Skip to main content

User account menu

  • Log in
Shopping cart 0
Cart

Search

Search
Home The Winona Times

Domain menu for The Winona Times (main)

  • Home
    • Newsletter Email Sign Up
    • FAQ
    • Our Staff
    • About Us
    • Notifications
    • Monthly Website Statistics
    • Our Awards
    • Contact Us
    • Rack Locations
    • Wedding Policy
    • Privacy Policy
  • Post
    • Post Dashboard
    • Payment Settings
    • Leaderboard
  • Top Stories
  • Most Recent
  • Most Read
  • Local News
  • State
  • National
  • More News
  • Sports
  • E-Editions
  • Opinion
  • Obituaries
  • Social
  • Submit News
  • Schools
  • Comics
  • Games
  • Communities
  • Subscribe
  • Advertising
    • How to Advertise
    • Classifieds
    • Pay Bill
    • Ad Rates
    • Ad Staff
  • Archives
  • Home
    • Newsletter Email Sign Up
    • FAQ
    • Our Staff
    • About Us
    • Notifications
    • Monthly Website Statistics
    • Our Awards
    • Contact Us
    • Rack Locations
    • Wedding Policy
    • Privacy Policy
  • Post
    • Post Dashboard
    • Payment Settings
    • Leaderboard
  • Top Stories
  • Most Recent
  • Most Read
    • Most Read This Week
    • Most Read This Month
    • Most Read This Year
    • Most Read All Time
  • Local News
  • State
    • Other State Websites
    • Most Read Statewide
    • Most Recent State News
  • National
  • More News
    • Features
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyles
    • Crime
    • Politics
    • Associated Press
    • Press Releases
    • Public Notices
    • Submit News
    • Documents
    • Videos
  • Sports
    • Local Sports
    • State Sports
  • E-Editions
    • Newspaper E-Edition
    • Magazine E-Edition
    • Special Section E-Editions
  • Opinion
    • Columns
    • Editorials
    • Cartoons
    • Letters
    • Polls
    • Comments
    • My Two Cents
    • Submit Letter
    • Submit My Two Cents
  • Obituaries
    • Submit Obituary
  • Social
    • Weddings/Engagements
    • Anniversaries
    • Births
    • Submit Wedding
    • Submit Engagement
    • Submit Anniversary
    • Submit Birth
    • Submit School News
  • Submit News
    • Submit Obituary
    • Submit Wedding
    • Submit Engagement
    • Submit Birth
    • Submit Anniversary
    • Submit News
    • Submit School News
    • Submit Letter
  • Schools
  • Comics
  • Games
  • Communities
  • Subscribe
  • Advertising
    • How to Advertise
    • Classifieds
    • Pay Bill
    • Ad Rates
    • Ad Staff
  • Archives

Could Mississippi constitutional change pave the way for winning independents?

By Bobby Harrison - Mississippi Today , READ MORE > 1,964 Reads
On Mon, 02/22/2021 - 9:45 AM

When former Mississippi Supreme Court Chief Justice Bill Waller Jr. was weighing a run for governor in 2019, research was done on whether he could conduct a viable campaign as an independent.

Waller, of course, opted to run as a Republican and later lost a runoff election in the primary to then-Lt. Gov. Tate Reeves, who had a massive campaign war chest and was viewed as the heavy favorite.

At the time, Waller and others feared that an independent — even a former Supreme Court justice — would not be taken seriously in Mississippi, where there is not much history of viable third-party candidates. And perhaps more importantly, Waller would face a near impossible political task because of provisions in the Mississippi Constitution. Those provisions dictated that if no candidate in a statewide election garnered both a majority of the popular vote and a majority vote in the state’s 122 House districts, the House of Representatives would vote to decide the winner.

The thought was that even if Waller could be in the top two in an election that was thrown to the House, there was no way he could prevail, especially if the other candidate was the Republican Reeves. No doubt, as has been well documented, Reeves is far from popular with House members thanks in part to his time as lieutenant governor, where he presided over the Senate and was often at odds with House leaders. Still, members of the three-fifths Republican majority in the House would have faced tremendous pressure from party leadership to vote for their fellow Republican Reeves.

But things are different now. Elections can no longer go to the House after 75% of Mississippians voted in November to remove those provisions from the state Constitution. Now, if no candidate obtains a majority of the vote, there is a runoff for voters to decide between the top two vote-getters.

Would Waller have opted to run as an independent if that provision already had been removed before the 2019 election? Probably not. But it is interesting to look ahead to whether an independent could one day be a viable candidate in the current political environment.

Would Reeves have won in 2019 had Waller run as an independent? Probably. But it is not such a stretch to see a scenario where the outcome would have been in question in a three-way November general election with Republican Reeves, independent Waller and Democrat Jim Hood on the ballot.

It is safe to assume no candidate would have garnered a majority. Who would have won the runoff? We will never know for sure.

Perhaps someone in the future — a businessperson with no background in politics — could wage a successful third-party campaign.

After all, that there is at least one example of a third-party candidate impacting a Mississippi election. The constitutional provisions throwing statewide elections to the House applied only to the eight state offices — not the U.S. Senate posts. In 1978, Thad Cochran became the first Republican elected to statewide office in Mississippi since the 1800s when he won a U.S. Senate seat. Many believe Cochran, who served until 2018, won that historic election because Charles Evers, brother of Civil Rights icon Medgar Evers, ran as an independent and is generally believed to have siphoned the majority of his votes from Democrat Maurice Danton. Cochran won that election with 45% of the vote.

When Reeves was asked last year about the proposal to eliminate the provisions that had the potential of throwing statewide elections to the House, he responded in partisan terms.

“If this provision passes at this point, it is going to make it harder for Republicans to get elected,” the first-term governor said.

