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Mississippi Today

Vote Tuesday: Candidates battle for seats on state’s highest courts

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mississippitoday.org – Taylor Vance – 2024-10-31 04:09:00

When Mississippi voters head to the polls Tuesday to decide who should become the country’s next president, a large swath of voters will also participate in a battle for seats on the state’s highest court. 

Incumbent Justice Jim Kitchens, the second-most senior judge on the Mississippi Supreme Court, is facing a challenge from four opponents, most notably Republican state Sen. Jenifer Branning of Neshoba County. 

In the five-person race for the Central District, which covers part of the Delta and the state’s capital Metro Area, the Republican Party has thrown its infrastructure and money behind Branning, a self-described “constitutional conservative.” There are three other challengers: Ceola James, a former Court of Appeals judge, and Byron Carter and Abby Gale Robinson, both private-practice attorneys.

Kitchens, first elected to the court in 2008, is a former district attorney and private practice attorney. On the campaign trail, he has often touted his experience as an attorney and judge, particularly his time prosecuting criminals and his rulings on criminal cases. 

“It’s one thing to talk about being tough on crime and another to sign your name at the bottom of a death warrant,” Kitchens said at the Neshoba County Fair. “You heard me right — a death warrant. I’ve done that, too, and I’m the only candidate who’s done that.” 

Kitchens has raised over $288,000 and spent around $189,000 of that money, leaving him with roughly $98,000 in cash on hand. Most of his campaign donations have come from trial attorneys around the state. 

Kitchens is one of two centrist members of the high court and is widely viewed as the preferred candidate of Democratic elected officials, though the Democratic Party has not endorsed his candidacy. Not only are GOP forces working to oust one of the dwindling number of centrist jurists on the high court, they appreciate Kitchens is next in line to lead the court as chief justice should current Chief Justice Mike Randolph step down.

Branning, a private practice attorney, was first elected to the Legislature in 2015. She has led the Senate Elections Committee and the Senate Transportation Committee. During her time at the Capitol, she’s voted against changing the state flag to remove the Confederate battle emblem, voted against expanding Medicaid to the working poor and supported mandatory and increased minimum sentences for crime.

While campaigning for the judicial seat, she has pledged to ensure that “conservative values” are always represented in the judiciary, but she has stopped short of endorsing policy positions. 

“The bottom line is this: We can elect conservatives to our executive and legislative branches,” Branning said at the Neshoba County Fair this summer. “But if we elect liberal, activist judges to our judicial branch, they will undermine the will of the voters and undo the conservative policies that are helping our state grow.” 

Branning has raised over $666,000 and spent roughly $312,000, leaving her with around $354,000 in cash on hand. Several special interest groups and trade associations have donated to her campaign, but the donations have been supercharged by a $250,000 personal loan she gave her campaign. 

Branning and Kitchens have spent thousands of dollars on TV ads in recent weeks, blitzing the airwaves before the election.

One of Kitchens’ ads is a play on his name and similar to ads he’s aired in past elections. His wife, in the commercial, maintains he needs to be on the high court to keep him out of her kitchen.

One of Branning’s ads contains footage of a violent riot (not in Mississippi) with a narrator claiming “radical judges are overturning laws, threatening our safety and putting our freedom at risk.”

“As a constitutional conservative, I will always follow the law, and I will never legislate from the bench,” Branning says in the ad. “That means I will call balls and strikes instead of writing the rules of the game.” 

Judicial races in Mississippi are supposed to be nonpartisan, and candidates have some restrictions on what they can say on the campaign trail. But these elections are essentially nonpartisan in name only. During a recent hearing over how Supreme Court justices are elected, an attorney with Attorney General Lynn Fitch’s office even said partisan politics plays a large role in the elections. 

The Southern Poverty Law Center, an advocacy group specializing in civil rights litigation, has endorsed Kitchens’ bid for reelection, while the state GOP has endorsed Branning’s campaign. 

Southern Supreme Court Seat 

David Sullivan is also challenging incumbent Justice Dawn Beam for her seat in the Southern District, which includes Hattiesburg and the Gulf Coast area. 

Sullivan is a public defender in Harrison, Stone and Pearl River Counties and has been a municipal judge in D’Iberville since 2019. A Gulfport resident, Sullivan comes from a family of attorneys and judges. His father, Michael D. Sullivan, also served as a Supreme Court justice. 

Beam joined the state Supreme Court in 2016 after former Gov. Phil Bryant appointed her to the bench to fill the seat left vacant by former Justice Randy Pierce. She was later elected to a full eight-year term and is now running for her second term. She is the only woman on the court.

Before joining the state’s highest court, Beam served as a chancery court judge. Throughout her career, she has focused on improving child welfare in the court system.  

Open Court of Appeals seat 

Three candidates – Ian Baker, Jennifer Schloegel and Amy Lassiter St. Pe –  are competing for the open seat on the Mississippi Court of Appeals. The seat, concentrated in South Mississippi, opened up when Judge Joel Smith decided not to seek reelection. 

Baker is an assistant district attorney for Harrison, Hancock and Stone counties. Schloegel is a Chancery Court judge in Harrison, Hancock and Stone counties. St. Pé is an attorney in private practice, a municipal court judge in Gautier, and a city attorney for Moss Point. 

The state Supreme Court often has the final say in cases involving criminal, civil and death penalty appeals, questions on the state’s laws and its constitution, and legal issues of public interest. To prevent a backlog of cases, the Supreme Court assigns cases for the Court of Appeals to consider.

