The Commercial Appeal

Republican wins Senate runoff in Mississipp­i

- Deborah Barfield Berry USA TODAY

WASHINGTON – Republican Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith fended off a challenge from Democrat Mike Espy Tuesday in a closely watched Senate runoff election marked by racial tensions.

She becomes the first woman from Mississipp­i elected to Congress. The Associated Press called the race for Hyde-Smith just before 10:30 pm EST.

President Donald Trump, who campaigned for Hyde-Smith in Mississipp­i Monday, applauded Hyde-Smith on her victory.

“Congratula­tions to Senator Cindy Hyde-Smith on your big WIN in the Great State of Mississipp­i,” he tweeted late Tuesday. “We are all very proud of you!”

Hyde-Smith was appointed by Republican Gov. Phil Bryant to fill the seat of longtime GOP Sen. Thad Cochran, who retired in April because of failing health. Hyde-Smith, a former state agricultur­e commission­er and state senator, will complete the two years remaining of Cochran’s term.

The contest was the last Senate race of 2018 and will give Republican­s a 5347 advantage next session.

“You’ve handed me a victory. I’m not going to let you down,” Hyde-Smith told supporters in Jackson. “I am going to Washington, D.C., first thing in the morning.”

Hyde-Smith, 59, will be among a record number of women, mostly Democrats, elected to Congress this year and part of the record number of women – 24 – to serve in the Senate in the upcoming 116th session. Of those, 17 are Democrats and seven are Republican.

The new number tops the record of 23 women now serving in the Senate.

“Mississipp­i was one of the last two states to have never elected a woman to Congress,” said Debbie Walsh, director of the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University. “While Cindy Hyde-Smith got Mississipp­i out of that undistingu­ished club when she was appointed, there still had never been a woman elected, so this is another milestone for the state of Mississipp­i.”

Vermont is now the only state to have never elected a woman to Congress.

Despite the historic moment, much of the national attention on the Mississipp­i race in recent weeks has focused on Hyde-Smith’s controvers­ial “public hanging” remark that sparked an uproar in a state with a troubled history of discrimina­tion and lynching.

Espy, her opponent, is African-American.

Espy, who launched his long-shot campaign in March, traveled the country to get support and raise money for his campaign. Civil rights organizati­ons and Democratic groups ramped up getout-the-vote efforts in the state to rally supporters.

“This is not a loss. It’s a movement,” Espy told a crowd Tuesday in Jackson. “And this movement is not going to end.”

If Espy had won, he would have been the first African-American to represent Mississipp­i in the Senate since Reconstruc­tion.

The Mississipp­i Senate race should have been an easy GOP win in the rubyred state, but it took many twists and turns with Trump dropping in at the 11th hour to help Hyde-Smith’s faltering campaign.

“I don’t want to take my chances” of her losing, Trump said at one of two rallies for Hyde-Smith in Mississipp­i Monday.

It was unusual for Republican­s to have to battle for the seat. It’s been decades since a Democrat won a U.S. Senate seat in Mississipp­i.

Trump won the conservati­ve state in 2016 and five of the six members of the state’s congressio­nal delegation are Republican­s.

“It should have been a slam dunk,” said John Bruce, chair of the Political Science Department at the University of Mississipp­i. “We’re here because of the president and the national mood. And we’re here because Cindy Hyde-Smith has run a bad campaign. She has tripped over herself more than once.”

Hyde-Smith had come under fire for remarks considered racially insensitiv­e. In a video at a Nov. 2 event, Hyde-Smith said of a supporter, “If he invited me to a public hanging, I’d be on the front row.”

Mississipp­i has a history of lynching blacks. Hyde-Smith has since apologized “for anyone who was offended,” but blasted her opponents for trying to twist her comments.

Trump noted her apology and defended her saying Monday “her heart is good.”

Hyde-Smith, who has kept a low profile in her seven months in the Senate, has been an avid supporter of Trump and his policies. She voted for several measures backed by Trump, including the confirmati­on of Judge Brett Kavanaugh to the U.S. Supreme Court.

 ??  ?? Sen Cindy Hyde-Smith enters her election watch party at the Westin hotel in Jackson, Miss., Thursday night following the announceme­nt of her win. SARAH WARNOCK/CLARION LEDGER
Sen Cindy Hyde-Smith enters her election watch party at the Westin hotel in Jackson, Miss., Thursday night following the announceme­nt of her win. SARAH WARNOCK/CLARION LEDGER

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