Kuwait Times

Republican wins racially-charged US Senate runoff

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WASHINGTON: A Mississipp­i Republican who drew scorn for making racially insensitiv­e comments managed to hold her US Senate seat Tuesday in the final race of 2018, networks projected, avoiding what could have been an embarrassi­ng setback for President Donald Trump. Incumbent Senator Cindy Hyde-Smith was leading Democratic challenger Mike Espy, a former congressma­n, by 54.4 percent to 45.6 percent with 94 percent of precincts reporting, according to Fox News and NBC.

The runoff in the Republican stronghold between Hyde-Smith, who is white, and Espy, who is black, came under national scrutiny when unsettling remarks by the senator-who said she would attend a “public hanging” for a supporter-were widely interprete­d as alluding to Mississipp­i’s history of lynchings and other racist violence. Hyde-Smith’s victory preserves the 53-47 majority that Republican­s will hold in the Senate when the new Congress convenes in January, even as Democrats gained at least 39 seats in the House of Representa­tives, with one race still left to be called. It also allowed Trump to dodge a political bullet in the Deep South, which under normal circumstan­ces is reliable Republican territory.

“Congratula­tions to Senator Cindy HydeSmith on your big WIN in the Great State of Mississipp­i,” Trump tweeted. “We are all very proud of you!” Trump held a pair of 11th-hour campaign rallies in Mississipp­i to prop up HydeSmith’s campaign, which had nearly derailed due to her remarks that Espy and others criticized as racist and un-democratic. “Mr. President, thank you so much for all of your help,” Hyde-Smith said during a victory speech, stressing that the race was about preserving the “conservati­ve values” of the state. “Mississipp­ians know me and they know my heart, and thank you for

stepping up,” she added.

‘Not the end’ Hyde-Smith becomes the first woman elected to Congress from Mississipp­i. She was appointed to the Senate in April to replace Republican Thad Cochran, who stepped down for health reasons, and will now serve the remaining two years of his term. Democrats were hoping political lightning could strike twice within a year in the South, after Democrat Doug Jones scored a shock Senate upset last December in neighborin­g Alabama. It was not to be in Mississipp­i, a state politicall­y divided largely along racial lines, as voters cast ballots in the final Senate contest of the midterm elections and the final referendum on Trump in 2018. Espy sought to frame his defeat as a strong showing for a party seeking to make inroads ahead of 2020 elections in a state where racial tensions still run deep.

“Make no mistake-tonight is the beginning, not the end,” tweeted Espy, who once served as agricultur­e secretary under president Bill Clinton. “When this many people show up, stand up, and speak up, it is not a loss. It is a moment. It is a movement.” Hyde-Smith, a former state lawmaker, should have glided to victory. But she startled observers this month when she said she would be “on the front row” if one of her supporters “invited me to a public hanging.” Days later she was recorded telling a small group at a university that it would be “a great thing” to suppress votes of liberal students.

With Hyde-Smith facing a backlash, Trump told supporters in Biloxi that it was vital to preserve a strong Senate majority in order to defend policies like tax cuts and confirm judges “who will interpret the constituti­on exactly as written.” Democrats reclaiming the House will make it more difficult for Trump to push through his agenda. Experts said black Mississipp­ians would have needed to vote in significan­tly larger numbers than the white population for underdog Espy to win. He and Hyde-Smith entered a runoff because neither gained a majority in the November 6 election, which featured multiple candidates.— AFP

 ??  ?? MISSISSIPP­I: US Senator Cindy Hyde-Smith (R-MS) speaks during an election night event at The Westin Hotel in Jackson, Mississipp­i. — AFP
MISSISSIPP­I: US Senator Cindy Hyde-Smith (R-MS) speaks during an election night event at The Westin Hotel in Jackson, Mississipp­i. — AFP

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