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Mississippi Drivers Spend A Huge Amount Of Their Income On Gas

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gas money

The Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) recently released the latest version of its annual report, "Fighting Oil Addiction: Ranking States' Gasoline Price Vulnerability and Solutions for Change."

It ranks states by "gasoline price vulnerability"— the percentage of personal income drivers spent on gas in 2011.

Every state's gas price vulnerability rose from 2010 to 2011.

At the top of the list is Mississippi, where filling the tank requires 8.98 percent of the average driver's income. The state has held the number one position every year since 2007.

According to the report, the least vulnerable state was Connecticut, where gas spending represented only 3.51 percent of income.

The other states in the top 10 are:

2. West Virginia: 8.10 percent

3. South Carolina: 7.91 percent

4. Kentucky: 7.89 percent

5. Oklahoma: 7.56 percent

6. Texas: 7.30 percent

7. Georgia: 7.21 percent

8. Iowa: 7.18 percent

9. New Mexico: 7.18 percent

10. Arkansas: 7.10 percent

The NRDC argues America's dependence on oil is "problematic" for a simple reason: "The United States uses several times more oil than it possesses." Importing oil is costly, and "threatens our national economy. The report also notes the rise in carbon dioxide and global warming as causes for concern.

The NRDC also ranked states for their action to reduce oil dependence by investing in public transportation and implementing policies to reduce emissions from cars. California (which is building a high-speed rail network) did the most in 2011. Nebraska did the least.

Here's the map of gasoline price vulnerability:

gasoline price vulnerability map 2012

SEE ALSO:  The 20 Most Miserable States For Driving

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Mississippi Lawmaker Found Dead With A Gunshot Wound To The Head

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Jessica Upshaw

Mississippi state lawmaker Jessica Upshaw was found dead in a residence on Sunday with a bullet wound to her head, the Clarion Ledger reports, citing unnamed sources at the state capitol.

Upshaw, a 53-year-old Republican, was found in the home of former Mississippi State Rep. Clint Rotenberry, Simpson County Sheriff Kenneth Lewis told the Clarion Ledger.

Lewis told the Clarion Ledger Sunday afternoon that the case had been turned over to the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation, and that he didn't know whether her death was a suicide.

Later Sunday evening, Lewis told the Clarion Ledger that the bullet wound"appeared to be self-inflicted."

Upshaw, who was single, had been a Mississippi state representative since 2004. A lawyer by trade, she chaired the legislature's Natural Resources Committee.

Rotenberry was elected to the house in 1994 and lost a Republican runoff in 2007, according to the Clarion Ledger.

It's not clear why Upshaw was at Rotenberry's house. He hasn't been arrested, CBS News reported Sunday night.

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Mississippi Lawmaker's Gunshot Wound To The Head Was An Apparent Suicide

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Jessica Upshaw

MENDENHALL, Miss. (AP) — Authorities say they are investigating the apparent suicide of a state legislator in Mississippi.

Simpson County Sheriff Kenneth Lewis tells WLOX (http://bit.ly/ZhXTa1 ) that Rep. Jessica Upshaw appeared to have shot herself in the head at a home in Mendenhall on Sunday. The town is about 30 miles southeast of Jackson, the state capital. She was 53.

The sheriff told The Clarion-Ledger (http://on.thec-l.com/X1xwqe) that Upshaw was found at the home of former state Rep. Clint Rotenberry. He has not been arrested.

Upshaw was an attorney who had been a lawmaker since 2004. She was a Republican from Diamondhead along the state's coast. Mendenhall is about 110 miles away from her hometown.

The sheriff did not return a phone call from The Associated Press. Rotenberry did not answer his phone.

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Five Extreme Republican Laws That Are Pushing States Even Further To The Right

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nebraska tea party rally

North Carolina Republican lawmakers are making a push to declare an official state religion, introducing a resolution this week that would exempt the state from any federal court ruling involving the First Amendment — or anything else related to the Constitution.

The bill has 11 Republican sponsors in the state's House of Representatives, including the House majority leader, according to WRAL, which first reported the news. Basically, it claims that North Carolina is "sovereign" and thus exempt from any federal court rulings regarding the separation between church and state, including those made by the Supreme Court.

The bill reads:

"The Constitution of the United States does not grant the federal government and does not grant the federal courts the power to determine what is or is not constitutional; therefore, by virtue of the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, the power to determine constitutionality and the proper interpretation and proper application of the Constitution is reserved to the states and to the people."

It goes on to state that "each state in the union is sovereign and may independently determine how that state may make laws respecting an establishment of religion." 

The North Carolina religion resolution is the latest evidence of a rightward shift that is taking place in Republican-led state houses across the country.

With Democrats in control of the White House and Senate, Republican supermajorities in several states have taken it upon themselves to block President Barack Obama's agenda, pushing through legislation to implement far-right agendas, which, in many cases, seeks to separate individual states from the federal government.

Here are four other examples of laws that have been passed or proposed by Republican state legislators this year:

1. In anticipation of Democratic efforts to introduce new federal gun control measures, the Republican-controlled Wyoming House of Representatives voted in January to approve a bill that would make it a crime to enforce any federal ban on assault weapons or high-capacity magazines.

2.TheOklahoma House of Representatives voted this week to approve a bill that declares the Affordable Care Act "null and void" in the state of Oklahoma.

3.Tea Party-backed lawmakers inMississippi have proposed legislation that would create a committee that would be authorized to nullify any federal laws that the state does not want to follow. According to the Dispatch, the bill was drafted in response to 23 executive orders issued by Obama on gun control and in preparation for the implementation of the Affordable Care Act.

4. North Dakota became the first state to effectively ban abortions last month, when Republican Gov. Jack Dalrymple signed legislation that bans abortion if a fetal heartbeat can be detected — something which can take place as early as six weeks into a pregnancy. The bill, Dalrymple said, represents a "legitimate attempt by a state legislature to discover the boundaries of Roe v. Wade."

He also signed another bill that makes the state the first to ban abortions based on genetic defects such as Down Syndrome, as well as a bill that requires doctors who perform abortions to have hospital-admitting privileges.

