Divisive race ends with win for Republican Sen. Hyde-Smith
JACKSON, Miss. — Republican U.S. Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith returns to Washington as a solidly loyal supporter of President Donald Trump after he stumped for her in a divisive Mississippi runoff shaped by her video-recorded remark about “public hanging.”
Hyde-Smith on Tuesday defeated Democrat Mike Espy, a former congressman and former U.S. agriculture secretary who was trying to become the state’s first African-American senator since Reconstruction.
Hyde-Smith received about 54 per cent of the vote to Espy’s 46 per cent. She fared well in traditional Republican strongholds where Trump was strong in 2016, including Rankin County, a mostly white suburb of Jackson. Espy won by wide margins in majority-black counties in the rural Mississippi Delta and in majority-black Hinds County, which is the home to Jackson and has the largest population of any county in the state.
The election was rocked by the video, in which Hyde-Smith, who is white, said of a supporter, “If he invited me to a public hanging, I’d be on the front row.” A separate video showed her talking about “liberal folks” and making it “just a little more difficult” for them to vote.