Trump’s re-election could make it easier for Mississippi to enact Medicaid expansion, to provide health insurance for the working poor
Mississippi voters will decide winners for one seat on the state Supreme Court and one on the state Court of Appeals.
On Nov. 26, candidates in state judicial races competed in runoff elections for a Mississippi Supreme Court seat and a Mississippi Court of Appeals seat.
Jenifer Branning and Justice Jim Kitchens were locked in a closely contested runoff for a Mississippi Supreme Court seat late Tuesday, with votes still being counted.Meanwhile, Amy St. Pe' secured a victory in the race for an open Mississippi Court of Appeals seat.
Gwyneth Paltrow and Chris Martin’s daughter, Apple Martin, has found herself in a bit of a controversy, and lots of people on TikTok are talking about it. In case you missed it, she made her debut at le Bal des Debutantes, which is all to raise money for charities that help young women. Apple arrived with a bunch of other …
View results from the Nov. 5 general election in Mississippi here.
Mississippians will head to the polls Tuesday to vote in two runoff elections for the Mississippi Supreme Court and the Mississippi Court of Appeals.
Election data shows many Democrats in swing counties didn't vote. One reason is that Kamala Harris didn't seem very different than Joe Biden, experts said.
The Associated Press did not publish a headline on Mississippi’s literacy program that misspelled the state’s name as “Missippi” as shown in a fabricated screenshot shared online with a caption questioning the credibility of AP’s election poll reporting.
Source: Election results are from The Associated Press. By The New York Times election results team: Michael Andre, Emma Baker, Neil Berg, Andrew Chavez, Michael Beswetherick, Matthew Bloch, Lily Boyce,
Mississippi voters will decide winners for one seat on the state Supreme Court and one on the state Court of Appeals.Runoff elections are Tuesday between candidates who advanced from the Nov. 5 general election.
By 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, the Mississippi Supreme Court Central District runoff race still hadn't been called, leaving the race in a neck-and-neck position. Both incumbent Jim Kitchens' and challenger Jenifer Branning's campaigns confirmed they were no longer expecting full results right away.