Abortion rights groups have promised a long and costly legal battle to fight the new restrictions. 

While some of these laws are likely to be overturned by the courts, together they represent a deepening partisan divide at the state level. As we reported back in November, the 2012 election brought in Republican supermajorities in 11 states, ushering in powerful one-party governments that are likely to make major tax cuts, slash spending to public education and social programs, and resist the implementation of Obama's agenda at every turn.

Beyond the immediate policy impact, the deeply partisan state legislatures could have a long-term effect on the GOP, particularly as the party tries to overcome the perception that it is "extreme" and "out-of-touch."

State legislatures are the breeding ground for candidates at the federal level. If the party's farm team is made up of politicians who have built their careers around catering to the deep red base, then the GOP could continue to struggle to come up with candidates with statewide — and nationwide — appeal. 

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A Homicide Detective Was Shot Dead In A Police Interrogation Room

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Mississippi police officer shot

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Stunned police officials in Jackson, Miss., are trying to determine how a suspect was able to shoot and kill a homicide detective inside an interrogation room at police headquarters — and how the suspect himself ended up dead.

Authorities said Det. Eric Smith, a tall, fit investigator and decorated homicide detective who had been with the department since 1995, was gunned down inside an interview room late Thursday afternoon as he was questioning the 23-year-old murder suspect, Jeremy Powell.

Officers heard several gunshots, and when they went to the room, found both Smith — a married father — and Powell dead of multiple gunshot wounds, police said.

Police in Jackson, the capital of Mississippi, were clearly shaken by the killing of one of their own inside a high-security building where officers and residents alike expect to be safe. But they did not release any details about what they believed happened. They said the case has been turned over to the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation, which is standard procedure.

"The entire city of Jackson and the Jackson Police Department family are all hurting," said Jackson city spokesman Chris Mims. "We are asking for the public's patience while we find out why this tragic incident happened and how it happened."

The suspect was being questioned on the third floor of the police headquarters building when the shooting happened, Police Chief Rebecca Coleman said.

Police said in a news release that Powell was in the process of being arrested in the killing Monday of 20-year-old Christopher Alexander. News outlets reported that Alexander's body was found Monday near a Jackson street and he had been stabbed in the neck.

The police headquarters was on lockdown Thursday night, Mims said.

Jackson City Councilman Chokwe Lumumba was in police headquarters with the mayor later and said Smith was shot by the suspect. He did not know how the suspect ended up dead.

"I understand there may have been more than one police officer in the room," Lumumba said.

The headquarters was blocked off and surrounded by crime tape. Law enforcement and Jackson city officials rushed to the scene.

At least 30 Jackson Police and Hinds County Sheriff's office vehicles were haphazardly parked across multiple, major downtown Jackson streets Thursday evening. Officers wiped their eyes, and Assistant Chief Lee Vance could be seen comforting Coleman at one point, putting his arm around her shoulder outside the building.

Mims described the 40-year-old Smith, who was assigned to the Robbery-Homicide Division, as "a decorated detective and well-respected law-enforcement person throughout the state of Mississippi."

A 2008 photo on the department's website shows Smith, in a shirt and tie, accepting a certificate of commendation, with Coleman and Vance on either side of him.

Lumumba, who is a lawyer, said he first met Smith in the late 1990s. The then-officer had testified on some of Lumumba's cases.

"I had great respect for his work and his integrity," Lumumba said. He added that Smith's stepson had played basketball on an Amateur Athletic Union team that Lumumba worked with.

"Eric helped take young men all over the country," the councilman said. "He's a real man in every sense of the word."

Mayor Harvey Johnson, Jr. also addressed the officer's death.

"Detective Smith was an excellent officer in all respects," the mayor said. "I want everyone to keep the Smith family in their prayers and in their thoughts."

___

Mohr reported from Brandon, Miss. Associated Press writer Jackie Quinn reported from Washington.

Now Watch: Your Smartphone Is Tracking You In Ways You've Never Imagined
 

SEE ALSO: James Holmes' Psychiatrist Bluntly Warned University He Had 'Homicidal Thoughts'

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There Was A Lovely Ad Campaign Designed To Fight Mississippi's Reputation As The Worst State In America

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Earlier today we posted "The 7 States That The Rest Of America Would Like To Kick Out Of the Country," based on a Reddit thread that tried to find which states the country could most easily part with. 

The state that got the most upvotes was Mississippi: 

Lowest average life expectancy, poorest, fattest, second highest teen pregnancy rate and highest teen birth rate, one of the lowest high school graduation rates and still a lot of opposition to interracial marriage being legal.

Needless to say, the Magnolia State has tried to push back on this reputation for some time. 

One reader forwarded us a link to a pro bono ad campaign for Mississippi designed by the Jackson-based Cirlot Agency. The Mississippi ... Believe It! campaign sought to highlight some positive aspects of the state, and after the post this morning we elected to highlight some of them. 

The campaign ran from 2006 to 2008, and posters were sent to every public and private K-12 school and every college and university in Mississippi. 

The project got positive feedback from The Daily Mississippian from a writer who saw the ads and was finally happy to own up to living in Mississippi, positive press from the Mississippi Business Journal, and scored the creators an interview on "Tell Me More" on NPR.  

All images are from the campaign's website. 

Here's an ad highlighting prominent writers from Mississippi:

Mississippi believe it

Mississippi has a strong relationship with the music business:

Mississippi believe it


If you think it's awesome when America sends stuff to space, you have Mississippi to thank for that:

Mississippi believe it


Not to mention the medical leaps and bounds that were pioneered in Mississippi:

Mississippi believe it


See the whole campaign here >

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Mississippi Hunters Caught The State's Heaviest Alligator Ever

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Alligator

Mississippi's alligator hunting season kicked off just three days ago and records are already being shattered left and right.

For roughly one hour, a 723.5-pound gator caught in Madison on Sunday held the state's record for heaviest alligator until a group of hunters from Claiborne County shot a 727-pound monster. The previous record holder weighed 697.5 pounds.

