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On this day in 1644

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mississippitoday.org – Jerry Mitchell – 2025-02-11 07:00:00

Feb. 11, 1644

New Amsterdam depicted in a cartoon, circa 1642 Credit: Public Domain

The first known legal protest by those of African descent in what became the United States took place when 11 Black Americans petitioned the Council for New Netherland (New York) for freedom, saying they had fulfilled their contracts to the Dutch West India Co. 

They had been brought to the colony just a few years after its 1624 founding. They won their fight, but they remained in legal limbo in what became known as “half-freedom.” They received property, but they still had to pay crops and cattle to the company each year. 

One of them, Manuel de Gerrit de Reus, was accused with eight others of killing a Black man. The company decided to execute only one of them, and de Reus drew the short straw. But when the officials tried to execute him, both nooses around his neck broke. At the behest of witnesses, they pardoned him instead. 

Five months later, eight Black Americans returned to court, demanding their full freedom. They cited the arrival of English soldiers, who might re-enslave them. Despite those fears, the Black Americans managed to keep their freedom and lived north of what is now Washington Square Park, creating New York City’s first free Black community.

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

Mississippi Today

Court-ordered redistricting will require do-over legislative elections this year

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mississippitoday.org – Taylor Vance – 2025-02-11 11:23:00

Five House seats will be re-decided in a November special election, pending court approval, under a resolution the House approved to comply with a federal court order.

Even though voters just elected members of the Legislature in 2023, the races will be held again because a three-judge federal panel determined last year that the Legislature did not create enough Black-majority districts when it redrew its districts.

 The panel ordered the state to redraw the districts and create a new majority-Black district in north Mississippi’s Chickasaw County. 

House Elections Chairman Noah Sanford, R-Collins, told House members he believes the new map complies with the federal Voting Rights Act and will allow Black voters in Chickasaw County to elect a candidate of their choice. 

“I tried to keep the number of members affected minimal,” Sanford said. 

The House plan does not require incumbent legislators to run against each other. The main change in the new map is that it makes the District 22 seat in Chickasaw County, currently held by Republican Rep. Jon Lancaster of Houston, who is white and a majority-Black voter district. 

The other four House districts that lawmakers voted to redraw are: 

  • House District 16: Rep. Rickey Thompson, D-Shannon
  • House District 36: Karl Gibbs, D-West Point
  • House District 39: Dana McLean, R-Columbus
  • House District 41: Kabir Karriem, D-Columbus 

Lancaster told Mississippi Today he did not want to comment on the proposed maps since the litigation over the legislative districts was still pending, and he did not know if he would run in a November special election. 

Under the legislation, the qualifying period will run from May 19 to May 30. The primary election will be held on August 5, with a potential primary runoff on September 2 and the general election on November 4. 

The federal courts also ruled that the Senate must redraw its districts to create a new Black-majority district in the DeSoto County and Hattiesburg areas. 

Senate Rules Chairman Dean Kirby, R-Pearl, has introduced a measure to change some Senate districts. However, he told Mississippi Today he is still tweaking the plan and does not know when the Rules Committee will debate it. 

Once the Legislature passes a redistricting plan, it must go back before the federal courts for approval.

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

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State Auditor criticizes bill he said would have ‘gutted’ his office

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mississippitoday.org – Taylor Vance – 2025-02-10 15:49:00

State Auditor Shad White on Monday continued to criticize legislation that attempted to alter the scope of powers his office has in auditing nonprofit companies, continuing the statewide officials’ clash with the Republican-majority Senate. 

White, a Republican, told attendees at the Stennis Capitol Press Forum that the legislation would have “gutted” his office and prevented his staff from adequately investigating organizations that receive federal or state funds. 

“It basically took away our ability to look at more waste in state government,” White said. 

Sen. David Parker, a Republican from Olive Branch, authored the Senate Bill 2847 but killed the measure last week.  

The bill would have required White’s office to audit nonprofits receiving more than $10 million in federal funds and allowed him at his discretion to audit nonprofits receiving less than $10 million in federal dollars. 

The legislation would also remove his office’s ability to “institute suit” against people he believes defrauded the state, an issue over which he and Attorney General Lynn Fitch are currently fighting in court over. 

Parker said the legislation was not politically motivated. He advocated for its passage because he did not like how White handled the arrest of a DeSoto County alderman accused of illegally obtaining unemployment insurance. 

