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Barrett-Simon Announces Mayoral Run
By RonniMottWard 7 Councilwoman Margaret Barrett-Simon officially announced her candidacy for mayor March 17.
Where's the Money? MSDH Withheld $600K from DV Shelters
By RonniMottThe state Department of Health has withheld nearly $600,000 from domestic-violence shelters over the past two years.
Canton, Nissan, UAW in NY Times
By RonniMottThe UAW is making unionization at Canton's Nissan plant an international effort.
Affordable Care Jubilee Oct. 4
By RonniMottRep. Bennie Thompson is partnering with the Jackson-Hinds Comprehensive Health Center to educate and assist Mississippians to enroll for health insurance.
Health Care Still Unavailable to Many Poor Mississippians
By RonniMottEmergency room care remains their only health-care option.
Trent Lott: GOP is 'Nasty and Mean'
By RonniMottWill the GOP pay attention to its moderates?
Health-Insurance Marketplace Scam Alert
By RonniMottMississippi's Attorney General and Insurance Commissioner want to make sure you don't get scammed with the newest rollout of the Affordable Care Act insurance marketplaces.
Thompson Derides Repubs for Shutdown
By RonniMott19,000 Mississippians awoke this morning to the possibility of no paycheck.
City Issues Boil-Water Notices
By RonniMottThe city of Jackson's water system seems to be fighting a battle against shifting Yazoo clay.
MS Coverage Under Obamacare May Be as low as $8/month
By RonniMottMississippi health-insurance rates could be as low as $8 a month after tax credits.
Board of Ed Names New Superintendent
By RonniMottDr. Carey Wright is Mississippi's new Education superintendent; Lynn House to retire.
Democratic Runoffs Likely in Supervisor Races
By RonniMottThe official results aren't available, yet, but it looks like its runoffs for the Democrats.
Barbour's Chickens Turn Out to be Buzzards
By RonniMottYou ought to know you're in trouble when the folks who should be your biggest cheerleaders come and do a dance on your head and slap you around a bit.
Former Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour has been a player in the Republican Party for decades. As a matter of fact, he was one of the big conservative brains (along with Lee Atwater) that came up with the Southern Strategy, a political mindset that has kept Southern politics stuck on the battlefield of black versus white since the days of Ronald Reagan. Barbour served as Reagan's political director and as chairman of the Republican National Committee.
Some might say that Mr. Barbour had a hand in stirring up the witch's brew that created right-wingers like the Tea Party—and I'd agree. But if he stirred the pot, he sure has no control over its content.
Now, Barbour is blasting conservatives, especially those on the ultra-shaggy edges of the right-wing fringe. The Washington Post calls them—the roughly 45 Republicans in Congress who refuse to bend at all, ever, under any circumstances—cast-iron conservatives .
“When you control the House, the Democrats control the Senate and the White House, you can’t exactly cram your stuff down their throat,” Barbour said in a Post TV "In Play" interview yesterday. “Some of our friends sometimes forget that.”
“The guys that wanted to make Obamacare the trip wire for closing down the government and making Obama cave in … that’s not going to happen; that was never going to happen,” he added.
Barbour goes on to blame the conservative troubles on—wait for it—outside agitators. The problem is, they're skunks of the same stripes:
Barbour went on to note that his bigger concern for the party moving forward was the number of outside conservative groups — he mentioned the Senate Conservatives Fund and the Club For Growth by name — who seek to vilify Republican Members of Congress for allegedly breaking with party orthodoxy.
“Some of these same people go out and raise money for outside organizations that attack the other Republicans not over principle, not over policy … over tactics,” said Barbour. “There is no excuse for making people think a conservative Congressman who has a 98 percent conservative voting record is a bad person because you disagree with his tactics.”
See the WaPo's The Fix blog for the entire interview.
Jackson Ranks No. 6 in Generosity
By RonniMottOur fair city ranks as one of the most generous cities in the United States.
Al Jazeera Profiles Chokwe Lumumba
By RonniMottAl Jazeera America published a profile of Jackson Mayor Chokwe Lumumba today, "In Mississippi, America's most revolutionary mayor." Author Siddhartha Mitter a good amount of time in the city this summer.
Looks like a good read: “Nowadays you’ve got to call yourself a ‘change agent’ or something, or else you’ll make people scared,” Lumumba told me when I visited Jackson in August. “But I am a revolutionary.”
Mitter even managed to work in Lumumba's trademark "Alright. OK."
Coalition Forms for Health Insurance Enrollment
By RonniMottCover Mississippi is taking on the challenges of educating and enrolling Mississippians in the new health insurance market place.
ARF Shelter in Crisis
By RonniMottThe Animal Rescue Fund of Mississippi is making a desperate plea for donations.
Project Homeless Connect Week
By RonniMottSeventh Annual Project Homeless Connect Week is happening this week.
Barbour, Lumumba, Tonkel Together on Community
By RonniMottOperation Shoestring just announced the panelists for its annual "Conversation About Community" luncheon: Jackson Mayor Chokwe Lumumba, former Gov. Haley Barbour and Wells Church pastor Rev. Keith Tonkel.
The event, which highlights and raises funds for Operation Shoestring's work with children and families in central Jackson, is scheduled for Thursday, Nov. 14, at the Jackson Convention Complex (105 E. Pascagoula St., 601-969-0114), from 11:30 a.m. until 1 p.m.
The featured panelists "will make public a conversation that’s been happening in living rooms and around kitchen tables across Jackson for a long time now," states a release about the luncheon. "Our capital city faces a declining tax base, a growing urban-suburban divide, struggling schools, crime and poverty. If Jackson, or Mississippi, for that matter, is going to rise, the solution will require our collective buy-in."
This year's "Conversation About Community" will be a frank, open talk about solutions.
“The potential of this event is enormous. Mayor Lumumba and Gov. Barbour bring vastly different perspectives to the task of moving our city and state forward. Providing a safe space for open dialogue between these two, with a faith-based voice of ‘what’s right’ coming from long-time central Jackson pastor Rev. Tonkel, has the potential to impact the trajectory of our city’s future in a profound way,” said Robert Langford, Operation Shoestring's executive director, in the release.
The organization's signature annual fundraiser was created as a way to put into action its mantra that “we all rise together.” The idea is to create a safe space for people and organizations from across the larger Jackson area, from all walks of life, to engage in open discussion about the critical issues that impact the children and families Shoestring serves in central Jackson and, ultimately, the larger Jackson community.
Tickets are $50, and sponsorships start at $125. Call Stacey Jordan for more information at 601-353-6336 ext. 27, or email [email protected]. Find out more at operationshoestring.org.
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