At 13 feet, 4.5 inches, the massive gator was two inches shy of the current length holder, a 13-foot 6.5-inch alligator caught in 2008, according to the Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries, and Parks

"It took about four and a half hours to actually catch him from the first time we saw him," Mississippi hunter Dustin Bockman told MSNNewsNow.

Bockman, a UPS driver, was helped by his brother and a friend.

After shooting the alligator, Bockman says it took the crew another four hours to try and load the alligator into the boat. They finally gave up and called for help.

On the night of Aug. 30, another hunting party caught the state's largest female alligator ever. It set the state's current length and weight record, measuring 10 feet long and weighing 295.3 pounds.  

Screen Shot 2013 09 03 at 11.23.16 AM

PHOTOS: Here's The Hard Work That Goes Into Catching Your Lobster

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Judge Allegedly Ejects Sikh Man From Courtroom Because He's Wearing A Turban, Orders Him To Remove 'That Rag'

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sikh temple shooting

The American Civil Liberties Union is calling for an investigation after a Mississippi judge allegedly kicked a Sikh man out of his courtroom and ordered him to remove his turban before coming back in for his hearing.

This all came after commercial truck driver Jageet Singh was allegedly harassed by police who called him a "terrorist" when they pulled him over in Mississippi, according to the ACLU.

Police reportedly arrested him during the traffic stop for disobeying orders when he insisted the "kirpan" he was carrying — a small, sheathed sword that is kept on the waistband — was not illegal.

Singh's lawyer told the ACLU that Judge Aubrey Rimes said his client could not come into the courtroom until he took "that rag" off his head.

Discrimination is not unfamiliar to Sikhs.

Just last week, a Columbia University professor who also wears a turban keeps a full beard in line with Sikh tradition was attacked and called a "terrorist" by a group of young men in Harlem.

Mark Potok at the Southern Poverty Law Center told Business Insider that discrimination and harassment directed at Sikhs is relatively common.

"I don't think there's any question that that happens frequently," he said.

In some cases, Sikhs — who typically hail from India — might be mistaken for Muslims.

But Potok says there has been "a remarkable level of violence directed at Sikhs," especially in the aftermath of 9/11.

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Pastor Who Banned Fried Chicken Leads Mississippi Obamacare Push

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HERNANDO, Mississippi (Reuters) — When Dr Michael Minor first became pastor at Oak Hill Missionary Baptist Church in Hernando, Mississippi, in 1996, he discovered a population overcome by an epidemic of obesity.

"It was so bad, I was having a funeral every weekend," he said.

Minor took dramatic action for a Southern preacher, banning fried chicken at church potlucks and setting up a walking track around the church perimeter.

He has had marked success. "You can see the difference. People are much better sized, way better. And once they get it off, they want to keep it off," he said.

Now he is taking on the much bigger task of trying to get the state's nearly 275,000 uninsured people to sign up for health insurance coverage under the Affordable Care Act (ACA).

With technology problems dogging enrollment on Obamacare health insurance exchanges, the roles of people like Minor are becoming increasingly crucial in determining the success or failure of President Barack Obama's health care law.

His church is one of only two organizations in the state to get a federal "navigator" grant to help the state's uninsured sign up for policies provided through Obamacare.

He has his work cut out for him.

Mississippi ranked last in a 2012 study comparing the health of the states, tying with Louisiana, and consistently ranks at the top for rates of obesity and diabetes.

The local political environment has been far from friendly to Obamacare. Republican-led Mississippi rejected federal funds for an expansion of the Medicaid program for the poor — while its application for a state-based exchange was rejected by Washington, leaving it to use the faulty federal exchange.

"That man is essentially heading up outreach enrollment of the ACA for Mississippi. It's staggering," said Roy Mitchell, executive director of the Mississippi Health Advocacy Program.

Mitchell and other health advocates initially wondered just how this pastor of a tiny church on the Northwestern edge of the state won its grant.

"I applied for it," said the 48-year-old Harvard graduate and health advocate who grew up just miles away in the town of Coldwater.

"I'm a firm believer that people are limited because someone tells them they are limited," Minor said. "I tell my members we can do whatever we want to do. Let's just go for it."

'NO FRY ZONE'

In the foyer of Oak Hill Baptist hangs a picture of Minor and his wife, Lottie, in the White House, a proud reminder of the heights this tiny church of 100 or so has already reached under his leadership. His efforts caught the attention of First Lady Michelle Obama, who in 2009 invited Minor to help promote her "Let's Move" anti-obesity campaign and has invited him to the White House on several occasions.

Off to the side is a room housing a machine donated by the American Heart Association that allows parishioners to get regular readings of their blood pressure and body-mass index.

In the church kitchen hangs a plaque reminding the congregation that it is a "No Fry Zone," a sign of the church's commitment to offer healthier fare at church gatherings.

"It's a symbol, especially with people of color," Minor said of the ban on fried chicken. "You've got to rally around symbols."

Seeing the success in his own congregation, Minor began expanding his gospel of healthy living. His church started sending teams of "health ambassadors" and health professionals to make regular checks on people in rural areas in the Mississippi delta, the poorest region in the poorest state in America.

He started organizing ushers in Northwest Mississippi to promote health among churches in the region, an effort that has grown into a national outreach program through the National Baptist Convention, the largest predominantly African-American Christian denomination in the United States.

Minor sees his work promoting health-care reform as a natural next step. "The ACA fits a niche," he said.

"The way we see it is, we're already doing a decent job with the spiritual aspect of it. The ACA affords us the opportunity to rescue the body and the mind."

HEAVY LIFTING

As a navigator, Minor's initial plan was to recruit ministers in the 41 counties in the Mississippi delta, but when he realized that the other group with federal navigator funding, the University of Mississippi Medical Center, was initially only planning to target current and past patients, Minor decided to set up a statewide network.

To stretch his $317,742 grant, Minor joined forces with Cover Mississippi, a network of consumer and patient advocacy groups and community health centers organized by the Mississippi Health Advocacy Program.

