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Voters head to polls in hotly contested MS race

ROUGH CUT (NO REPORTER NARRATION) Voters in Mississippi on Tuesday are heading to the polls to decide a U.S. Senate special election runoff marked by racial controversy and capped by a last-minute visit by President Donald Trump to shore up the beleaguered Republican incumbent.

Senator Cindy Hyde-Smith, a white former state lawmaker who was appointed to the seat in April, is still favored over black Democrat Mike Espy in the reliably Republican state, which has not sent a Democrat to the U.S. Senate since 1982.

But she has been engulfed in a political storm since a video surfaced showing her praising a supporter at a Nov.

2 public event by saying: "If he invited me to a public hanging, I'd be on the front row." The comment caused an uproar in Mississippi, a deep South state with a history of racism and violence against blacks, including lynchings.

Several businesses, including giant retailer Walmart, demanded that she return their donations.

Hyde-Smith was also shown on another video joking about suppressing liberal student votes, and photographs have surfaced of her posing with Confederate artifacts in 2014.

Espy, a former congressman and U.S. agriculture secretary, gained new momentum from the furor in a state where 38 percent of residents are African-American.




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