The top two courts in recent years have had the final say over legislation to create a support court system within the city of Jackson, struck down Mississippi’s ballot initiative process and ruled on whether the Legislature can appropriate public tax dollars to private schools. 

Absentee voting is currently ongoing, and in-person absentee voting ends at noon on November 2. Voters can cast in-person ballots for judicial races on November 5 from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. 

With more than two candidates competing in the Central District Supreme Court seat and the Court of Appeals race, a runoff election would take place on Nov. 26 if no single candidate in the two races receives a majority of the votes cast.

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

Mississippi Today

On this day in 1967

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mississippitoday.org – Jerry Mitchell – 2025-01-09 07:00:00

Jan. 9, 1967 

Julian Bond with John Lewis, congressman from Georgia, at the Civil Rights Summit at the LBJ Presidential Library in 2014. Credit: Photo by Lauren Gerson/Wikipedia

Civil rights leader Julian Bond was finally seated in the Georgia House. 

He had helped found the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee while a student at Morehouse College along with future Congressman John Lewis. The pair helped institute nonviolence as a deep principle throughout all of the SNCC protests and actions. 

Following Bond’s election in 1965, the Georgia House refused to seat him after he had criticized U.S. involvement in Vietnam. In 1966, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled unanimously that the Georgia House was required to seat him. 

“The truth may hurt,” he said, “but it’s the truth.” 

He went on to serve two decades in the Georgia Legislature and even hosted “Saturday Night Live.” In 1971, he became president of the just-formed Southern Poverty Law Center and later served a dozen years as chairman of the national NAACP. 

“The civil rights movement didn’t begin in Montgomery, and it didn’t end in the 1960s,” he said. “It continues on to this very minute.” 

Over two decades at the University of Virginia, he taught more than 5,000 students and led alumni on civil rights journeys to the South. In 2015, he died from complications of vascular disease.

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

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Mississippi Today

‘Fragile and unequipped’: Disproportionate number of Mississippi mothers died preventable deaths during COVID

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mississippitoday.org – Sophia Paffenroth – 2025-01-08 13:19:00

Mississippi women died of pregnancy complications at nearly twice the national rate during the COVID-19 pandemic, new data shows. The vast majority of those deaths were preventable, according to the latest Mississippi Maternal Mortality Report

Between 2017 and 2021, 202 women who were either pregnant or up to one-year postpartum died. Seventy-seven of those deaths were directly related to pregnancy. 

Black women were five times more likely to die from a condition or circumstance related to pregnancy, the report found. 

“Unfortunately, COVID unmasked and exacerbated an already prevalent problem here in Mississippi,” said Lauren Jones, co-founder of Mom.ME and a member of the  Maternal Mortality Review Committee members who contributed to the report. 

The federally mandated committee, made up of physicians, advocates, social workers and others, is tasked with reviewing all pregnancy and postpartum-related deaths to determine the circumstances that caused them and whether they were preventable. The committee makes recommendations based on what members learn from reviewing the data. 

The committee’s first recommendation to reduce these deaths is for the state to expand Medicaid as 40 other states have done.

“The report sheds light on exactly how fragile and unequipped we are to handle what is considered routine maternal care without adding a national health crisis to an already fractured system,” Jones said.

Study authors found that had COVID-19 not happened, it’s “highly likely” that the five-year pregnancy-related mortality rate would have gone down. Instead, it averaged 42.4 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births, peaking at 62.6 in 2021 – compared to a U.S. average of 33.2 the same year at the height of the pandemic. COVID-19 was a leading cause of these deaths, second to cardiovascular conditions. 

Nearly half of the women who died because of a pregnancy complication or cause in this time period never received a high school diploma. And nearly three-quarters of them were on Medicaid. 

The pregnancy-related mortality rate was highest in the Delta.

A vast majority – 83% – of pregnancy-related deaths were deemed preventable. Committee members made several recommendations, including expanding Medicaid, training all health care providers on blood pressure monitoring, cultural sensitivity and screening for mental health issues. 

“I want to acknowledge the Mississippi women who lost their lives in 2017-2021 while pregnant or within a year of pregnancy,” State Health Officer Dr. Daniel Edney said in a statement published in the report. “I extend my heartfelt condolences to their surviving loved ones, and am optimistic that once we know better, we will do better.”

This report comes at the heels of the 2022 Infant Mortality Report, which showed that Mississippi continues to lead the nation in the number of infants who die before their first birthday. However, the number of infant deaths attributed to Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, or SIDS, decreased by 64% between 2021 and 2022. 

Edney also commended the Maternal Mortality Review Committee members who he said “tirelessly leave no question unasked and no stone unturned in exploring what happened and how these deaths might have been prevented.”

In 2024, the committee met six times to review 54 maternal deaths from 2021. 

“No one wants to serve on a committee that is only established to review death. It’s mentally and emotionally hard, but as members we do it not only to lend our personal expertise in determinations but to be a voice for those lost in hopes of sparking necessary change for better outcomes,” Jones said. 

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

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Crooked Letter Sports Podcast

Podcast: Putting a wrap on the Saints and Rebels, and lots more

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mississippitoday.org – Rick Cleveland and Tyler Cleveland – 2025-01-08 12:00:00

Following a holiday break, the Clevelands put a lid on the Ole Miss and New Orleans Saints football seasons. Also in the discussion are Southern Miss’s 25-player haul in the transfer portal, including 16 from Marshall. Rick also gives his memories of Magnolia State football heroes Jerald Baylis and Dontae Walker.

Stream all episodes here.


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

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