fbpx
Connect with us

Mississippi Today

Public Service Commission candidate’s residency challenged at GOP HQ

Published

on

Public Service Commission candidate's residency challenged at GOP HQ

The election qualification of Mandy Gunasekara, who filed to for public service commissioner in the northern district of Mississippi, is being challenged before the Republican Party.

A letter sent to Republican Party Chairman Frank Bordeaux by Hernando attorney Matthew Barton, who is a Republican candidate this year for district attorney in DeSoto County, says that Gunasekara has not met the legal requirement of being a citizen of Mississippi for “five years preceding the day of election.”

The letter reads, “Mrs. Gunasekara fails to qualify and should be because she does not meet the requirements.”

Advertisement

Gunasekara, former chief of staff of the Environmental Protection Agency in the Trump administration, is vying for the open PSC seat in the Republican primary against Rep. Chris Brown of Nettleton and Tanner Newman, a former staffer of U.S. Sen. Roger Wicker and now an administrator in the .

Incumbent PSC Commissioner Brandon Presley is running as a Democrat for governor this election cycle. No Democrat or third party candidate has qualified for the open seat, meaning the winner of the August Republican primary will hold the seat.

The executive committee of the state Republican Party has the authority to rule on election challenges, such as residency requirements.

In a statement to the Mississippi Today, Gunasekara, who now lives in Oxford, said she is qualified to vie for the PSC post.

Advertisement

“My heart, my home, and my have always been in Mississippi,” she said. “My time fighting for conservative values with is why I'm the most qualified candidate and the subject of these attacks. I conferred with Mississippi election experts, and I meet the requirements for PSC.”

In the letter to the state Republican Party, Barton documented where Gunasekara voted in the District of Columbia in 2018. She qualified to vote in Mississippi in January 2019.

She also owned a home in the District of Columbia and received a homestead exemption on her 2021 property taxes, the letter and public documents provided show.

The letter said the Office of Tax Revenue explains, “To qualify for the homestead deduction, you must be domiciled the District of Columbia and the property for which you are applying must be your principal residence.”

Advertisement

In addition, the letter points out that a mortgage document from 2020 said that Gunasekara “shall continue to occupy the property as borrower's principal residence for at least one year after the occupancy.”

The letter to the state Republican Party is dated Feb. 9. The state parties have a June 9 deadline to submit to the Secretary of State's office a list of qualified candidates for the August primary elections.

Spencer Ritchie, Gunasekara's lawyer, said, “Under clearly established Mississippi law, citizenship and residency are not synonymous. To the extent Mandy ever lost her Mississippi citizenship during her time working in D.C., which is debatable, she certainly regained it once she took several concrete steps in 2018 to abandon D.C. and once again make Mississippi her permanent home … The Mississippi Republican Party State Executive Committee is very familiar with these fundamental concepts in Mississippi election law, and we are confident in how they will resolve the matter.”

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Did you miss our previous article…
https://www.biloxinewsevents.com/?p=208151

Advertisement

Mississippi Today

On this day in 1964

Published

on

mississippitoday.org – Jerry Mitchell – 2024-05-02 07:00:00

May 2, 1964

Moore is holding a 1964 photograph of him and his younger brother, Charles, shortly before his brother was kidnapped and killed by Klansmen, along with Henry Hezekiah Dee. Credit: David Ridgen.

Henry Hezekiah Dee and Charles Eddie Moore, two 19-year-old Black Americans, were simply to get a ride back home. Instead, Klansmen abducted them, took them to the Homochitto National Forest, where they beat the pair and then drowned them in the Mississippi

When their bodies were found in an old part of the river, FBI agents initially thought they had found the bodies of three missing workers, James Chaney, Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner. 

Thanks to the work of Moore's brother, Thomas, and Canadian filmmaker David Ridgen, federal authorities reopened the case in 2005. Two years later, a federal jury convicted James Ford Seale. He received three sentences and died in prison. 

Advertisement

Ridgen did a on the case for the CBC , “Somebody Knows Something.”