“This bill is not about personal attacks or political agendas,” Parker said. “It’s about making sure our system is fair, balanced and transparent — and that we don’t rush to judgment in ways that can damage lives.” 

White said the legislation increased his motivation to run for governor in 2027.

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

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Speaker White frustrated by ‘crickets’ from Senate on tax plan: Legislative recap

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mississippitoday.org – Geoff Pender – 2025-02-10 11:58:00

Last week, with the legislative session clock ticking towards midway, House Speaker Jason White was growing more frustrated with the “crickets” he’s heard from his Republican Senate counterpart Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann on the House’s sea-change tax overhaul plan.

“It’s frustrating for us to try to move something this big, and at the other end of the building, they just refuse to engage,” White said in an interview with Mississippi Today as the three-month session nears the halfway mark. “… There’s a plan to have a plan, but, nobody’s seen the plan …

“To just get crickets on the whole thing, that just doesn’t work.”

White and the GOP majority House — and Republican Gov. Tate Reeves — have made no secret they believe eliminating the income tax is priority No. 1 for this session. The House worked through the summer on a plan, holding public hearings, a public summit and providing details of its plan as the session started.

House Bill 1 — which contains the House plan to eliminate the income tax over more than a decade, cut the sales tax on groceries, raise the sales tax to 8.5% and place a new 5% — has been public about a month. It was passed by the full House and sent to the Senate on Jan. 17. The plan would attempt to address a long-running shortfall in highway maintenance funding and help shore up the state’s government employee retirement system.

Hosemann and the GOP majority Senate leadership have indicated they, too, have a sea-change tax overhaul coming. But so far Hosemann has outlined only a few particulars he expects will be in the Senate plan, and some of his lieutenants have criticized parts of the House proposal. But reportedly, through recent days, the Senate plan is still being devised, debated and tweaked behind closed doors. Senate leaders indicated it will be unveiled this week.

White said such monumental policy shouldn’t be done late in a hectic session, and there should be more transparency for the public.

“We have Republican leadership in all three place, the Governor’s Mansion, the House and in the Senate,” White said. “The answer can’t be, we’re looking at it in a small group behind a closed door, and say, ‘We’ll let you know when we come up with something’ … I’m so frustrated with the process.”

White said there appears to be a pattern of Senate leadership “hiding the ball,” and “running out the clock” on parlaying with the House on major policies. He noted similar issues in overhauling the state’s education funding formula — in which the House and Senate finally reached agreement late last year — and Medicaid expansion, which failed after the Senate delayed, then refused major compromise.

“Is the public going to buy this on a month’s notice?” White said. He speculates the governor could call lawmakers back into special session if no major tax plan is agreed to.

Some Senate leaders have said they are being more deliberate with monumental tax cuts or policy changes, and having bean counters thoroughly vet various scenarios. The Senate, by design, is supposed to be the more “deliberative” body in Mississippi’s bicameral Legislature.

“Well, let’s deliberate,” White said. “… But the answer can’t just be, ‘No.’ The answer could be, you’re wrong and here’s why … But to have that you have to have engagement, and not do things in a flurry the last 10 days of a session … We’re not interested in a small piece of a tax cut while not addressing other issues …

“This is the issue of the session,” White said, “and it can bring all the rest of the stuff to a halt.”

WATCH: Political Reporter Michael Goldberg breaks down the school choice debate.


“The chairman acted like he couldn’t smell what I was stepping in, but I think you and I are on the same page,” Rep. Bryant Clark, D-Pickens, to Rep. Jansen Owen, R-Poplarville, during a House floor debate.


Both chambers pass bans on public camping

The House and Senate each passed bills after lengthy floor debates this week that would prohibit people from “camping” on public property.

House Bill 1203 and Senate Bill 2334 would make it a misdemeanor offense to camp on places such as streets, sidewalks and near government buildings, with penalties ranging from fines to jail time for repeated violations of the law.

The measures are designed to prevent the growth of sprawling encampments where homeless people live. Proponents, mostly Republicans, argue such encampments are a public nuisance and dissuade people from seeking mental health support and other social services. Opponents, mostly Democrats, say the measures criminalize homelessness..

