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Home Happenings

Mississippi is on the cusp a great change – if we can overcome inertia

Sue Honea by Sue Honea
January 13, 2025
in Happenings, Out & About
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Charter School Authorizer Board Decision – And What it Means for School Choice
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Another week, another massive investment project was unveiled in Mississippi.  On Thursday, Governor Tate Reeves announced that a $10 Billion data center is coming to Meridian. One deal alone isn’t proof that the economy is taking off, but it does add to a pile of evidence suggesting that Mississippi could be on the cusp of a new era of growth.  If Mississippi keeps going the way data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis suggests we are moving, this state won’t be 50th out of 50 for much longer.

Is it too far-fetched to imagine young people wanting to move to Oxford, Starkville, Laurel, or the Coast, the way they currently want to go to Austin or Nashville?

Encouraging, too, is Mississippi’s political leadership at the start of the new legislative session.

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Income tax abolition, essential if we are to be competitive, is now the number one priority for the Governor and the Speaker, Jason White. School choice, the only sure fire way to improve education standards and prepare young people for the world of work, is on Speaker White’s priority list for this legislative session. Removing red tape, particularly as it restricts the healthcare economy, is also being actively considered, with the State Board of Health firmly committed to change.

These changes are essential if our state is to seize this once-in-a-generation opportunity.  But even now the forces of inertia are trying to stop change.  If they succeed, Mississippi will stall.

(Almost) everyone now says they support income tax elimination.  Yet some are quite clearly only paying lip service to the idea, desperately seeking to avoid passing legislation this session that commits to actual elimination.  At the same time, they talk up the idea of cutting the grocery tax as a deliberate distraction strategy, knowing full well that cutting the income tax would have vastly more impact.

While Mississippi considers school choice, we are surrounded by states that are actually doing it.  Tennessee is in the process of passing the legislation this week. Yet the forces of inertia in Mississippi say we need more time to consider Education Savings Accounts.  Really?  Can you not look across the state line at Arkansas or Alabama to see how it is transforming education for the better?  Perhaps your call for “more time” just an excuse?

Maybe, like the disgraceful School Superintendent in Madison County did this week, the forces of inertia circulate false claims about school choice?  (No, public to public school choice does not take away local tax dollars, since it only involves the state portion of the budget.  No, private schools do not lack accountability.  They are more accountable than any public school.)

The sort of misleading claims made by the Madison School Superintendent are attempts to prevent change by those that think they, not pesky parents, know best for your child. The forces of inertia are also lobbying aggressively in the legislature to kill off reforms that will remove health care regulation that intentionally limits the number of providers. The truth is that for years all of those against lower taxes, less regulation and opposed to school choice in our state have been able to get their way.  That is why Mississippi has not grown the way Alabama or Texas have. I’m optimistic that this time the forces of inertia can be overcome.  Why?

Firstly, it is increasingly obvious that Mississippi could be doing things differently.  You only need to look across the river at Arkansas under Sarah Huckabee Sanders (tax cuts, school choice, red tape removal), or Alabama (ditto), or at almost any southern state to see it. Secondly, Trump.  The 47th President is committed to tax cuts, red tape reduction and school choice.  This will help tilt opinion in our state.

Imagine for a moment that you are a local Republican party office holder keen to catch the eye of the new White House administration.  Perhaps you want an appointment or some kind of endorsement?  Do you really imagine Donald J. Trump would pick you out in such a crowded field if you have been anti-tax cuts?  Do you honestly think Team Trump would say, “Yes, Mr. President, this local guy in Mississippi who killed off School Choice is our guy”? If nothing else, self-interest will move the dial towards the right agenda in Mississippi over the next four years.

Finally, I think inertia can be overcome because of Elon Musk.

Something weird has happened since Elon bought X / Twitter.  Politics is now increasingly unfiltered.  Even if you are one of a majority of folk that don’t use X, you will have felt the effect of this form of unfiltered politics. The forces of inertia can be petulant.  They can lobby and bully to try to stop change.  But they cannot any longer escape the consequences of trying to stop change. Cheer up!  2025 is going to be awesome.  Mississippi is on the cusp a great change.

Douglas is President and CEO of the Mississippi Center for Public Policy

 

MageeNews.com is the online news source for Simpson and surrounding counties as well as the State of Mississippi

Tags: #incomeTaxAbolition#MSPublicPolicydouglasCarswellMageeNews.com
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