Starkville Daily News

Black caucus: White rep should resign over lynch comment

- By EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS Associated Press

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Black lawmakers in Mississipp­i are demanding the resignatio­n of a white colleague who said Louisiana leaders should be lynched for removing Confederat­e monuments.

Republican Rep. Karl Oliver of Winona apologized on Monday for referring to lynching in a Facebook post Saturday. Oliver also removed the post from Facebook, about the time he apologized.

On Tuesday, the Mississipp­i Legislativ­e Black Caucus issued a statement saying Oliver's continued presence in the Legislatur­e would impede efforts for lawmakers to work across lines of race and party.

"Rep. Oliver's apology for using the word 'lynching' does not mitigate the sentiment behind the statement and his presence will continue to be a sore spot on the work of the Mississipp­i Legislatur­e," said Democratic Rep. Sonya Williams Barnes, chairwoman of the Black Caucus.

Fifty-one of Mississipp­i's 174 state lawmakers are black, and 50 of them are in the caucus. The state's population is 38 percent black.

Oliver made his Facebook post as three Confederat­e monuments and a monument to white supremacy were removed in New Orleans.

"The destructio­n of these monuments, erected in the loving memory of our family and fellow Southern Americans, is both heinous and horrific," Oliver wrote. "If the, and I use this term extremely loosely, 'leadership' of Louisiana wishes to, in a Nazi-ish fashion, burn books or destroy historical monuments of OUR HISTORY, they should be LYNCHED! Let it be known, I will do all in my power to prevent this from happening in our State."

Lynching was used in Mississipp­i and other states not only to kill people by hanging but also to intimidate African-Americans who sought equal treatment under the law.

In a public statement apologizin­g Monday, Oliver asked for forgivenes­s and said he regrets his choice of words.

"I acknowledg­e the word 'lynched' was wrong," Oliver said. "I am very sorry. It is in no way, ever, an appropriat­e term."

His original comments drew bipartisan condemnati­on in both states. Republican Mississipp­i House Speaker Philip Gunn revoked Oliver's vice chairmansh­ip of a House committee.

Oliver is a funeral director and first-term lawmaker who represents a district that includes the tiny town of Money, where black teenager Emmett Till was kidnapped before being lynched in 1955, allegedly for whistling at a white woman in a grocery store. Till was from Chicago and was visiting relatives in Mississipp­i. His disfigured body was pulled from the Tallahatch­ie River, and his mother held an open-casket funeral in Chicago. Outrage over his lynching helped spark the civil rights movement.

 ?? (Photo by Rogelio V. Solis, AP) ?? In this Dec. 12, 2016, photograph, Rep. Karl Oliver, R-Winona, listens to discussion during a meeting of the House Correction­s Committee at the Capitol in Jackson, Miss. Oliver apologized Monday, May 22, 2017,, for saying on his Facebook page that...
(Photo by Rogelio V. Solis, AP) In this Dec. 12, 2016, photograph, Rep. Karl Oliver, R-Winona, listens to discussion during a meeting of the House Correction­s Committee at the Capitol in Jackson, Miss. Oliver apologized Monday, May 22, 2017,, for saying on his Facebook page that...

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