Mississippi
For the second year, Mississippi lawmakers will not restore a ballot initiative process
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JACKSON, Miss. (WLBT) – You’ll must preserve ready you probably have a difficulty you need placed on the poll.
That proper was stripped away when the state Supreme Courtroom dominated the method was outdated practically two years in the past.
Lawmakers can reinstate it, however Thursday, they’re letting that measure die.
”When the Supreme Courtroom threw this out a few years in the past, they weren’t saying no extra poll initiative,” famous citizen activist and Initiative 65 organizer Jonathan Brown. “They had been saying to the legislature, you could restore the poll initiative course of, as a result of there’s a constitutional requirement for it to exist.”
However for the second 12 months in a row, it gained’t.
“The help for the poll initiative, because it was despatched again, was not there,” stated Sen. John Polk, chairman of the Senate Accountability, Effectivity and Transparency committee.
“It’s sort of my feeling that we had been simply to date aside on the variety of signatures,” stated writer of SCR 533 Sen. Tyler McCaughn.
Senator John Polk says that was a sticking level.
“I’m firmly satisfied that we want a lot of signatures for the individuals’s will to be recognized what it’s,” famous Polk.
An modification on the Home ground had put the brink again to the place it initially was.
One other challenge for Polk? The Home eliminated a restriction that might preserve referendums from altering Mississippi’s place as a “proper to work” state.
“That was disturbing to me,” added Polk.
However Home leaders had been shocked as a result of they thought they’d indicated they had been prepared to barter specifics.
“Now we’re not even going to convention and simply dying on the calendar is disappointing,” stated Rep. Jason White, Home Speaker Professional Tempore. “We had been hoping to see that transfer. Individuals have demanded it and requested for and I feel on the marketing campaign path this summer season and fall, you’re gonna hear individuals, constituents voters speaking about it.”
“The poll initiative is a vital course of that retains the legislature in test,” defined Jonathan Brown. “They’re proving the purpose and proving the necessity for a poll initiative course of proper earlier than our very eyes.”
“I don’t know of another another mechanism or means for it to be revived this session,” stated Speaker Philip Gunn.
Thursday was the deadline for the invoice to be stored alive.
Lieutenant Governor Delbert Hosemann launched the next assertion.
“I’ve constantly stated I’m in favor of an initiative course of in Mississippi. I belief the voters of the state, each in who they elect to workplace and on coverage issues. Plenty of Republicans within the Senate have a unique opinion on the initiative challenge. That is the legislative course of and we’ll proceed that course of.”
Joint assertion from Home Minority Chief Robert Johnson and Senate Minority Chief Derrick Simmons
“SCR 533 dying within the Senate was about far more than simply restoring the poll initiative. It confirmed, but once more, simply how out of step Republicans are with one another and with the overwhelming majority of Mississippians — together with their very own voters.
Seventy-nine % of Mississippians help totally funding training, however this morning the Home refused to concur with the Senate’s try to completely fund MAEP. Whereas Republican state leaders crow about our practically $4 billion surplus, we are able to’t nonetheless can’t get them to decide to prioritizing our public faculties and our state’s children. And we all know that 73% of their very own voters agree with us.
All this after Republican management wouldn’t enable a lot as a dialog about Medicaid growth this session, a difficulty that almost 80% of Mississippians help.
Whereas we hope this weekend’s convention committee conferences outcome within the widespread sense options all of our constituents need, let’s simply say that we aren’t feeling notably optimistic. Fortunately for all of us, it’s an election 12 months, and we’re pleased to take our file on the marketing campaign path. We’re not so certain our colleagues can say the identical.”
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Copyright 2023 WLBT. All rights reserved.

Mississippi
'Sinners' Puts 'Truth on Screen' For The Mississippi Choctaws

CHOCTAW, Miss. (AP) — It’s a small part in a big movie, but for the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians, their scene in “Sinners” is a huge deal.
The horror movie blockbuster, starring Michael B. Jordan as a gangster turned vampire slayer, paints a brief but impactful portrait of the tribe using Choctaw actors and cultural experts. For some, it’s the first time they’ve seen the Choctaw way of life accurately portrayed on the big screen.
In the scene, a posse of Choctaw, riding on horseback and in an old truck, arrives at a small farmhouse to warn the couple that lives there of coming danger. When the couple refuses their help, a Choctaw man wishes them luck in his native language before riding off.
“I’ve not seen another movie that has our language spoken correctly,” said Cynthia Massey, a cultural consultant for “Sinners.”
Massey runs the tribe’s Chahta Immi Cultural Center alongside Sherrill Nickey and department director Jay Wesley. All three were hired as cultural consultants to ensure a genuine depiction of the tribe in the film. Together, they sifted through archives, researching how their ancestors would have dressed, spoken and acted in the 1930s, when “Sinners” takes place.
“I was honored and humbled by the fact that they wanted a true representation,” said Wesley, who also acted in the movie.
Wesley connected the filmmakers to Choctaw actors and artifacts like the beaded sashes the Choctaw characters wear in the movie. Those sashes are now part of a “Sinners” display at the cultural center.
The movie’s introduction also features a short snippet of a Choctaw war chant, performed by Wesley’s daughter, Jaeden Wesley, who is a student at the University of California, Los Angeles. While recording, Jaeden Wesley said the filmmakers told her they wanted the Choctaw people to hear their music in the movie.
“We were catering to our own people, even in that short little second,” Jaeden Wesley said.
Shining a spotlight on often overlooked cultures and topics, like the Choctaw people, is part of the mission at Proximity Media, which produced “Sinners.” The company was founded by “Sinners” director Ryan Coogler, his wife and film producer, Zinzi Coogler, and producer Sev Ohanian.
“It was never a question for us that if we were going to portray the Mississippi Choctaw, we got to have the right people who can tell us, who can tell Ryan, what we’re not knowing, what we’re not thinking,” Ohanian said. “It was all because we’re trying to serve Ryan’s story of like putting truth on screen.”
Ohanian and his co-founders didn’t stop with Choctaw consultants; they enlisted a small army of experts who advised on the confluence of cultures mingling in the Mississippi Delta, where the film is set. The resulting cinematic world was so well received, community organizers penned an open letter, inviting Coogler and his fellow filmmakers to visit the Delta. Last week, the Cooglers, Ohanian and others took up the offer, attending a “Sinners” screening in Clarksdale, Mississippi. Clarksdale is where the film’s events unfold.
“I hope this encourages other filmmakers to find opportunities to be authentic in their storytelling and to look at this rich tapestry of culture that’s right here in America,” Ohanian said, noting the film industry has historically misrepresented nonwhite groups.
Wesley and his fellow consultants hope the film will cultivate curiosity in audiences, encourage them to learn more about Choctaw culture and visit the Chahta Immi Cultural Center.
“It’s important to be connected to this culture because this was here before the public was here,” Massey said. “Probably three-quarters of Mississippi was Choctaw land, and now we only have 350,000 acres.”
They say Choctaw participation in the film has cultivated a sense of pride among tribe members. Nickey hopes it will encourage a sort of cultural renaissance at a time when she says fewer and fewer Choctaw speak their native language.
“I know for a fact that there are a lot of kids out there that don’t even know how to speak our language. They only speak English,” Nickey said. “I hope they know it’s okay to speak our language.”
Related
Mississippi
Why Brian O’Connor retained Justin Parker as Mississippi State baseball pitching coach