Building awareness will be critical. According to a Kaiser Health Tracking Poll released last month, two-thirds of the uninsured said they did not have enough information about the law to know how it will impact their families. And a survey commissioned by the MHAP of nearly 1,000 residents who would be eligible to buy insurance on the exchanges showed that three-fourths did not know enrollment began October 1.

The U.S. government has not released figures on how many people have signed up so far, but Chad Feldman, who's leading the navigator program at UMMC, said the center has assisted more than 3,000 people, including 1,000 phone calls and more than 2,000 visits.

"The Mississippians we are interacting with are very interested. People are engaged and wanting to learn more," Feldman said.

The hospital has been reaching out to the 200 or so uninsured patients who seek treatment at the hospital each day, and early next year it plans to use its telemedicine network to offer video counseling to walk people through the application process in 100 sites across the state.

That would mean there would be no in-person navigators in some of the state's neediest counties.

So Minor has spent the past three weeks patching together a network of patient advocacy groups and church volunteers, who have gone through the needed 20 hours of navigator training, with the blessing of the Department of Health and Human Services.

He is also tapping into the network of some 20 community health centers and organizations that shared nearly $2.5 million in federal grants to become certified application counselors — trained individuals stationed in health centers that can offer face-to-face enrollment assistance.

As of last week, Minor and his coalition partners had built a network of 75 to 100 navigators and counselors.

"I was so happy I jumped up and down," he said. "We have navigators within an hour's drive of everywhere in the state."

The coalition crosses denominational lines and racial and ethnic lines. "People are just so excited," he said.

Minor's organization will be hitting its stride around the second week of November, when he expects to be signing up thousands of people for coverage that begins on January 1. The plan is to organize enrollment events ahead of the Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays in the hopes that people will share their good news during family gatherings.

"We feel like once you get people in churches and families, they will become de facto navigators," he said.

(Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen; Editing by Prudence Crowther)

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A 21-Year-Old College Student Is About To Become The Youngest Member Of The Mississippi House

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Jeramey Anderson Tulane Student Mississippi House Representatives

Tulane University senior Jeramey Anderson turns 22 on Friday — the same day he will be sworn into the Mississippi House of Representatives, making him the youngest member of the legislative body.

The Tulane student won the seat after a general election against the candidate backed by the local Democratic Party, even though Anderson had led the Democratic primary. Anderson took 60% of the vote in Tuesday's election, the Sun Herald reports.

According to the Associated Press, Anderson is studying homeland security and public relations at Tulane, and has made arraignments with the school's dean to continue his education online when the House is in session. 

Anderson told the Sun Herald that he believes education is the most important issue he'll face. 

"We focus too highly on standardized testing .. We teach students to memorize the answers to specific questions and ideas, but what we don't teach them is how is they got those answers. We need to get back to the foundation of understanding why things are what they are," he said.

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AUDIO: GOP Senate Candidate Went Off On Reparations, 'Mamacitas,' And Spanish In Radio Rant

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Chris McDaniel

Racially tinged comments from a Republican state senator and candidate for U.S. Senate in Mississippi have created controversy and opened up a new divide in one of the most high-profile Republican primaries in the nation. 

Chris McDaniel is mounting a Republican challenge to Thad Cochran, who has held his seat in Mississippi since 1978. On Thursday, an audio clip from McDaniel's past as a conservative radio host was posted online, including some insensitive comments on race. The Wall Street Journal first reported the comments.

The McDaniel campaign claims the clip is nearly a decade old, and accused the "liberal press" and establishment Republicans of dredging up the old comments.

In the clip, McDaniel was heard discussing the possibility of paying so-called "reparations" to descendants of slaves. 

"If they pass reparations, and my taxes are going up, I ain't paying taxes," he said on the clip.

McDaniel then went on to say the show should be moved and produced in Mexico. 

"Why don't we all immigrate south. Let's go to Mexico!" he said. "You know, a dollar bill can buy a mansion in Mexico. And I think we all get together, go down there, build us a studio for like 26 pesos, and put on a radio show right there in Mexico. Live the rest of our lives there!"

Another person in the studio then asked McDaniel if they would "have to learn Spanish."

"Yes, regrettably," McDaniel said. "You’ll have to learn just enough to ask where the bathroom is. Baños. Baños. That’s what you say."

Following up on their discussion of the Spanish language, McDaniel then asked someone to translate the phrase, "Do you have a sister?"

After some discussion, he posited, "What about mamacita? Mamacita works. You say that at the wrong place at the wrong time, you will get beat down. Mamacita. It's not a bad word. It's just indicative. I'm an English-speaking Anglo. I have no idea what it means, actually, but I've said it a few times, just for, you know, fun. And I think it basically means, 'Hey, hot mama.' Or, you know, 'You're a fine looking young thing.'"

Later in the clip, McDaniel went on to discuss an ad for a Sony PlayStation Portable ad that had been criticized as racist. The commercial featured a white woman viciously holding a shorter black woman to promote the release of the white version of the PSP console. McDaniel noted a San Francisco politician had called the ad was racist, but he wondered why. 

"She wasn’t holding down a gay guy!" he said.

The Mississippi Senate race is one of the most contentious in the nation, as it is being fought largely within the bounds of a divided state Republican Party. McDaniel's campaign was quick to charge the "liberal press" and establishment Republicans with trying to make something new out of old comments.

"The liberal press clearly loves to attack conservatives of all types," McDaniel spokesman Noel Fritsch told Business Insider in a statement.

"When Chris got into this race he knew they would throw mud, so it's no surprise they'd dredge up decade old comments made on conservative talk radio. Chris will continue to deliver his conservative message of controlling government spending, lowering taxes, and repealing Obamacare across the state."​

In turn, some in the establishment were quick to point to the comments as exemplary of a flawed Tea Party challenger who could open up the seat to the possibility of a Democratic takeover and experience an implosion along the lines of failed Missouri Senate candidate Todd Akin.

The Senate Conservatives Fund and FreedomWorks, two conservative groups that have backed McDaniel, didn't immediately respond to requests for comment about McDaniel's remarks.

