SERVING SOUTHERN MISSISSIPPI SINCE 1927 • WWW.STUDENTPRINTZ.COM • FEBRUARY 19, 2020 | VOLUME 105 | ISSUE 18
THE ADDYS AWARDS PG 3
ONE DIRECTION NIGHT PG 6
OPINION: TRUMP BUDGET PG 7
Hiram Revels anniversary highlights lack of black senators
Alyssa Bass | Printz
Mike Espy endorsed Brandon Rue for House District 102 Feb. 22, 2019.
ALYSSA BASS
EXECUTIVE EDITOR
n Feb.11, the Mississippi Department of Archives and History celebrated the 150th anniversary of Hiram Revels becoming the f irst African American to serve in the U.S. Senate in Jackson at the Old Capitol Building, the very place he was elected to represent Mississippi. Before the event, director of public relations for MDAH Michael Morris said he didn’t get to learn much about Revel’s story until he went to graduate school at Jackson State University. “I got a better grasp of what an amazing feat that was, the bravery that it took to run for off ice during that time period and what it really means to be f irst,” Morris said. “My hope is that there’s going to be a lot of kids at the program Tuesday night
that are going to get a chance to learn more about the amazing feats that Hiram Revels and so many other black off icials faced during that era.” Mississippi has not elected an African American senator since Reconstruction when Blance Bruce served from 1875 to 1881. Democrat Mike Espy failed at breaking the tradition in 2018, but he’s trying again. Espy will compete against Tobey Bartee and Jensen Bohren in the Democratic primary election March 10. Race has been a talking point of Espy’s campaign since his f irst run against Republican Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith in 2018 when he criticized her comments about public hangings. His latest campaign video acknowledges the contributions of his grandfather who founded the f irst hospital for African Americans
in Mississippi. Espy failed to unseat Hyde-Smith in 2018 by 65,950 votes, making him the closest Democrat to winning a Senate seat since 1982. Senior communications major Brandon Rue said Espy is one of his mentors. Rue worked on Espy’s 2018 campaign as a student engagement director, and Espy endorsed Rue’s campaign to become representative of House District 102. He said Espy’s second run for senate seems more promising. “We saw that toward the end of the [2018] campaign a lot more people started paying attention, but it was kind of a little too late because they started getting more money in. To their point, it was too late to spend all of the money that was received,” Rue said. “This time around, I think people are going to be paying more attention from the beginning, which
is going to help him tremendously because he’s got a whole year to campaign.” Espy told Mississippi Today reporter Bobby Harrison in November he wants to connect more with millennials this time. Rue said Espy connects with older voters because they are familiar with his political history and that most campaigns fail to reach millennials because of low voter turnout. In the 2018 midterm election, 26.7% of Mississippi voters ages 1824 voted, and 36.5% of people ages 25-34 voted, according to data by the U.S. Census Bureau.
Continued on PG. 2