Brian O’Connor introduced as new Mississippi State baseball coach
Watch Brian O’Connor’s first news conference as the Mississippi State baseball coach.
- New Mississippi State baseball coach Brian O’Connor retained interim coach Justin Parker as pitching coach.
- O’Connor was impressed with Parker’s pitching staff during the Charlottesville Regional matchup between Mississippi State and Virginia last season.
This story was updated to change a photo.
STARKVILLE — New Mississippi State baseball coach Brian O’Connor brought two assistant coaches with him from Virginia, Kevin McMullan and Matt Kirby. However, he picked one MSU assistant to stay with him on staff.
The Bulldogs retained Justin Parker as the pitching coach. The news was announced just hours before O’Connor’s introduction at Dudy Noble Field on June 5.
Parker was the interim MSU coach after Chris Lemonis was fired on April 28. He led the Bulldogs to a 9-1 finish to the regular season and an NCAA tournament at-large bid.
“I felt like that we really needed on this staff, somebody who had connections in the southeast from a recruiting standpoint,” O’Connor, hired on June 1, said. “A couple of things in Justin Parker’s favor is that he’s coached four years in the SEC. He knows this league.”
O’Connor also recalled last season’s Charlottesville Regional where Mississippi State and Virginia played each other twice. The Cavaliers won both games, but O’Connor said he was impressed with Parker’s pitching staff.
He mentioned Parker’s development with young pitchers, specifically Charlie Foster, Ryan McPherson and Dane Burns.
“Not only is he a developer of their skill and going to help them not only win for Mississippi State, but also be successful after their time here, I happen to feel he’s also a good man,” O’Connor said, who’d been the Virginia coach since 2004. “That is the fiber of what he’s about, is what I’m about.”
O’Connor’s hiring was announced an hour after the MSU season ended in the Tallahassee Regional. The team bussed back to Starkville the next day, where O’Connor was already there. O’Connor said he’s completed 30-minute exit interviews with every player on the team that has eligibility, but also spent time with Parker. He said they’ve been together on six different occasions since June 2 ranging from 30 minutes to two hours.
“I certainly had conversations with other candidates and things like that,” O’Connor said. “That’s part of the process, right? But ultimately landed on he is the man that is most qualified and best here at Mississippi State to lead this pitching staff moving forward.”
Sam Sklar is the Mississippi State beat reporter for the Clarion Ledger. Email him at ssklar@gannett.com and follow him on X @sklarsam_.
Mississippi
Tigers 'top three' for Mississippi DL
Auburn’s had some success in recent years recruiting the state of Mississippi.
Corey Wells is another prospect out of the Magnolia State to keep an eye on.
The 6-foot-5 defensive lineman out of Petal, Miss., wrapped up a midweek official visit Thursday, as the Tigers are one of four SEC schools getting Wells on an official this summer.
“I loved it, I ain’t gonna lie,” Wells said. “From the moment I stepped in, I already knew I was gonna love it. I mean, it’s big, it’s beautiful. I mean, the coach is great, and it just feels right.”
Auburn was the second official visit for Wells, who previously took an official with Ole Miss. He has upcoming officials with Texas and Mississippi State, but the Tigers made a strong impression during his first ever trip to the Plains. What stood out the most about his Auburn visit?
“Talking with the coaches, watching the coaches practice with the players, the photo shoot, the food — the food was real good,” Wells said.
Wells spent plenty of time with defensive tackles coach Vontrell King-Williams during the visit. His biggest takeaway was that King-Williams genuinely cares for his players and gets the best out of them.
“Coach Vontrell, he’s a good coach, he gets after it,” Wells said. “He loves his players, he’s gonna teach his players, he’s gonna make sure his players get after it, make sure they’re good.”
Head coach Hugh Freeze also is involved in Wells’ recruitment.
“He loves us Mississippi boys,” Wells said. “Mississippi is very underrated, and coaches like him just coming to get us. I appreciate it, and I feel like all Mississippi boys are gonna appreciate it.”
Following the visit, Wells has Auburn sitting “top three” in his recruitment, with a plan to make a decision sometime before his senior season.
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