One Republican official told Business Insider it doesn't make sense to compare McDaniel to Akin — who made the now-infamous remarks about "legitimate rape" and abortion in 2012 — given McDaniel's record, the lack of a viable Democratic challenger, and Mississippi's decidedly Republican electorate.

Here's the full clip:

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WATCH: The Moment A Local News Station's Live Feed Cuts Out During A Tornado

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The live feed from a local Mississippi news station cut out as the news station employees rushed to safety during a tornado, as you can see in this video uploaded to YouTube.

A giant tornado is hitting Tupelo, Mississippi, and reports of damage have already started rolling in.

About 26 seconds into the video, from WTVA in Tupelo, the radar image behind the anchor cuts out, and about 41 seconds in, the audio stops. Then, the anchor is seen motioning for people behind the camera to get into position and presumably take shelter.

Check it out:

A tornado emergency is in effect for Tupelo and Lee County.

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This Is The Single Nastiest Campaign Fight In America

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Clayton Thomas Kelly

The mudslinging in Mississippi finally came to a head over the weekend. And insiders on both sides are now suggesting the Senate race there may be the most vicious campaign fight in the U.S. this year.

The race now includes salacious details that have made it explode into a national story over the past three days — rumors of a candidate having an affair with a longtime staffer, the arrest of an activist for allegedly sneaking into a nursing home to take a picture of Republican Sen. Thad Cochran's ailing wife, and allegations of police misconduct. 

"I've never seen anything like it," one 20-year campaign veteran aligned with the Cochran campaign told Business Insider. "You'd be hard-pressed to find anything worse in the entire country."

Amazingly, all of this nastiness has occurred between two members of the same party. The vicious battle is being fought between Cochran, an incumbent of more than three decades, and a conservative insurgent, State Sen. Chris McDaniel, ahead of a June 3 primary.

Their feuding reached a fever pitch Saturday, when news broke that local political activist and blogger Clayton Thomas Kelly was arrested after police said he sneaked into a Madison, Mississippi, nursing home to take a picture of Cochran's wife without her consent. 

Cochran's wife, Rose, suffers from progressive dementia and she has lived in St. Catherine's nursing home since 2000. Don Clark, an attorney who represents the Cochrans, told Business Insider in a statement that a picture was "taken inside of Mrs. Cochran’s room near her bedside."

The picture was allegedly used for a video Kelly published on his blog that seems to have been part of an attempt to report on rumors about Cochran's personal life. Kelly's wife, Tara, and his attorney, Kevin Camp, told the Hattiesburg American on Monday night that he "received tips from someone on the Internet that Thad Cochran was having an affair" with a longtime staffer, at which time he decided to pursue the story. She said she didn't know who provided the tips. Kelly's original video and post containing the image has been removed. 

Cochran supporters have suggested Kelly was used as a political pawn to fuel chatter about some kind of a romantic relationship between Cochran and his executive assistant, Kay Webber. Various conservative blogs have run with the rumor in recent weeks while reporting on Cochran's extensive travel with Webber.  

Cochran's children, Clayton and Kate Cochran, defended their father in a statement to Business Insider.

"For over 13 years, our mother has been at St. Catherine’s Village where she has been treated for ever-increasing dementia," they said. 

"It is amazing and humbling to see how devoted our dad has been as mother has progressed from early dementia to complete loss of language to her current state of hospice care. He is a model of understanding for those who are losing their loved ones in this way. We are shocked by someone trying to use our mother’s illness for political purposes, and our family is unified in doing everything we can to protect her safety, privacy and security."

In the aftermath of Kelly's arrest, the McDaniel campaign tried repeatedly to disavow any ties to Kelly. But its story keeps changing, and the Cochran campaign has cited these shifts as evidence the McDaniel team may have been involved in the scheme to publish the nursing home photo.

Robert Sanders, the assistant police chief at the Madison Police Department, confirmed on Monday that police are looking into whether more people may have been involved in the picture's publication.

On April 26, when Kelly originally published the photo, McDaniel campaign manager Melanie Sojourner sent an email to the campaign staff, according to a copy of the email obtained by Business Insider.

Thad Cochran"If I find out anyone associated with our staff had anything to do with this it is immediate grounds for dismissal," Sojourner wrote. "We have to know we cannot engage in these attacks."

On Friday, three weeks after the photo was published, Jackson Jambalaya, a local website, posted a brief story on Kelly's arrest that did not mention any connection to Rose Cochran. The Clarion-Ledger published the first story tying Kelly's arrest to the photo of Cochran's wife Saturday morning.

Early Saturday morning, at 7:41 a.m., Sojourner left a voicemail for Kirk Sims, Cochran's campaign manager, that would provide ammunition for the Cochran campaign's claims the McDaniel camp was changing its story about Kelly.

In her voicemail, Sojourner said the McDaniel campaign doesn't "know this guy." Kelly's wife would later claim otherwise. Sojourner also said McDaniel was "very upset" about the incident, something he would contradict just hours later when he disavowed any knowledge of the story at all.

McDaniel provided even more fodder for the allegations he hasn't kept his story straight about Kelly in a radio interview Tuesday morning. In that radio appearance, McDaniel said he knew about the video containing Rose Cochran's photo when it was first published and called for it to be taken down. That would seem to contradict Sojourner's prior claims she was unaware of Kelly's activities. In the interview, McDaniel also claimed he didn't fully understand the specifics of the video. McDaniel also refused to answer whether he'd quit if a member of his staff were connected to the video.

But as Cochran's camp has repeatedly speculated about the McDaniel campaign's ties to Kelly, McDaniel has suggested Cochran has attempted to exploit the situation. 

For the past several days, McDaniel and his campaign have questioned why Cochran waited nearly three weeks to bring information of Kelly's alleged nursing-home break-in to police. Clark, the Cochrans' attorney, said he provided information to the Madison Police Department on Thursday, resulting in Kelly's subsequent arrest. 

The wait time between the initial posting of the video and Cochran's reaction has led those sympathetic to McDaniel to openly question whether the Cochran campaign "held" the information so it would come out closer to the primary. On Monday, the McDaniel campaign released a poll showing its candidate ahead of Cochran to reinforce those claims.

