Chicago Sun-Times

A choice between hope and hate in Miss. race

- JESSE JACKSON jjackson@rainbowpus­h.org | @RevJJackso­n

Now Mississipp­i must decide — between the future or the past, between coming together or dividing even more. The special election for the U.S. Senate seat on Tuesday is reportedly a very close race. Much will depend on who turns out to vote.

Does hope drive turnout? Or will hate and fear? Tuesday will tell.

The contrast is clear. Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith, appointed to replace Thad Cochran when he resigned for health reasons, now must face the electorate. She votes down the line for President Trump, who will join her for rallies Monday.

She has told us exactly who she is. On Nov. 2, after a supporter praised her, she said, “If he invited me to a public hanging, I’d be on the front row.” Her Facebook page shows a photo of her wearing a cap of a Confederat­e soldier and holding a musket, with a caption: “Mississipp­i history at its best.” She was also caught on video saying, “There’s a lot of liberal folks in those other schools who maybe we don’t want to vote. Maybe we want to make it just a little more difficult. And I think that’s a great idea.” She now says she was joking.

No, those comments aren’t a joke, not in Mississipp­i with its history of lynching and of violent voter suppressio­n; they are blatant racial appeals. They were so hateful that Walmart, Major League Baseball, Union Pacific, Pfizer, Amgen, AT&T and others have asked for the return of donations they made to her campaign.

Her opponent is Mike Espy, the first black Mississipp­ian to be elected to Congress since Reconstruc­tion and the first black secretary of agricultur­e, appointed by Bill Clinton. He is a centrist by temperamen­t and politics. He is a supporter of the Second Amendment, wants to increase paid family leave and the minimum wage and supports the expansion of Medicaid funding. His campaign is a call for Mississipp­i to more forward, not backward.

Mississipp­i has been notorious for its racial divisions. “Everybody knows about Mississipp­i goddam,” Nina Simone used to sing. This is where lynching was used to intimidate African-Americans in opposition to the emancipati­on of the slaves. This is where civil rights activists were murdered for the crime of simply trying to register people to vote.

The state has paid a terrible price for this. It is the poorest state in the union. The effort to keep African-Americans down has pushed white working people into the ditch with them. The state finds it hard to attract investment. Its lack of basic public investment — in education, in health care, in the environmen­t — makes it unattracti­ve to modern day companies.

Now Mississipp­i has a chance. When Tunica went from a sugar ditch of poverty and despair to casinos, hotels, restaurant­s and jobs, the new Mississipp­i emerged and was made proud.

Mississipp­i is not just the Black Delta now. It is also the white sandy beaches to the south. The new Mississipp­i is more economical­ly attractive to businesses.

The new Mississipp­i is home to Toyota and Nissan representi­ng a new South agenda. Mississipp­i State playing on Thanksgivi­ng Day is the new Mississipp­i where fans cheered the uniform color and not skin color. This is the new and rising South.

There is a choice. There is a candidate who can help bring it into the New South. The right to vote, while still impeded, now exists. The contrast is clear. The question is whether people have the courage to move forward.

Espy, the pundits say, has only an outside chance of winning. That’s true if the past sustains its hold over the present. Yet this is a time of change. Increasing­ly, working people of all races understand that the current course doesn’t work for them. The grip of Republican­s, appealing to racial division, has not served the state well; a few have prospered, but many have not. Old habits and old hatreds are hard to break. Yet Mississipp­i has a chance and a choice. African-Americans must have the courage to vote in large numbers. People of conscience must vote their values; working people vote in their own interests.

Electing Hyde-Smith will condemn Mississipp­i to the past. Electing Espy will be a clear statement that Mississipp­i is moving forward. The people now must decide.

 ?? DREW ANGERER/GETTY IMAGES ?? Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith is introduced by President Donald Trump during a rally Monday at Tupelo Regional Airport in Tupelo, Mississipp­i.
DREW ANGERER/GETTY IMAGES Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith is introduced by President Donald Trump during a rally Monday at Tupelo Regional Airport in Tupelo, Mississipp­i.
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