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Gov. Tate Reeves, with one tweet, digs up his controversial public education record

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Gov. Tate Reeves, with one tweet, digs up his controversial public education record

Note: This editorial anchored Mississippi Today's weekly legislative newsletter.Subscribe to our free newsletterfor exclusive access to legislative analysis and up-to-date information about what's happening under the Capitol dome.

Senate Republican shocked the on Feb. 28 when they announced their intention to fully fund Mississippi's public school formula for just the third time since 2003.

Just a few minutes before the Senate was set to vote on the proposal on March 7, Gov. Tate Reeves took to Twitter with an eyebrow-raising warning to lawmakers.

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“Be very cautious of a last minute change in formula that seems to have unanimous support amongst Democrats in Senate and liberal activist groups. Very very cautious,” Reeves tweeted, followed by his office sending his tweet to reporters as an official press statement. “Instead of funneling more money to the district offices — where our kids won't see it — why not another teacher pay raise? Put it in the classroom!”

A little more than an hour later, the supermajority in the Republican state Senate, apparently unfazed by their Republican leader's words, voted unanimously to do the exact opposite of what Reeves had warned. Every single Republican and Democrat in the Senate voted with virtually no debate to tweak the education funding formula and fully fund public schools.

The Senate plan, which would help local school districts cover basic costs such as supplies, building costs and, yes, teacher salaries, would require the state send an additional $181 million to the Mississippi Adequate Education Program per year. The proposal comes as Mississippi sits on a record revenue surplus of $3.9 , and more than $1 billion of that is recurring.

READ MORE: Bill to fully fund public education heads to House for consideration. Here's what the changes would mean.

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The politics of opposing full funding of public education during an election year are questionable at best. And even more problematic for Reeves is that his unprompted Twitter take dredged up his controversial record on one of the single biggest political issues of any campaign.

Reeves, at least on this issue, appears wildly out of step with Mississippi voters, including his Republican base. A new Siena College/Mississippi Today poll released today shows that a whopping 79% of Mississippians — including 73% of surveyed — believe lawmakers should fully fund public schools this session.

Democrat Brandon Presley, who is getting all sorts of statewide and national attention for his political upside against Reeves in the governor's race later this year, pounced immediately. As one longtime political operative put it in a text message later in the day: “I hear they're a Field Day in Nettleton today,” referencing Presley's hometown.

“I commend both Republicans and Democrats in the state Senate for coming together across party lines unanimously to better fund our schools,” Presley tweeted shortly after the Senate vote. “As usual, Tate Reeves is now attacking this bipartisan effort and playing politics once again. Tate Reeves has shown over and over he cares more about HIS political career than OUR . He won't . As governor, I will.”

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Reeves' tweet leads astute political observers to recall Reeves' many black eyes from his action (or inaction) on public education related issues. If you're interested in taking a stroll down memory lane, here are just a few of those moments:

  • In eight years as lieutenant governor, when he had deep influence over the state budget, Reeves raised teacher pay just two times — both during election years. And those pay raises were so marginal that education groups and teachers publicly panned them with descriptors like “a joke”; “insufficient”; “a slap in the face': “insulting”; and “another election-year-timed symbolic gesture.” His March 7 tweet suggested current lawmakers consider another teacher pay raise. Needless to say, that wasn't received too well.
  • The governor highlighted in his March 7 tweet that the Senate full funding effort was “last minute.” But no one, seemingly, has forgotten about perhaps the most notorious “last minute” leader in modern political history regarding education-related moves. When Reeves was lieutenant governor, he famously sneaked $2 million for private school vouchers into an unrelated appropriations bill in the 2019 election year, drawing the broad ire of every single public education group.
  • In 2017, Reeves and other legislative leaders tried and failed to rewrite the state's public education funding formula. A majority of Republican senators shot down Reeves' plan in broad daylight. Shortly after the Senate vote, Reeves went sour grapes and blamed reporters: “I know you're all smiling big today. You worked really hard to kill this, and you were very, very successful at doing so.” Reeves has rarely publicly discussed the failed rewrite effort since then, and he has neither tried nor proposed another rewrite effort.
  • In Reeves' last five years as lieutenant governor, the underfunded Mississippi Adequate Education Program by $1.06 billion, according to data compiled by The Parents' Campaign. Since 2008 under the same measures, MAEP has gone underfunded by $3.35 billion, including a worst-ever stretch from 2012-2020 — the eight years Reeves served as leader of the Senate.
  • From 2015-2019, his last four years as lieutenant governor, Mississippi's public education budgets were cut by $173.5 million ($102 million cut to Institutions of Higher Learning, $40 million cut to K-12 education, $32 million to community colleges).
  • Several teacher loan forgiveness programs in 2016 received budget cuts so extreme from the Reeves-led Legislature that they had to stop forgiving loans for teachers. “It really got me thinking, ‘Well, my state's not really on my side here,'” a north Mississippi teacher said.
  • And how soon we forget one of the biggest political blunders of modern politics. In 2019, late in his heated governor's race with Democratic Attorney General Jim Hood, Reeves released a TV ad touting his plan to raise public school teacher pay. There was just one problem: most of the ad was filmed inside a private school and several private school teachers. That private school, then a little-known entity, is now one of the most familiar schools in the state for all the wrong reasons. Reeves filmed the ad at New Summit School, owned by welfare and education fraudsters Nancy and Zach New, who were 2019 campaign donors of Reeves.

