Mississippi Today
Read Mississippi Today’s Pulitzer Prize-winning series ‘The Backchannel’
Read Mississippi Today’s Pulitzer Prize-winning series ‘The Backchannel’
Mississippi Today reporter Anna Wolfe won the 2023 Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting for her remarkable investigation “The Backchannel,” which exposed former Gov. Phil Bryant’s role in the state’s welfare scandal.
Wolfe’s investigation was the culmination of more than five years of reporting on the Mississippi welfare agency, which is tasked with helping the poorest residents of America’s poorest state. When she found in 2017 that only a fraction of Mississippians who applied for direct cash assistance were receiving it, she wondered how, instead, the state was spending hundreds of millions in federal grants designed to help those people.
READ MORE: Mississippi Today’s complete “The Backchannel” investigation
Through dozens of records requests and hundreds of interviews over the past several years, Wolfe uncovered misspending of those federal funds. And, after a tipster leaked thousands of private, never-before-seen text messages between Bryant and key players in the scandal, Wolfe was able to piece together the former governor’s role.
Among the findings of “The Backchannel” investigation:
- Bryant was set, just days after leaving office, to receive stock in a Favre-affiliated drug company that had received state welfare dollars.
- Favre pressed Mississippi welfare officials to steer taxpayer funds to his pet projects — one of which he planned to profit from.
- Bryant helped Favre secure welfare funding for USM volleyball stadium.
- Bryant wielded great control over how his appointed welfare director distributed federal funds, even turning to that welfare director to seek help for his troubled nephew.
Click the links below to read the entire “The Backchannel” investigation.
Part 1: Phil Bryant had his sights on a payout as welfare funds flowed to Brett Favre
Part 1A: ‘You stuck your neck out for me’: Brett Favre used fame and favors to pull welfare dollars
Part 2: ‘My Governor is counting on me’: Disgraced welfare director bowed to Phil Bryant’s wishes
Part 3: Governing by text: Phil Bryant’s hidden hand picked welfare winners
Part 4: Phil Bryant’s star-powered selfies and slick brochures didn’t Save the Children
Part 5: Family first: Gov. Phil Bryant turned to welfare officials to rescue troubled nephew
Part 6: Gov. Tate Reeves inspired welfare payment targeted in civil suit, texts show
Before national news covered the welfare scandal, Mississippi Today exposed it first.
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This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
On this day in 1815
Jan. 8, 1815
A U.S. Army unit that included Black and Choctaw soldiers helped defeat the British in the Battle of New Orleans.
While peace negotiations to end the War of 1812 were underway, the British carried out a raid in hopes of capturing New Orleans. After the British captured a gunboat flotilla, Maj. Gen. Andrew Jackson put the city under martial law.
Despite being outnumbered, the U.S. Army force of about 2,000 (including a battalion of free Black men, mostly refugees from Santo Domingo, and up to 60 Choctaw Indians) defeated the British.
After the victory, Andrew Jackson honored these soldiers of color with a proclamation: “I invited you to share in the perils and to divide the glory of your white countrymen. I expected much from you, for I was not uninformed of those qualities which must render you so formidable to an invading foe. I knew that you could endure hunger and thirst and all the hardships of war. I knew that you loved the land of your nativity, and that, like ourselves, you had to defend all that is most dear to man – But you surpass my hopes. I have found in you, united to these qualities, that noble enthusiasm which impels to great deeds.”
Prior to the battle, Jackson had promised Black soldiers pay, acres of property and freedom to those who were enslaved. That inspired James Roberts to fight as hard as he could in the Battle of New Orleans.
“In hope of freedom,” he said, “we would run through a troop and leap over a wall.”
Although Roberts would lose a finger and suffer a serious wound to the head, the pledge proved hollow for him, just as it was in the Revolutionary War when he had been promised freedom and instead was separated from his wife and children and sold for $1,500.
The memoir he self-published in 1858 is once again available for sale.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
Photos: Lawmakers gavel in for 2025 Mississippi legislative session
The Mississippi Legislature returned to the State Capitol on Tuesday for the start of the legislative session in Jackson.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
Billionaire Tommy Duff forms Republican PAC as he weighs gubernatorial run
Billionaire Tommy Duff, as he considers a run for Mississippi governor in 2027, has formed a political action committee to help elect Republicans to city and legislative offices this year, likely to increase his influence as a political powerbroker.
Jordan Russell, a longtime Republican operative who has led several federal and state campaigns, is director of the PAC, which was formed in December.
Russell told Mississippi Today in a statement that Duff founded the PAC to support conservative candidates and advance policies that promote “opportunities, freedom, faith-based values and prosperity across Mississippi.”
“We are planning a significant investment in multiple races in our state to ensure strong, conservative leadership at every level of government,” Russell said.
Duff, a Hattiesburg resident and the co-wealthiest Mississippian along with his brother Jim, has been involved in state politics for decades, but mostly behind the scenes as a megadonor and philanthropist. He recently finished an eight-year stint on the state Institutions of Higher Learning Board, first appointed by former Gov. Phil Bryant.
READ MORE: Will a Mississippi billionaire run for governor in the poorest state?
He’s travelled around the state in recent months meeting with political and business leaders, potentially laying the groundwork for a gubernatorial run. Duff also appeared at last year’s Neshoba County Fair and made the rounds at the state’s premiere political gathering.
Duff and his brother turned a small, struggling company into Southern Tire Mart, the nation’s largest truck tire dealer and retread manufacturer. They created Duff Capitol Investors, the largest privately held business in Mississippi, with ownership in more than 20 companies, including KLLM Transport, TL Wallace Construction and Southern Insurance Group.
Duff has recently said he’s still weighing a run for governor, but his creation of a PAC that could garner support from many down-ticket Republicans would appear to be a concrete step in that direction. Duff’s entrance into a gubernatorial race would likely cause numerous potential candidates — particularly those who have looked to him for large campaign donations — to wave off.
While statewide elections are still two years away, municipal elections will take place this year and several special legislative races will happen as well.
Rep. Charles Young, Jr., a Democrat from Meridian, died on December 19, and Rep. Andy Stepp, a Republican from Bruce, died on December 5. Sen. Jenifer Branning, a Republican from Philadelphia, was sworn into office yesterday for a seat on the Mississippi Supreme Court. Special elections will take place later this year to fill these vacancies.
A federal three-judge panel also ruled last year that the Legislature must create new state Senate and House maps with Black-majority districts and conduct special elections in 2025 under those newly created districts.
The court ordered legislators to create a majority-Black Senate district in the DeSoto County area in north Mississippi and one in the Hattiesburg area in south Mississippi. The panel also ruled the state must create a majority-Black House district in the Chickasaw County area in northeast Mississippi.
However, the Legislature will also have to tweak many districts in the state to accommodate for the new Black-majority maps. State officials in court filings have argued that the redrawing would affect a quarter of the state’s 174 legislative districts.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
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