— Michael Goldberg


Bill would protect people reporting sex crimes

The House Judiciary B Committee on Tuesday passed legislation that would give immunity to people who possess alcohol while underage or small amounts of drugs if they report instances of sexual abuse or sexual assault to law enforcement authorities. 

The legislation, authored by Rep. Dana McLean, R-Columbus, passed the committee and can now be considered by the full House. McLean said the intent of the legislation was to give some level of protection to college students at a party where drugs were present who might be worried they would receive punishment from law enforcement if they were survivors or witnesses to sexual assault. 

“We want to be able to protect these witnesses in case they’re concerned about an underlying arrest,” said McLean, who has advocated for reforms to Mississippi’s sexual assault laws for years. — Taylor Vance


Bill would ban cell phones in class

A measure that would ban students using cell phones in Mississippi public school classrooms is pending before the full Senate, with support from Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann.

Similar measures have been implemented or are being considered in many states, with experts saying the use of cell phones and social media during school is detrimental to learning and a distraction.

SB 2145 authored by Sen. Briggs Hopson III, passed the Senate Education Committee and is pending in the full Senate. It would provide exceptions for students that require a cell phone for health or safety reasons. The measure would sanction school systems that do not adopt strict cell phone policies by 2026 by withholding state funding. — Geoff Pender


Wine shipment measure advances

The full Senate will consider a measure to allow Mississippians to have wine shipped to their homes after the Finance Committee passed SB 2145, authored by Sen. Walter Michel.

But lawmakers added a “reverse repealer” to the bill, to ensure more debate before it could be passed into law. Similar measures have been debated and killed for many years.

The bill would require a wine shipper to get a permit from the state Department of Revenue and pay taxes, and a recipient would have to show ID proving they are over 21. — Geoff Pender


Measure would create domestic violence board

A bill to create a board reviewing domestic violence deaths passed the House Public Health Committee last week.

The goal of HB 1551 is to uncover trends of domestic fatalities, which would help shelter providers find ways to help victims, and for the review board to make policy suggestions to lawmakers.

This board would be housed within the State Department of Health. Bill author Rep. Fabian Nelson, D-Bryam, said as domestic incidents are on the rise, it’s “time for us to do something about it.” — Mina Corpuz


Special election set to replace Branning

Gov. Tate Reeves has set a special election for April 15 to fill the vacancy in Senate District 18, which includes Leake, Neshoba, and Winston counties.

The vacancy is from the resignation of Jennifer Branning after she was elected to the state Supreme Court. 

The qualifying deadline to run for the special election is Feb. 24. — Mississippi Today


Senate panel approves vape registry

A measure to create a registry of approved electronic cigarette, or vaping, devices is pending before the Senate after it was approved by the Finance Committee. A similar measure was passed by the Senate but died last year.

Senate Finance Chairman Josh Harkins authored the bill, and said Louisiana and other states have similar registries, aimed at making sure only safe products are sold in Mississippi.

“We’ve all had stories of illegal products being sold in Mississippi,” Harkins said. The registry, if passed into law, would begin Sept. 1. — Geoff Pender


Lawmakers prep for Supreme Court redistricting, if judge orders

Legislature could address Supreme Court redistricting, if ordered by federal judge 

The House passed a bill 116-1 that would allow the Legislature to change Mississippi’s Supreme Court districts if a federal judge, while lawmakers are in session, orders the districts to be redrawn. 

Horan, a Republican from Grenada, passed a “dummy bill” to allow legislators to change the three districts if U.S. District Judge Sharion Aycock rules lawmakers have diluted Black voting strength by not drawing a districts that allow Black voters to elect judges of their choice. 

Black voters across the state filed federal litigation against the state arguing the Mississippi’s Central Supreme Court District is unfairly drawn. Aycock has not issued a ruling in the pending litigation.   — Taylor Vance


Bill would widen scope for advanced-practice nurses

A bill passed by the House Public Health Committee on to the full Senate this week would widen the scope of practice for nurse practitioners and certified registered nurse anesthetists. 

The bill allows the two groups of advanced-practice registered nurses to practice independently – not under the supervision of a physician – after completion of 8,000 practice hours. It would also allow anesthesiology assistants to be licensed and regulated in Mississippi, though that group of providers would have to operate under an anesthesiologist. 

