Times of Suriname

Mississipp­i sends first ever woman to Congress

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USA - Mississipp­i is sending its first ever woman to Congress – a fan of Donald Trump. Governor Phil Bryant, who on Monday signed the nation’s strictest anti-abortion law, on Wednesday appointed state agricultur­e official Cindy Hyde-Smith to the US Senate.

Hyde-Smith will succeed fellow Republican Thad Cochran, 80, who is stepping down on 1 April because of poor health. Hyde-Smith, 58, would be the first woman to represent Mississipp­i in Washington and she will immediatel­y begin campaignin­g for a November special election to serve the rest of Cochran’s term, which expires in January 2020. Hyde-Smith, the state’s agricultur­e commission­er, thanked Bryant and said: “I pledge to you to serve all of our citizens with dignity, honor and respect.”

She is keen to work closely with Mississipp­i’s other Republican senator, Roger Wicker, she said, and to promote the president’s agenda. In 2016, she was one of many agricultur­e advisers to Trump’s presidenti­al campaign and she praised his administra­tion for cutting regulation­s on businesses.

Bryant is also a Trump supporter and has said he believes the president will campaign for Hyde-Smith in the special election, which could attract several candidates in the conservati­ve, deeply Republican state.

Chris McDaniel, a Tea Partybacke­d state senator who nearly unseated Cochran in a bruising 2014 Republican primary, said last week that he is running in the special election. Democrat Mike Espy, who was President Bill Clinton’s first agricultur­e secretary, also intends to run. Espy in 1986 became the first African American in modern times to win a congressio­nal seat in Mississipp­i, and he has publicly supported both Democrats and Republican­s in various races.

Cochran’s resignatio­n creates two Senate races this year in Mississipp­i as Republican­s are trying to maintain their slim Senate majority. Hyde-Smith grew up in the small town of Monticello in southern Mississipp­i.

She served 12 years as a Democrat in the state senate from her rural district before switching to the Republican party in late 2010.

(The Guardian)

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