Republican-led Mississippi Legislature begins 4-year term with new leadership in the House

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — The Republican-controlled Mississippi Legislature began its annual session Tuesday, as all members were sworn in for a four-year term and the House chose new leaders after the previous speaker chose not to seek reelection.
Rep. Jason White of West secured promises of support from his Republican colleagues weeks ago to become the next House speaker, and he was elected Tuesday with bipartisan support. He succeeds Republican Philip Gunn of Clinton, who held the leadership post for the past 12 years.
Addressing the House moments after taking his oath as speaker, White urged Republicans and Democrats to treat each other with dignity and respect.
White was speaker pro tempore under Gunn, the second-highest leadership post in the 122-member House. Republican Rep. Manly Barton of Moss Point will be the new speaker pro tem. In that role, he will be a close adviser to White and will preside over the House when White is away.
Republican Gov. Tate Reeves will be inaugurated Jan. 9, beginning his second term in that job after previously serving as state treasurer and lieutenant governor.
Reeves is pushing legislators to eliminate the state income tax, saying that will help Mississippi compete with Florida and Texas, which don’t tax personal income. In 2022, legislators and Reeves enacted Mississippi’s largest-ever tax cut, which reduces the income tax over four years beginning in 2023.
“We may well get to the elimination of the income tax, probably at the rate we’re going faster than they proposed last time, by doing it in a cogent, fiscally responsible way versus some political statement,” Hosemann said last month.
Conservative groups are pushing “school choice” plans, which could allow parents to send their children to other public schools outside their attendance zone if those schools accept the students, or could allow public money to go toward private schools or homeschooling.
Legislators could consider reviving a way for people to petition to put issues on the statewide ballot. In 2021, the Mississippi Supreme Court ruled that the state’s initiative process was invalid because it required people to gather signatures from five outdated congressional districts rather than the four current districts.
For the first time, they could also give serious consideration to expanding Medicaid to people who work in jobs that provide modest wages and no health insurance.
The new House speaker said he wants legislators to get a firm idea of how many people could become eligible for Medicaid coverage if it’s expanded. White also said he wants to talk to business leaders about whether they could cover part of the state’s cost.
“It’s got to be something we can afford and that makes sense,” White told The Associated Press last week. “We are one of the poor states, if not the poorest. It’s foolish for us to not figure out a way to make this work.”