Orlando Sentinel

Walmart asks senator for refund

Walmart is asking for a return of a campaign contributi­on after Mississipp­i senator’s “hanging” remark.

- By Emily Wagster Pettus

JACKSON, Miss. — Walmart is asking U.S. Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith to return a recent campaign contributi­on because of comments by the Mississipp­i Republican that dredged up strong emotions about the state’s history of racial violence.

Hyde-Smith’s campaign did not respond to questions whether it would refund the $2,000 contributi­on from the nation’s largest retailer.

The rebuke from Walmart came before Hyde-Smith appeared Tuesday night for her only debate against Democrat Mike Espy, a former congressma­n and former U.S. agricultur­e secretary who is seeking to become the state’s first AfricanAme­rican senator since Reconstruc­tion.

Walmart spokeswoma­n LeMia Jenkins said Tuesday that the company donated to Hyde-Smith Nov. 8. That was two days after Hyde-Smith and Espy advanced from a field of four candidates to go to a Nov. 27 special election runoff, but three days before release of the video showing Hyde-Smith praising a supporter at a campaign event by saying: “If he invited me to a public hanging, I’d be on the front row.”

“Sen. Hyde-Smith’s recent comments clearly do not reflect the values of our company and associates,” Jenkins said in a statement.

This matchup, the last major race of 2018 midterms, has drawn scrutiny after Hyde-Smith’s remarks.

President Donald Trump reiterated his support for Hyde-Smith on Monday ahead of a campaign visit to Mississipp­i next week. Meanwhile, former Vice President Joe Biden endorsed Espy, a former congressma­n and U.S. agricultur­e secretary who is seeking to become Mississipp­i’s first AfricanAme­rican senator since Reconstruc­tion.

Hyde-Smith was appointed to the Senate to temporaril­y succeed longtime Sen. Thad Cochran, who retired in April amid health concerns. She is the first woman to represent Mississipp­i in Congress.

Hyde-Smith and Espy each received about 41 percent of the vote when four candidates were on the ballot Nov. 6. If she wins the Nov. 27 runoff, Hyde-Smith would give Republican­s a 53-47 majority in the U.S. Senate.

Mississipp­i hasn’t elected a Democrat to the U.S. Senate since 1982, and Republican­s hold all but one statewide office.

The contest has intensifie­d since the publisher of a liberal-leaning news site posted a video clip Nov. 11 on social media, showing Hyde-Smith praising a cattle rancher at a Nov. 2 campaign event with the public hanging comment.

The same Louisianab­ased publisher, Lamar White Jr. of The Bayou Brief, posted another video clip Nov. 15, showing HydeSmith at a Nov. 3 event in Starkville talking about “liberal folks” and making it “just a little more difficult” for them to vote.

In a statement, HydeSmith called the hanging expression an “exaggerate­d expression of regard” and said it is “ridiculous” to read any negative connotatio­n into it. She repeatedly refused to answer questions about it during a news conference in Jackson, but the issue is sure to come up at the debate. Her campaign has said she was joking about hurdles to voting.

In a state with a history of lynchings and violent suppressio­n of black voting rights, critics denounced her remarks as ignorant at best and racist at worst.

Bishop Ronnie Crudup, senior pastor of predominan­tly black New Horizon Church Internatio­nal in Jackson, said Hyde-Smith’s hanging remark was “highly offensive.”

“That statement has historical context to it, and it shows that she doesn’t really know black people,” said Crudup, who is supporting Espy. “This is something that has everybody in an uproar because, in 2018, you want to think that we’re beyond this. And probably for most of my folks, too, what makes it worse is not to apologize about it.”

Merle Flowers, a former colleague of Hyde-Smith’s in the Mississipp­i Senate, said she is being unfairly criticized for the “public hanging” comment.

“She’s a fine Christian woman and she meant no ill will in what she said,” Flowers said.

Hyde-Smith served 12 years as a Democratic state lawmaker before switching to the Republican Party in late 2010 and winning statewide races as agricultur­e commission­er in 2011 and 2015.

“I’ve never heard Cindy Hyde-Smith say anything derogatory,” Flowers said. “Black or white or Mexican or Chinese — I’ve never heard her say a derogatory word about anyone.”

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