly responded to this,” Emmerich said. 

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

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Mississippi Today

On this day in 1870

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mississippitoday.org – Jerry Mitchell – 2025-02-25 07:00:00

Feb. 25, 1870

Hiram Revels was the first Black American elected to the U.S. Senate. Credit: Wikipedia

Two days after Mississippi was readmitted to the Union, Hiram Revels became the first Black American elected as a U.S. senator. 

“All men are created equal, says the great Declaration,” Republican Sen. Charles Sumner of Massachusetts said, “and now a great act attests this verity. Today we make the Declaration a reality…. The Declaration was only half established by Independence. The greatest duty remained behind. In assuring the equal rights of all we complete the work.” 

Born free in North Carolina, Revels became a national force in an office once held by Jefferson Davis, the former president of the Confederacy. 

A minister by trade, Revels sought to improve the education of others, working with Black Americans in Indiana, Illinois, Kansas, Kentucky and Tennessee. 

In 1854, he was imprisoned for preaching to the Black community. After that, he moved to Baltimore, where he served as principal of a Black school. When the Civil War broke out in 1861, he helped recruit two Black regiments from Maryland and later served as chaplain for Black soldiers fighting in Mississippi. 

After the war ended, he worked for a church in Kansas. On the train, the conductor asked him and his family to move to the smoking car. They refused, and the conductor relented. Not long after, he and his family settled in Natchez, Mississippi, where he was elected as an alderman. Winning over both Black and white with his calls for cooperation, he was elected to the Mississippi State Senate, one of more than 30 African Americans to serve in the Legislature during Reconstruction. 

“We are in the midst of an exciting canvass,” he wrote a friend in a letter. “We are determined that Mississippi shall be settled on a basis of justice and political and legal equality.” 

He drew attention as soon as he arrived with his moving words. After Mississippi lawmakers appointed him to the U.S. Senate, a few tried to block him from taking office. Revels remained steadfast and took office. 

“I find that the prejudice in this country to color is very great, and I sometimes fear that it is on the increase,” he went on to say. “If the nation should take a step for the encouragement of this prejudice against the colored race, can they have any grounds upon which to predicate a hope that heaven will smile upon them and prosper them?”

He supported universal amnesty for former Confederates, requiring only their sworn loyalty to the Union. 

“I am in favor of removing the disabilities of those upon whom they are imposed in the South,” he said, “just as fast as they give evidence of having become loyal and being loyal.” 

After the end of his Senate term in 1871, he became the first president of Alcorn University, the first land-grant school for Black students. He later taught theology at Rust College and died of a stroke in 1901.

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

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