It remains unclear what Reeves thought he was doing March 7 with his social media warning to lawmakers and his effective trolling of the Senate's full funding proposal.

The Senate plan now moves to the House, where Republican leaders there have to decide whether to heed Reeves' warning. But legislative Democrats, like Presley, are already using the moment to apply pressure.

“This appropriation would be less than 5% of our nearly $4 billion surplus and he still doesn't want to spend it on Mississippi's public school students,” said Rep. Robert Johnson, the House Democratic leader. “If we're in the best financial shape in our state's history, as the governor so often likes to remind us, why should we have to choose? If he isn't interested in investing in public education now, will he ever be?”

Johnson continued: “If House Republicans and Tate Reeves think blocking $181 million from going into our public schools while they crow about a $4 billion surplus is a winning strategy going into an election year, then good luck to them.”

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But before too long, we'll get some clarity on how Reeves' questionable take — effectively, “I know we have more money than we've ever had, but let's actually not send additional funding to our consistently struggling public schools during this major election year” — will affect his effort to win one more term in the Governor's Mansion.

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

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Mississippi Today

 Belhaven man’s widow will decide what will be done with his remains, but independent autopsy will be done

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mississippitoday.org – Mina Corpuz – 2024-05-02 13:06:28

A chancery judge has removed the brother of Dau Mabil from a lawsuit filed against the man's widow that would have him to gain access to his brother's body for an independent autopsy. 

Judge Dewayne Thomas issued two orders Thursday morning several days after a hearing in a lawsuit between Bul Mabil and Karissa Bowley, along with investigators, about what will happen to Dau Mabil's remains. 

In the hearing and court filings, Bowley said she will allow an independent autopsy to be conducted. 

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“I do feel relief that this part of things is over and we can move on to what we were doing before, which is continue to dig for information,” she said Thursday after the judge's orders were released. 

On March 25, the 33-year-old Belhaven went on a walk in his usual area without his phone. He was seen on video surveillance on Jefferson Street between Fortification and High Street, and at one point went to the Trail in Belhaven Heights to check on corn he planted. 

About three weeks later, a fisherman spotted a body floating in the Pearl near Lawrence County, more than 50 miles away. By April 18, a preliminary autopsy revealed the body belonged to Mabil. The Lawrence County sheriff said there was no evidence of foul play.

In his order, Thomas imposed safeguards proposed by Bowley and the Department of Public Safety for the independent autopsy: It needs to be conducted after the state finishes its investigation and be conducted by someone who is a qualified pathologist with a certain medical degree and certification. 

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After the state finishes its investigation, official autopsy results shall be released only with consent of Bowley, as the surviving spouse and next of kin, according to the court order. 

Bowley is awaiting the report from the first autopsy to shed more light on what happened and whether anyone from the public knows anything or has any video from the day Mabil disappeared, including video Bul Mabil's attorney mentioned that supposedly shows people at the Museum Trail moving that appears to be a body into a truck around the time Mabil was at there. 

The Department of Public Safety will hold Mabil's remains for 30 days after the state finishes its death investigation so the independent autopsy can be done. 

Bul Mabil filed the lawsuit the night before his brother's body was identified because he believes it is the only way to know whether there was foul play in his brother's death. U.S. Rep. Bennie Thompson has asked the Justice Department to investigate.

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In a separate order, Thomas agreed that Bowley, as Mabil's surviving spouse, is Mabil's next of kin and the one who can direct what happens with his remains. 

He dismissed Bul Mabil as a plaintiff because he lacked standing in the matter. 

At a Tuesday hearing, his attorney, Lisa Ross, argued that he should be Dau Mabil's next of kin because his brother and Bowley had a strained relationship leading up to his disappearance. Ross said Mississippi has no existing case law that defines who is a surviving spouse, but referenced a New York case in which a wife separated from her husband was not allowed to cremate his body and interfere with the mother's request for an autopsy. 