"You think it's a coincidence they held the nutjob blogger story 'til now?" one campaign operative close to McDaniel told Business Insider.

McDaniel supporters have also questioned the Madison Police Department and wondered whether the cops coordinated with the Cochran campaign. Erick Erickson, the editor-in-chief of the conservative political blog RedState, wrote a post Monday noting the lack of press releases from the department has issued this year before issuing a flurry of announcements on the Kelly investigation. Erickson said this disparity made him wonder if it was a "coordinated hit" on McDaniel.

Sanders, the assistant police chief, emphatically told Business Insider the suggestion his department coordinated with Cochran was "not true."

"We are concentrating solely on the criminal side," Sanders said. "Any suggestion otherwise is false."

Chris McDanielIn a statement to Business Insider, Cochran's lawyer, Clark, explained why he did not take the information to police immediately. Clark said he took his time because he was looking into both criminal and civil case options. 

"I can tell you that once Senator Cochran became aware of the video that contained an image of his wife, he asked me and our firm to represent him in pursuing whatever remedies he and his family might have," Clark said. "As we would in any similar situation, we gathered appropriate background information on his behalf and looked at his options for both civil and criminal remedies. That resulted ultimately in our contacting the appropriate law enforcement authorities on his behalf and turning this matter over to them. They have conducted their own investigation and have taken whatever actions they deemed appropriate. We have made it clear that we will continue to cooperate with them on Senator Cochran’s behalf in any way that we can."

A Cochran campaign spokesperson further told Business Insider that the campaign does not "have anything to hide" with regard to the delay in contacting the police about the video.

The primary is two weeks from Tuesday. 

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Sharing Your Netflix Password In This State Is Illegal – Plus 8 More Laws On The Books In The South

A Senate Candidate Sent His Opponent This Really, Really Intense Letter

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Chris McDaniel

The two Republican candidates in a bitter Mississippi primary escalated their feud on Wednesday, as the two campaigns continued to trade allegations after the weekend arrest of a local activist and blogger

The campaign of Chris McDaniel, a state representative and intra-party challenger to incumbent Thad Cochran, released an "open letter" from McDaniel to Cochran. The letter blasts Cochran for "shameful slander" over the past several weeks — and then things got personal.

McDaniel went on to say he has been "forced to reconsider" whether he respects Cochran as a "man of honor." He also described the senator's conduct "an embarrassment to our great state."

"Mississippi deserves better than this," McDaniel wrote. 

McDaniel also reiterated his call for Cochran to participate in a primary debate using equally emotional language.

"You have refused to come home to Mississippi and debate," McDaniel said. "Until then, I will not engage either your campaign or the liberal media in their absurd witch hunt. No matter how many press releases your campaign puts out, I will simply not stoop to your level." 

The letter comes as tensions between the two candidates have ratcheted up over the past few days. Cochran's campaign has accused McDaniel's team of being behind the actions of Clayton Thomas Kelly, a local blogger who was arrested last weekend after police said he snuck into a nursing home to snap a photo of Cochran's unsuspecting wife that was used in a video designed to fuel rumors of a romantic relationship between the senator and his executive assistant.

Meanwhile, the McDaniel campaign has denied any involvement with Kelly and accused Cochran of attempting to exploit the situation. Specifically, Cochran has faced criticism for waiting weeks after finding out about the photo before hiring an attorney, who conducted an investigation and handed over information to police three weeks later.

On Wednesday the Cochran's team hosted a press call featuring an attorney, Scott Newton, who has not worked for the campaign. Newton suggested that McDaniel, an attorney, may have violated the Mississippi Bar Association's rules of conduct by not immediately reporting Kelly's video to authorities.

"In my opinion, the Cochran campaign took the measured approach," Newton said.

On the call, Cochran spokesman Jordan Russell also rejected McDaniel's plea for a debate, saying it "wouldn't be very productive."

Read McDaniel's full letter below: 

Dear Senator Cochran, 

When I announced my candidacy for the U.S. Senate I told my supporters that I respected you as a man of honor as well as your longtime service to our state. I emphasized that I decided to run for the U.S. Senate simply because we have fundamental differences on some of the most important policy issues facing our nation today.

Sadly, the actions you campaign has recently taken have forced me to reconsider my position.

Over the past several weeks, your campaign has resorted to shameful slander, even going so far as to call me a “criminal” without a shred of evidence to back up these accusations.

No doubt, many political campaigns resort to juvenile behavior when they are down in the polls, but this kind of slander goes beyond childish pranks. It is, frankly, an embarrassment to our great state. Mississippi deserves better than this.

Senator, if you are inclined to cast aspersions on my honor and integrity then I call upon you to do it to my face in a debate forum. (We are both grown men capable of engaging in a spirited debate about our differences. There is no need to hide behind campaign surrogates.)

Many television stations across Mississippi have extended debate invitations to our campaigns and I remain more than willing to participate in any of the debates we've both been asked to join.

To date, you have refused to come home to Mississippi and debate.

Until then, I will not engage either your campaign or the liberal media in their absurd witch hunt. No matter how many press releases your campaign puts out, I will simply not stoop to your level. Win or lose, I’d like to be able to wake up on June 4th and be proud of the primary campaign I ran on behalf of Mississippi. Trailing in the polls, your campaign has made it apparent they will say and do anything to win.

Instead, we will continue to talk to voters about the issues they care about. And we will also continue to educate voters on your record, including your votes to fund Obamacare, your support for tax increases, your many votes to increase your own pay, and your support for billions of dollars in wasteful spending like the Bridge to Nowhere in Alaska.

These are legitimate issues and these are the kind of policy differences this campaign should be about. 

Sincerely,

Chris McDaniel
 Republican Candidate for U.S. Senate
 from Mississippi

 

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A Top Mississippi Tea Party Official And Two Others Have Been Arrested In Connection With The Bizarre Senate Race

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Clayton Thomas Kelly

Three more men were arrested in connection with the investigation into the alleged videotaping of the unsuspecting wife of Mississippi Republican Sen. Thad Cochran on Thursday. 