The governor did not talk about the need to remove the provision because it was placed in the 1890 Constitution as a safeguard to prevent African Americans, then a majority in Mississippi, from being elected to statewide office. He did not say the provision needed to be removed so that Mississippi could join the rest of the nation — with the exception of Vermont — by specifying the candidate with the most votes in the statewide races would be declared the winner. Instead, the governor spoke of the potential of the change hurting state Republicans and blamed Democrats in 1890 for originally putting the language in the Constitution.

Perhaps somewhere down the line, removing that provision does not help a Republican or a Democrat, but an independent.

There is growing talk from some national Republicans, who are not enamored with the leadership of former President Donald Trump or the prominent party leaders who support him, of forming a third party. A Gallup poll released last week found that a record 62% of Americans support forming a third party because the two major parties “do such a poor job representing the American people.”

-- Article credit to Bobby Harrison of Mississippi Today --

‹ PreviousNext ›

Most Recent - Winona Times

Jackson Councilman Kenneth Stokes leads protest across the street from gun show

As hundreds gathered at the Mississippi Trade Mart this weekend for an annual gun show, Jackson… READ MORE

Most Read News Article

  • Week
  • Month
  • Year
  • All Time

Mississippi Covid-19 Update : April 08, 2021

Listed below is the daily COVID-19 update for the state of Mississippi.   New cases of COVID-19:… READ MORE

Town discusses Master Street Plan
Candidate drops out of race
Secretary of State Watson faces criticism for saying ‘woke, uninformed’ college students shouldn’t vote
“Connect me to Ruleville”: NSMC telemedicine pilot becomes model for national COVID response
In a season of baseball excellence, we should recall the ‘Willie Ball’

Mississippi increases monthly welfare check for first time since 1999

Mississippi’s relatively small number of families receiving federal Temporary Assistance for Needy… READ MORE

Carrollton water customers reminded of boil water alert
Vaccine-resistant COVID-19 strain detected in Mississippi
More than $51 million separates legislative chambers on K-12 education appropriation bill
MDOT employee severly injured in accident
Wicker, Hyde-Smith Cosponsor Legislation to Honor Emmett Till’s Legacy

Needy families get July 4th holiday boost

For some families in the Carroll and Montgomery area, the Fourth of July holiday just became a… READ MORE

Favorite dips to enjoy for summer
Recipe even better the next day
Charges against Curtis Flowers dismissed
Two killed in I-55 crash
4-H hosts first-ever Virtual State Congress

“Hill Fire: Knee Deep” based on the stories of the late Arnold Dyre

This weekend, the Montgomery County Arts Council will present a special play inspired by the life… READ MORE

Stars to face St. Joseph in first round
Carpenter wins runoff, Daniels new constable
Orvlie Hunt
Four injured in Carroll plane crash
Black Hawk resident meets Austrian pen pal for the first time

edition-button

Sign Up for Notifications of Local Breaking News

Start E-mail NotificationsStop E-mail NotificationsStart Mobile NotificationsStop Mobile Notifications

Social - WT

State Auditor, AG investigating Centene on allegations it pocketed millions in taxpayer dollars

Both the state auditor and Mississippi attorney general are investigating whether Centene Corp., as… READ MORE

U.S. Supreme Court denies Fitch motion to halt education lawsuit over Jim Crow-era language
Charter school must improve to continue operating, board says
New Summit School operators allegedly fleeced the Mississippi Department of Education out of more than $2 million from 2017 to 2020 using a program that serves hospitalized children. They had been charging the program for over a decade.
How public education fared during the 2021 legislative session
MDE: Legislature Passes Teacher Pay Raise, Increases Funds for State Board of Education Priorities

Obituaries

Henry Franklin “Buddy” Blount, Jr.

Henry Franklin “Buddy” Blount, Jr., 74, and a lifelong resident o

Kathrine 'Kay' Heath Steed
Susie Kuykendall McElroy
Lora Ann McCuiston
Lester Bell, Jr.
Tannie Dixon, Jr.

SPORTS

Brian Dozier will be at home on Opening Day and loves it

Major League Baseball’s opening day is set for Thursday. All 30 big league teams will play, but for… READ MORE

Brian Dozier will be at home on Opening Day and loves it
In a season of baseball excellence, we should recall the ‘Willie Ball’
Stars split district games
Tiger tennis wins district
Jaguars rout Bulldogs 27-0

Cartoon Button

  

Comic Button

COMPANY COMMUNITY ADVERTISE E-EDITIONS MORE NEWS
Contact Community Calendar Subscribe Newspaper Archive Cartoons
FAQ/Help Obituaries Ad Rates Newspaper E-Edition Columns
Our History Engagements/Weddings Ad Staff Special Section Editorials
Our Staff Most Read My Account   Politics
Statewide Most Recent Rack Locations    

Click on the city name to visit its website.

ACKERMAN  •  CARROLLTON  •  CHARLESTON  •  CLARKSDALE  •  COLUMBIA  •  DUMAS(Ark.)  •  EUPORA  •  FOREST  • 

FRANKLINTON(La.)  • GREENVILLE  •  GREENWOOD  •  GRENADA  •  HATTIESBURG  •  JACKSON  •  KOSCIUSKO  •  INDIANOLA  • 

LOUISVILLE  • MAGEE  • MENDENHALL  •  McCOMB  •  NEWTON  •  PETAL  •  QUITMAN  •  SENATOBIA  •  TALLULAH(La.)  •  WINONA  •  YAZOO CITY


Copyright 2020 - Montgomery Publishing | Privacy Statement | Help | Terms of Service

Montgomery Publishing - 401 Summit St. Winona, MS 38967 - (662)-283-1131

Emmerich Newspapers proud to serve your local communities.

Thank you for visiting our website.