He has also argued in court that he should remain in the case because he is the next of kin for Dau's child. 

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Ross could not be reached about whether she plans to appeal. 

The lawsuit has been renamed to reflect the new parties: Bowley v. Mississippi Department of Public Safety. 

Now that the judge has written the orders, Bowley said she feels relieved and has more to grieve her husband, including visiting places around the where they went together. 

One of those is the patch along the Museum Trail where Mabil planted corn. Bowley said she's returned there to the plants and see them grow. 

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“It's a nice place to be reminded of him along with many others,” she said.

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

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Mississippi Today

Senate Republican leaders appear receptive to Medicaid expansion proposal from Democratic leader

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mississippitoday.org – Adam Ganucheau – 2024-05-02 12:24:14

Following an apparent Republican of expansion negotiations late Wednesday night, the House Democratic leader walked onto the Senate floor Thursday to deliver a new proposal to Senate Republican leaders.

Rep. Robert Johnson III, the House Democratic leader whose caucus stalled a vote on an earlier Republican plan to expand Medicaid, offered an idea to Republican Senate Medicaid Chairman Kevin Blackwell Thursday morning — just hours before a final deadline that would end expansion negotiations altogether.

Johnson told Blackwell that he could promise more than 30 Democratic House “yea” votes if Senate Republicans could agree to a slight tweak of one provision in their expansion plan. The Democratic leader said his proposal seemed to be well met by Blackwell and later Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann, offering hope that expansion talks were not yet dead.

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“We are all closer on a final plan than I think they realized,” Johnson said shortly after talking with Blackwell and Hosemann. “We just wanted them to know we think there's a true path forward for compromise here and we can here this weekend with Medicaid expansion on the books. The Senate can have almost precisely what they wanted all along, and I believe there are more than enough votes in the House for it.”

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

Senate Republicans have long demanded that any expansion program include a stringent work requirement for Medicaid recipients — a provision the federal has shot down for the 13 other states. House Republicans and Democrats also wanted to pass a plan that included work requirement language, though their proposal was pragmatic with federal policy and would have an expansion program to go into effect even if the federal government did not allow it. 

Senate Republicans held firm against that idea, though, which led to the impasse that threatened to kill the entire negotiations late Wednesday night and into Thursday.

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But Johnson, aiming to revive the expansion negotiations ahead of a Thursday at 8 p.m. deadline, approached Blackwell on the Senate floor Thursday late morning and a few minutes later met with Hosemann inside the Senate chamber to propose a tweak to the original Senate bill.

The Senate, in its most recent plan, wanted the state to request a federal waiver to implement a work requirement every year until it was approved. With an understanding that the federal government was likely to not approve that waiver, Johnson asked the Senate Republicans on Thursday to mandate the state apply for the waiver just one year rather than every year indefinitely.

“We just want the to back and have a conversation next year if the federal government doesn't approve the work requirement. It's as simple as that,” Johnson said shortly after walking off the Senate floor. “He (Blackwell) said he didn't think that was necessarily a bad idea and that he'd take it to the lieutenant governor (Hosemann).”

Shortly after Johnson spoke with Blackwell and Hosemann, Hosemann told reporters he and his colleagues were willing to listen to any proposals, but as of Thursday at noon, “we haven't gotten anything on paper.” Hosemann would not commit to supporting Johnson's idea, but Johnson said Blackwell and Hosemann sounded receptive to the idea.

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“We'll look at anything between now and the deadline,” Hosemann said. “That's something we just heard and we'll it over. But we do think our original plan was a strong compromise, and it was unfortunate it wasn't accepted.”

Johnson said he would take the morning conversations to House Republican leaders, who have remained close with Johnson throughout the course of the Medicaid expansion negotiations.

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

It is exceedingly rare for any Democrat to be in a position of influence in the supermajority Republican Legislature. But Medicaid expansion plan requires a three-fifths vote for passage and likely will need a two-thirds majority vote to override an expected veto from Gov. Tate Reeves, who has long opposed expansion. Those vote thresholds place Democrats in a position of power with many Republicans still unwilling to Medicaid expansion.

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“There's been a lot of noise in this building, and I wish we could do everything we want to do,” Johnson said. “But the fact of the matter is that the vast majority of everyone here — Senate Republicans, House Republicans, Senate Democrats, House Democrats — want to help health coverage to a state that desperately needs it. We're close. We just have to keep talking.”

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

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Mississippi Today

On this day in 1964

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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. 

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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.

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