The Clarion-Ledger reported Thursday Mississippi Tea Party Vice Chairman Mark Mayfield and one other suspect were arrested in connection with the weekend arrest of Clayton Thomas Kelly, a local activist and blogger who allegedly snuck into Rose Cochran's nursing home and videotaped her. A Madison police official confirmed the arrest of Mayfield to Business Insider.

Mayfield has extensive ties with the campaign of state Sen. Chris McDaniel, the intra-party insurgent challenging Cochran in the June 3 Republican primary. His arrest will likely provide fodder for the Cochran campaign, which has accused McDaniel's team of being behind the alleged nursing-home break-in.

Madison Police said Richard Sager of Ellisville, Mississippi, and John Mary of Hattiesburg, Mississippi were the two others person arrested on Thursday. All three defendants were charged with conspiracy to photograph or film another without permission where there is an expectation of privacy. 

In a statement Thursday afternoon, McDaniel denounced the arrested parties.

"As we have said since day one, the violation of the privacy of Mrs. Cochran is out of bounds for politics and is reprehensible," McDaniel said in a statement after the arrests. "Any individuals who were involved in this crime should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law."

John Reeves, an attorney representing Mayfield, said he was charged as part of a "conspiracy" to take a photograph of Rose Cochran. Reeves said Mayfield "maintains his innocence" and said he "looks forward to getting this matter resolved in his favor." He also said Mayfield has "no connection whatsoever" to Kelly.

"This is politics at its worst," Reeves told Business Insider.

 Merrida Coxwell, another attorney representing Mayfield, did not immediately respond to emails and calls for comment. 

The McDaniel campaign's Facebook page and Mayfield's personal page both display his support for McDaniel. On April 5, McDaniel's campaign posted a photo of Mayfield and five other volunteers on Facebook.

"Here's part of a crew that reached over 500 homes walking in Madison today. Great work team!" the post said.

Mark Mayfield

Police have said Kelly was arrested after the department received information last Thursday about the "possible exploitation of a vulnerable adult resident" at the nursing home.

The resulting investigation determined the 28-year-old Kelly "illegally and improperly obtained an image of a vulnerable adult resident without their consent for his own benefit." Kelly is currently being held on $100,000 bond.

Kelly maintains a blog, "Constitutional Clayton," where he posted a video featuring the photo of Cochran's wife. It has since been removed. 

Both campaigns accused the other of using the situation for political gain. Cochran's team has accused McDaniel's camp of being involved in the scheme. Meanwhile, the McDaniel campaign has denied any involvement with Kelly and accused Cochran of attempting to exploit the situation by waiting weeks after finding out about the photo before hiring an attorney. Cochran's lawyer conducted an investigation and handed over information to police three weeks after Kelly's video was published online.

This post was originally published at 3:21 p.m. ET and has been updated to reflect new developments.

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The GOP Could Have A Huge Problem On Its Hands In The Reddest Of Red States

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Chris McDanielNational Republican Senatorial Committee Chairman Jerry Moran is not ready to commit to giving Mississippi state Sen. Chris McDaniel an endorsement if he wins the state's Republican primary.

Asked on MSNBC's "Daily Rundown" Friday about whether the NRSC would endorse McDaniel, the intra-party challenger to incumbent Sen. Thad Cochran, Moran, a Republican senator from Kansas, only said he expected Cochran to win what has become an intensely nasty and personal fight between the two candidates.

"I'll leave that for another day," Moran said, when asked if the NRSC would support McDaniel's bid if he were the nominee.

If national Republicans do not back a McDaniel's general-election bid, it could open the door for Democrats in a deep-red state. Former center-left Rep. Travis Childers is expected to secure the nomination, and Democrats believe he could compete against McDaniel.

Without the support and resources of the NRSC, Childers' odds could improve even further. That would be a huge problem for the GOP as it has sights set on taking a Senate majority — an endeavor that will require swinging six seats while holding on to all the ones they already control.

Moran's comments come after local authorities have made multiple arrests in the past week of activists who allegedly conspired to obtain a photo of Cochran's unsuspecting wife in a nursing home for use in a blog post attacking the senator. In his interview Friday, Moran hinted he was upset about the personal attacks on Cochran and his wife and expected more news to emerge about the photo. 

"What I would say is that the scandal that's brewing there — there will be a lot of news out of Mississippi over the coming days," Moran said. "I would say that Sen. Cochran is a highly respected, great representative for the state of Mississippi, has represented them well, and he has high favorable numbers in Mississippi. The only way you can defeat someone like Sen. Cochran in Mississippi is this kind of personal aspect."

MSNBC host Chuck Todd asked Moran twice more if the NRSC would support a McDaniel bid. Both times, Moran said he would have to look at all the facts of the scandal before addressing the question.

The Cochran campaign has accused the McDaniel campaign of being involved in the scheme to obtain the photo, a charge the McDaniel team denies. Cochran's team has pointed to the McDaniel campaign's shifting story about when it found out about the video, as well as its ties with some of the people arrested.

The full clip of Moran's appearance on MSNBC is below. His comments on the Mississippi Senate race begin around the 5:00 mark: 

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America's Nastiest Election Fight Hits The Airwaves

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Cochran ad

The scandal that has led many observers to dub Mississippi's GOP Senate primary one of the nastiest campaigns in the country has now been commemorated in a television ad. 

Mississippi Republican Sen. Thad Cochran unveiled his newest campaign commercial Wednesday, and it continues his efforts to tie his opponent, state Sen. Chris McDaniel, to an ongoing scandal involving a photo of Cochran's wife. 

So far, four local activists and officials have been arrested in conjunction with the photo including blogger Clayton Thomas Kelly who allegedly snuck into a nursing home to take the picture of Cochran's wife. Kelly posted the photo on his blog as part of a video designed to fuel rumors of a romantic relationship between Cochran and his executive assistant. 