House Bill 849 is authored by House Public Health and Human Services Chair Sam Creekmore, R-New Albany, and Rep. Clay Mansell, R-Clinton. 

Currently, advanced practice registered nurses must enter into a collaborative agreement with a physician. Under the agreement, the advanced practice nurse must pay the physician with whom they are collaborating. These contracts can be expensive and sometimes have distance limitations, meaning nurses in rural areas may not be able to participate.

Physicians and the Mississippi State Medical Association have long said doing away with these agreements reduces the quality of patient care. — Kate Royals


$1.7 billion

The amount of back child support owed for 159,826 children, according to lawmakers during debate over a bill to allow the state to garnish gambling winnings to collect from deadbeat parents.

Mobile sports betting legalization passes Mississippi House

The state House approved legislation Monday for the second year in a row to legalize mobile sports betting, a move that puts Mississippi on track to join a growing number of states that allow online betting. Read the story.


Education Chairman says Senate doesn’t currently support easing public school transfers

Mississippi Senate Education Chairman Dennis DeBar, R-Leakesville, declined on Monday to advance a proposal that would have made it easier for students to transfer between public schools and said he doesn’t think such a proposal can currently pass the upper chamber. Read the story.


Campaign finance reports: Gubernatorial hopefuls Fitch, Hosemann, White neck-and-neck in fundraising

Annual campaign finance reports due Friday show the top potential contenders — at least to date — for Mississippi governor in 2027 were neck-and-neck in how much they raised last year. Read the story.


Rural Mississippi schools fight to attract and keep teachers amid shortages

Mississippi’s education system faces a critical teacher shortage, particularly in rural areas like Greene County, where school leaders struggle to recruit and retain experienced educators. Read the story.


Sea change in Mississippi taxation coming. Where is the Senate plan?

To his credit, House Speaker Jason White has been very transparent with the House plan, every jot and tittle of it before the public for weeks. House leaders held public hearings, even a public “summit” in the months leading up to this legislative session and received input from business, transportation and local government leaders. They openly broadcast details of their plan and were out the gates early in the session passing House Bill 1. Read the analysis.


Mississippi again turns down millions of dollars to feed low-income kids during summer months

Hundreds of thousands of eligible poor Mississippi children will miss out on grocery assistance this summer after the state missed the deadline to apply for the federal program for the second year in a row. Read the story.


Measures allowing former felons to regain voting rights clear House committees 

Two measures allowing some people convicted of disenfranchising felony offenses to regain their voting rights passed a House committee on Tuesday, allowing the House to consider reforming one of the most strict felony disenfranchisement systems in the nation. Read the story.


Sending taxpayer money to private schools advances in Mississippi House

The move keeps alive a yearslong push from private school advocates and prompted concern among Democrats that the legislation could undermine public schools serving some of the state’s neediest students. Read the story.


House passes bill to make switching public K-12 school districts easier

The House on Thursday passed a bill to make it easier for K-12 students to transfer to other public schools outside their home districts, advancing a policy priority for House Speaker Jason White.  Read the story.


‘This is a stupid bill’: Mississippi House advances DEI ban

Mississippi House Republican lawmakers advanced a bill that would shutter DEI programs in all of the state’s public schools, ban certain concepts from being taught in classrooms and dictate how schools define gender. Read the story.


Measures allowing former felons to regain voting rights clear House committees 

Two measures allowing some people convicted of disenfranchising felony offenses to regain their voting rights passed a House committee on Tuesday, allowing the House to consider reforming one of the most strict felony disenfranchisement systems in the nation. Read the story.


Health Department cuts clinical services at some county clinics following insufficient funding from Legislature

After the Legislature failed to give the state health department the funding it needed to fully staff county health departments, some no longer offer clinical services and the agency may close others. Read the story.


Mississippi parents, owed $1.7 billion in child support, could collect gambling winnings

The Senate passed a bill that would allow the agency to collaborate with the state Gaming Commission to withhold cash winnings from people with outstanding child support. Read the story.


Podcast: The health care issues lawmakers are debating in 2025

Mississippi Today’s health team outlines the major health care issues the Mississippi Legislature is dealing with in the 2025 session. Listen to the podcast.


They want to send public funds to private schools, but they don’t want to let voters decide the issue

Proponents of spending public funds on private schools are not proponents of letting the people vote on the issue. Read the analysis.

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

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