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Continue Reading

Mississippi Today

Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann shuts down House Republican idea to let voters decide Medicaid expansion

Published

on

mississippitoday.org – Taylor Vance – 2024-05-01 20:01:39

After House Republicans asked Senate leaders to agree to a proposal that would place Medicaid expansion on November's statewide ballot, Senate leader Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann said the idea had no legs in his chamber and added that expansion talks were likely done for the year.

House Speaker Jason White, a Republican from West, announced the idea in a statement Wednesday night and pointed out it had become clear over the last few days that House and Senate Republicans were still far from agreement over the best way to expand Medicaid coverage.

The bill narrowly escaped on Wednesday afternoon until House Democrats forced a procedural vote that granted everyone more time to find compromise.

Advertisement

“This proved that a consensus has formed and we all share the same goal: to access to low-income ,” White said. “Creating a referendum for this issue is a clear direction forward. We hope that our colleagues in the Senate will take this opportunity to finally hear from the electorate once and for all.”

About an hour after White announced the referendum idea, Hosemann poured cold water on the idea with a statement of his own.

“We had some discussions with senators about the possibility of a non-binding referendum on the ballot and the idea was not well received,” Hosemann said. “We are disappointed in the outcome this year, but value the discussions which occurred this session — the first time this Legislature has seriously considered healthcare reform in our state.

“I remain committed to finding ways to increase access for working Mississippians who otherwise do not have the resources for a simple check-up or an extended hospital stay,” Hosemann continued. “A strong work requirement, with necessary exceptions, is a bottom line for many Senators. We look forward to continuing on access to healthcare in the future.”

Advertisement

READ MORE: Lawmakers buy one more day to reach Medicaid expansion compromise

The House's full proposal was not made available on Wednesday night, but White's statement said the proposed referendum would be two-fold: Voters would decide if they think Medicaid should be expanded to the working poor and if the program should include work requirements for recipients.  

House Democratic caucus leadership supported the House Republican effort, saying in a statement Wednesday night that if the language in the House's referendum is “very clear” and allows working Mississippians to get the “ care we know that they need,” then they would likely support the new proposal. 

“We are excited about the opportunity to finally give the people of this state a chance to voice what we know to be — that they want this, and they want it as quickly as possible,” read a statement from Reps. Robert Johnson and Daryl Porter, the House Democratic leaders.

Advertisement

The statewide ballot referendum idea was seen late Wednesday as a renewed chance for Republicans to find an expansion agreement — something that had become elusive during the first legislative session that expansion was earnestly considered.

At the heart of the Senate and House disagreement was a requirement that mandated Medicaid recipients work — a provision that the federal government had blocked in 13 other states.

House and Senate Republican negotiators earlier in the agreed to a deal that would expand Medicaid only if a strict work requirement was approved by the federal government. House Republicans, who had previously proposed an expansion program that would go into effect even without federal approval of a work requirement, caved late Monday and agreed to the Senate Republicans' demand to include the make-or-break work requirement provision.

But House Democrats, who had for weeks vowed to not support any expansion plan that included a work requirement, fulfilled that promise on Wednesday and threatened to vote against the Republican bill on the House floor. The Democrats' dug-in position against the bill would likely have killed the proposal, which needed a three-fifths majority vote to pass.

Advertisement

Rep. Bryant Clark, D-Ebenezer, said he was one of 29 Democrats who would not vote for the agreement as it stood on Wednesday. He said he was unsure whether he would support the issue going to a statewide referendum.

“I think we as a Legislature should do it — that's what people hired us to do,” Clark said. “I wouldn't be just totally opposed to that idea, but sometimes the devil is in the details. What would be put before the people? Would it be a clean expansion proposal, or something else? I am 85% sure the citizens of Mississippi would pass something that is a clean Medicaid expansion proposal.”

Note: This article will be updated.

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Mississippi Today

Lawmakers buy one more day to reach Medicaid expansion compromise

Published

on

mississippitoday.org – Geoff Pender, Bobby Harrison, Taylor Vance, Sophia Paffenroth and Adam Ganucheau – 2024-05-01 17:34:04

Facing a late Wednesday deadline, the House and Senate procedurally voted to give themselves at least one more day to deliberate a proposal that could make Mississippi the 41st state to expand under the Affordable Care Act.