One of the men arrested last week, Mississippi Tea Party Vice Chairman Mark Mayfield, has extensive ties with McDaniel and both candidates have spent the past few weeks trading accusations about the scandal back and forth. The McDaniel campaign has denied any involvement and accused Cochran of attempting to exploit the situation. 

Cochran's new ad includes a mugshot of one of the people arrested in the scandal last week and claims the "conspiracy investigation draws closer" to Mississippi state Sen. Chris McDaniel, who is Cochran's intra-party challenger. It also features photos of McDaniel with the two other officials arrested, in an apparent attempt to highlight his ties to the people being investigated in conjunction with the photo.

A spokesman for Cochran said the ad will run statewide on broadcast and cable in the final week before the primary, which is scheduled for June 3.

Meanwhile, the McDaniel campaign released its own ad on Wednesday touting the endorsement of former Alaska Gov. and Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin. Palin narrates that ad, which runs for 60 seconds. 

Here's the Cochran campaign's ad:

SEE ALSO: This Is The Single Nastiest Campaign Fight In America

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The Nastiest Election In America Could End Tonight

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Clayton Thomas Kelly

A nasty, scandalous, mudslinging race strategists on both sides have called the most vicious election fight in America could come to an end Tuesday night, as Republican primary voters head to the polls. Or it could drag on for a few more weeks — something that could be very bad news for Republicans.

So far, four local activists and officials have been arrested in conjunction with Mississippi's Senate Republican primary. The men were allegedly involved in a conspiracy to photograph the unsuspecting wife of Republican incumbent Sen. Thad Cochran. And the Cochran campaign has repeatedly attempted to tie the scandal to the his Tea Party insurgent challenger, state Sen. Chris McDaniel, as the race goes down to the wire.

Almost three weeks ago, police say, local blogger Clayton Thomas Kelly allegedly snuck into a nursing home to take the picture of Cochran's wife, who has been in the home since 2000 with early onset dementia. Kelly posted the photo on his blog as part of a video designed to fuel rumors of a romantic relationship between Cochran and his executive assistant. 

One of the arrested men, Mississippi Tea Party Vice Chairman Mark Mayfield, has extensive ties with McDaniel. Both candidates have spent the past few weeks trading accusations about the scandal back and forth. The McDaniel campaign has denied any involvement and accused Cochran of attempting to exploit the situation. 

"I've never seen anything like it," one 20-year campaign veteran aligned with the Cochran campaign told Business Insider of the campaign fight. "You'd be hard-pressed to find anything worse in the entire country."

After all of this feuding, the race likely won't be decided when the polls close at 8 p.m. ET Tuesday night. 

The Real Clear Politics average of recent surveys conducted on the race show it in a dead heat, 42.5-42.5. And if it stays that way, that would mean a runoff where Cochran and McDaniel slug it out for three more weeks. To avoid this scenario, one of the candidates would need to capture more than 50% of the vote. With polls where they are and a third Republican candidate, Thomas Carey, the chance of a runoff being avoided are growing slimmer.

In that case, the nightmare for the Republican establishment could grow. Those close to McDaniel privately admit they would love a runoff. Democrats would love it too — it would mean three more weeks of GOP brawling.

Democrats would also much rather face McDaniel than Cochran. A McDaniel win, which would be much more likely in a runoff with less turnout, could theoretically put the seat in play for centrist Democratic candidate Travis Childers, a former U.S. congressman. Even being forced to pour resources into Mississippi would serve as a hindrance toward Republicans' hopes of taking a Senate majority in the midterm elections this year. 

"A McDaniel win is the best-case scenario for Democrats," one Democratic strategist told Business Insider.

A spokesperson for the National Republican Senatorial Committee didn't respond to a question seeking comment on whether the committee would endorse McDaniel in a general-election race, something its chairman refused to do on television late last month. The spokesperson said the race would be "very close," depending on higher turnout that stands to benefit Cochran.

This post was updated at 1:28 p.m. ET.

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The Nastiest Election Fight In America Is Heading For A Runoff After A Frantic Night

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Chris McDaniel

There was no outright winner in the Mississippi Republican Senate primary, as the two candidates barreled early Wednesday morning toward a head-to-head runoff. 

Neither incumbent GOP Sen. Thad Cochran nor his intra-party challenger, the Tea Party-favorite state Sen. Chris McDaniel, had crossed the 50% threshold as of 7:30 a.m. ET Wednesday morning. McDaniel led Cochran by the slimmest of margins — 49.6% to 48.9%, or just more than 2,000 votes — with 99% of the vote tallied.

Cochran and McDaniel have gone back and forth in a nasty, scandalous, mudslinging race strategists on both sides have called the most vicious election fight in America. Unless the remaining 2% of votes swing heavily in McDaniel's favor, the fight looks set to drag on for three more weeks in a runoff election.

"Yep," Cochran campaign manager Jordan Russell said when asked if the race was headed to a runoff.

Cochran did not come out and speak to supporters early Wednesday morning, a move that seemed to baffle observers. McDaniel addressed his supporters only briefly, painting even his current position — "leading a 42-year incumbent" Cochran — as historic. He said the campaign would likely know Wednesday whether it would be headed to a runoff.

"Whether it’s [Wednesday], or whether it’s three weeks from tonight, we will stand victorious in this race," he said.

Three more weeks of the race in Mississippi would be welcome news for the McDaniel campaign — and for Democrats. Those close to McDaniel have privately admitted they would love a runoff. Democrats would love it too — it would mean three more weeks of GOP brawling.

Democrats would also much rather face McDaniel than Cochran. A McDaniel win, which would be much more likely in a runoff with less turnout, could theoretically put the seat in play for centrist Democratic candidate Travis Childers, a former U.S. congressman. Childers easily won his primary race Tuesday night.

Even being forced to pour resources into Mississippi would serve as a hindrance toward Republicans' hopes of taking a Senate majority in the midterm elections this year. 

"A McDaniel win is the best-case scenario for Democrats," one Democratic strategist told Business Insider earlier Tuesday.

The National Republican Senatorial Committee said in a statement early Wednesday morning that it would continue to "fully support" Cochran.

This post has been updated.

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