The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Miss America terminates contracts with NJ, NY and FL

- By Wayne Parry

ATLANTIC CITY >> There they go. Miss America state groups in three more states have had their licenses revoked by the Miss America Organizati­on following a bitter, highstakes clash between state pageants and the national leadership headed by former Fox News host Gretchen Carlson.

The Miss America Organizati­on sent terminatio­n letters Friday to New Jersey, New York and Florida. The Associated Press obtained two of the letters, and confirmed with leaders of the third state that it, too, had been revoked.

So far, the parent organizati­on has sent terminatio­n letters to seven states, and leaders in an eighth state have resigned in protest.

The latest targets included the pageant’s current and traditiona­l home — New Jersey, whose Boardwalk Hall hosts it each year in Atlantic City — and the state that has produced four of the last six Miss Americas (New York), including the current Miss America, Nia Imani Franklin.

Earlier this year, the Miss America Organizati­on had moved against Georgia, West Virginia, Pennsylvan­ia and Tennessee, while Colorado’s leaders quit.

The letter to Florida cites “the State Organizati­on’s default under the Agreement,” but does not spell out what the violations were. The letter to New Jersey states that its agreement with the parent organizati­on is not being renewed.

States whose licenses are terminated can request an appeal hearing within 10 days from Miss America’s executive committee. After an appeal is heard, the Miss America Organizati­on has the right to seek a new licensee.

The Miss America Organizati­on declined to discuss the shakeup. “The revocation­s are subject to a confidenti­al appeal process and we are unable to comment on the status of the licensees or their leadership,” it said in a statement.

They would not say whether any of the targeted state leadership groups has been replaced.

The turmoil involves a revolt by dozens of states this summer against the national leadership of the pageant headed by Carlson.

State officials say their dissatisfa­ction stems not from this year’s eliminatio­n of swimsuits, but by the way Carlson and CEO Regina Hopper have run the organizati­on since taking over in January. Their biggest change was dropping the swimsuit competitio­n and focusing more on the contestant­s’ platforms and talents in an attempt to make the pageant more relevant.

But most state leadership groups chafed under the new national leaders, and even the outgoing Miss America, Cara Mund, released a remarkable letter in which she said she had been marginaliz­ed and bullied by top pageant leaders. An investigat­ion commission­ed by the Miss America Organizati­on found no evidence to back up that claim, but investigat­ors did not interview Mund for the report, which was issued on Sept. 10, the day after the 2018 pageant was held.

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 ?? AP FILE PHOTO/NOAH K. MURRAY ?? Beauty contestant­s react after Miss Arkansas Savvy Shield was named Miss America 2017, Sunday, Sept. 11, 2016, in Atlantic City, N.J.
AP FILE PHOTO/NOAH K. MURRAY Beauty contestant­s react after Miss Arkansas Savvy Shield was named Miss America 2017, Sunday, Sept. 11, 2016, in Atlantic City, N.J.

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