House and Senate Republican negotiators earlier in the agreed to a deal that would expand Medicaid only if a strict work requirement for recipients was approved by the federal . House , who had previously proposed an expansion program that would go into effect even without federal approval of a work requirement, caved late Monday and agreed to the Senate Republicans' demand to include the make-or-break work requirement provision.

But House Democrats, who had for weeks vowed to not support any expansion plan that included a work requirement, fulfilled that promise on Wednesday and threatened to vote against the Republican bill on the House floor. The Democrats' dug-in position against the bill would likely have killed the proposal, which needed a three-fifths majority vote to pass.

Advertisement

With the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services under the Biden administration unlikely to approve Mississippi's Medicaid expansion plan with a work requirement, Senate Republican have expressed optimism that Donald Trump would be reelected and that he would approve Mississippi's plan.

However, the realpolitik is that Trump has loudly voiced his opposition to Medicaid expansion, and his approval of Mississippi's work requirement would usher expansion in for the Magnolia state over the wishes of a Republican governor (Tate Reeves) whom he supports. When he was president, the Trump administration approved Medicaid work requirements for some states, but only as a means of limiting participation where it had already been expanded, not to help a state implement expansion.

Waiting on approval from CMS under either Biden or Trump could keep Mississippi's expansion of coverage as it now stands in limbo indefinitely.

“We will vote for Medicaid expansion,” Rep. Robert Johnson III, the House minority leader, said after the recommittal on Wednesday. “This is not Medicaid expansion. At least we got a do-over.”

Advertisement

Johnson said that shy of going back to the original House position — or removing the work requirement the Senate demanded — House Democrats want to language that says the state would reapply for work requirements each year while expansion remains in limbo until such time as a work requirement is approved. He said the Democrats told the Republican leadership that they would agree to the work requirement, but not reapplying on an annual basis for the work requirement wavier. Instead, he said the state should apply once for the work requirement and if it is rejected by federal officials the should act to remove the requirement.

“We're not saying we are against the work requirement,” he said, adding House Democrats oppose it because it would keep Medicaid from being expanded,

Johnson added, “We're saying fine, we will try that once and show you it will not work, then we move on (removing the work requirement and expanding the program).”

When it was clear the House Democrats' dissension might kill the expansion program, House Republicans moved to recommit the bill to conference committee. The Senate Republicans followed suit a few minutes later, effectively extending the deadline for a final plan to be hammered out between House and Senate negotiators until 8 p.m. Thursday.

Advertisement

House and Senate Republican leaders declined to comment about what they may bring to the negotiations or what the next few hours may look like. House Democrats claimed a small victory and reiterated their desire to pass an expansion plan that would actually go into effect and provide health coverage to an estimated 200,000 Mississippians.

As of the recommittal spread quickly through the Capitol on Wednesday afternoon, many people floated the notion of placing a Medicaid expansion issue on a statewide ballot, where voters could mandate what they wanted lawmakers to do.

“I have heard about that, but it would confuse voters with a work requirement,” Johnson said, adding he would support placing Medicaid expansion without a work requirement on the ballot.

Rep. Bryant Clark, D-Ebenezer, said he was one of 29 Democrats who would not vote for the agreement as it stood on Wednesday. He said he is unsure whether he would support the issue going to a statewide referendum.

Advertisement

“I think we as a Legislature should do it — that's what people hired us to do,” Clark said. “I wouldn't be just totally opposed to that idea, but sometimes the devil is in the details. What would be put before the people? Would it be a clean expansion proposal, or something else? I am 85% sure the citizens of Mississippi would pass something that is a clean Medicaid expansion proposal.”

As the extraordinary politics played out on Wednesday, dozens of clergy and other citizens came to the Capitol to express their support of expansion. Many Capitol attendees specifically said they did not support the compromise plan that included the work requirement.

“There are people in Mississippi who are sick, hurting, in pain and broken,” said the Rev. Dawn Douglas Flowers, a minister at Parkway Hills United Methodist Church. “We have a way to enter into that brokenness and offer healing right away. I hope lawmakers can find a way to compromise and allow Medicaid expansion to happen now because what they've come up with is just a delay. The work requirement will not allow us to get help to people who need help . We can't just kick the can down the road any longer.”

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

News from the South

Trending