The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Few lines at polls in Senate runoff election

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Voting was swift and easy in many precincts on Tuesday as Mississipp­i residents were deciding the last U.S. Senate race of the midterms, choosing between a white Republican Senate appointee backed by President Donald Trump and a black Democrat who was agricultur­e secretary when Bill Clinton was in the White House.

History will be made either way: Republican Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith, 59, would be the first woman ever elected to Congress from Mississipp­i, and Democrat Mike Espy, 64, would be the state’s first AfricanAme­rican U.S. senator since Reconstruc­tion.

A spokeswoma­n for the secretary of state’s office, Leah Rupp Smith, said observers from the office were seeing “steady but slow” turnout around the state, with few lines.

Espy cast his ballot at a Baptist church in the Jackson suburb of Ridgeland, while Hyde-Smith voted at a volunteer fire department in Brookhaven, about 55 miles south of Jackson.

Mississipp­i’s past of racist violence became a dominant theme after a video showed Hyde-Smith praising a supporter in early November by saying, “If he invited me to a public hanging, I’d be on the front row.” She said it was “an exaggerate­d expression of regard.” More than a week after the video’s release, she said she apologized to “anyone that was offended by my comments,” but also said the remark was used as a “weapon” against her.

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