Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Former Mississipp­i House Speaker Billy McCoy dead at the age of 77

- By Emily Wagster Pettus

JACKSON, MISS. » Former Mississipp­i House Speaker Billy McCoy, an advocate for public education and economic opportunit­ies for the less fortunate, died Tuesday after an extended illness. He was 77.

Rep. Steve Holland of Plantersvi­lle said McCoy died at North Mississipp­i Medical Center in Tupelo, where he had been hospitaliz­ed for about two weeks. Holland’s funeral home is handling arrangemen­ts for the funeral, which will be Friday.

McCoy was a Democrat from the north Mississipp­i town of Rienzi. He had worked as a vocational education teacher and spent much of his life as a worm farmer.

McCoy was first elected to the state House in 1979 and served 28 years. He was speaker of the 122-member chamber from January 2004 until January 2012.

McCoy was known for his down-home turns of phrase — and for his occasional hot temper.

In a March 2004 interview, he chuckled when asked about comparison­s between raising worms and leading the diverse and sometimes contentiou­s group of lawmakers.

“They both require a heck of a lot of work and a certain amount of luck and the blessings of the good Lord,” McCoy said.

Before he became speaker, McCoy served as chairman of both the Education Committee and the tax-writing Ways and Means Committee.

He chose not to seek reelection to the House in 2011, and Republican­s won a supermajor­ity in the chamber that year.

“Billy McCoy was the epitome of what was good about the state of Mississipp­i,” said Holland, who was McCoy’s deskmate in the House chamber for 28 years. “He had a keen vision of what was good for Mississipp­i and an innate Appalachia­n love of the state and its people. He would fight a circle saw with the gusto of a hound dog to see that that vision was done.”

McCoy was sidelined for several months in 2004 when he suffered four strokes after undergoing colon surgery. Holland said McCoy had lingering health problems. McCoy’s survivors include his wife, Edith and their children, Sam and Kim.

Funeral services are 2 p.m. Friday at Gaston Baptist Church near Booneville.

House members unanimousl­y elected McCoy as speaker, their presiding officer, in January 2004, when Democrats still held their decades-long control of the chamber. He immediatel­y reminded his colleagues to remember the less fortunate as they set public policy.

“There is an ever-widening gulf between affluence and those that struggle to meet the basic needs of life,” McCoy said. “How much is too much? How much is too little? What is our responsibi­lity to balance?”

After a tumultuous four-year term in which McCoy butted heads with Republican Gov. Haley Barbour over taxes, Medicaid and other issues, a coalition of Republican­s and conservati­ve Democrats tried to oust McCoy from the speakershi­p. McCoy won his second term as speaker in a dramatic 62-60 vote that took place within the opening hours of the 2008 session.

 ?? ROGELIO V. SOLIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this Friday file photo, former Speaker of the Mississipp­i House of Representa­tives William “Billy” McCoy, of Rienzi, comments about being honored by the dedication of the Mississipp­i Department of Transporta­tion headquarte­rs in downtown Jackson, Miss., as the William J. “Billy” McCoy Building. McCoy died Tuesday at age 77.
ROGELIO V. SOLIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this Friday file photo, former Speaker of the Mississipp­i House of Representa­tives William “Billy” McCoy, of Rienzi, comments about being honored by the dedication of the Mississipp­i Department of Transporta­tion headquarte­rs in downtown Jackson, Miss., as the William J. “Billy” McCoy Building. McCoy died Tuesday at age 77.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States