Is it possible for a Presley to emerge victorious in Mississippi?

Is it possible for a Presley to emerge victorious in Mississippi?



Can a Presley win Mississippi?

Downtown Jackson, Mississippi’s capital,‌ is ⁣a ghost town with storefronts boarded ‍up​ since the civil-rights era and a crime rate that scares locals into ​staying in after sunset. More people in Mississippi ⁤are ‍out of a job and more‍ children live in‌ fatherless homes than anywhere else in ⁢the country. Well ‍over half the black residents of the Delta live below⁢ the poverty​ line. Some of those in the ‌state’s richer parts are glum. “When you’re the poorest, sickest, fattest state in ‌America, who wants to bring ⁣their family here?” says a retiree in​ Oxford, a pretty college‌ town.

It is perplexing then that Tate Reeves, the Republican governor, is running for re-election on November 7th on ‌a message of prosperity. He is campaigning⁣ on what he calls ​“Mississippi ‌momentum”, touting the state’s schools⁣ and economy. His best selling-point is a statistic released ⁢earlier this year: in the decade to ⁣2022 Mississippi rose from ranking second-worst on⁢ 4th-grade reading-test scores to 21st-best nationally, a ​feat that the governor ‍deserves some⁢ credit for. He reminds voters ​that he reopened ⁤the state after covid-19, pumped money into coastal industries and cut ‍taxes. (Less is said about the biggest corruption scandal in⁤ state history that took place while he was lieutenant governor.)

That ‍could be enough to get his base to the polls. After all, Republicans usually⁣ win here. But ⁣his opponent, Brandon ⁣Presley (a second cousin of⁣ The King) ⁢is a pro-life, pro-gun Democrat and is trailing by just ‌one⁢ point in the latest poll. He outraised the governor four to one in the last quarter (largely⁣ thanks to money from out of‌ state).⁣ “As⁤ your side mirror says in your car, things are⁣ closer than they appear,” he told⁤ a‍ crowd two weeks from election day.

2023-11-02 ⁢09:17:57
Post from www.economist.com
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