Starkville Daily News

ANALYSIS

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“When you swore in all of these witnesses, the last thing you said to them in your instructio­ns was, ‘So help you God,’” Hyde-smith said. “In God’s word in Exodus 20:18, it says, ‘Remember the Sabbath and keep it holy.’”

Hyde-smith was inaugurate­d for her current term on the first Sunday of this year.

She has engaged in other political activities on Sundays. Her campaign issued a news release on Wednesday, Oct. 17, 2018, saying that Hydesmith would go on a bus tour to meet voters: “On Sunday, the tour will stop for a reception at 4:30 p.m. at St. Catherine’s Village in Madison.”

On Sunday, Nov. 11, 2018, Hydesmith issued a statement responding to a video clip that showed her praising a supporter by saying: “If he invited me to a public hanging, I’d be on the front row.” The timing of this skirmish was not her choice: The clip was posted to social media that day by Lamar White Jr., publisher of a Louisiana-based

blog, The Bayou Brief.

Hyde-smith said in a news release that Sunday: “In a comment on Nov. 2, I referred to accepting an invitation to a speaking engagement. In referencin­g the one who invited me, I used an exaggerate­d expression of regard, and any attempt to turn this into a negative connotatio­n is ridiculous.”

Hyde-smith is white, and critics said her “public hanging” remark showed callous disregard of the history of the lynching of Black people in Mississipp­i. She was in a 2018 special election runoff against Democrat Mike Espy, who is Black. Espy is a former congressma­n and former U.S. agricultur­e secretary. He repeatedly criticized Hyde-smith for the hanging remark, including during a 2020 rematch that she also won.

Ben Jealous, current president of People for the American Way and a former national president of the NAACP, is among those who responded to Hyde-smith’s comments about Sunday politickin­g.

“I know and love Mississipp­i — I’ve lived and worked there,” Jealous wrote on Twitter. “The role that Black churches play in the state, including in encouragin­g civic engagement, is deeply inspiring. She knows exactly who she is targeting when she criticizes Sunday voting. Black voters will remember.”

Joyce White Vance, a University of Alabama law professor and former U.S. attorney for northern Alabama, tweeted: “Mississipp­i Sen Hyde-smith objects to Sunday voting because it violates her religious beliefs. Does that mean the country can’t vote on Saturday because of Jewish beliefs? Or at times like Friday afternoon that conflict with Muslim prayer? She needs to read the 1st Amendment.”

Regardless of any criticism about her remarks, Hyde-smith said she remains opposed to the Democrats’ proposed election changes.

“The legislatio­n before us today would nullify Mississipp­i’s successful voter ID law,” she said in a statement. “Under S.1, in a federal election, an individual could walk into a polling place, register and vote on the spot, without ever showing any proof of identity or residency. I am totally against this and will fight it every day. We need to have confidence that our vote counts and that there’s one person for one vote.”

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