Delbert Hosemann | Jackson Free Press | Jackson, MS

Delbert Hosemann

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Secretary of State of Delbert Hosemann doesn't think Mississippi will get a fair hearing on voter ID.

Because of Mississippi's sordid history of trying to stop black people from voting, the U.S. Justice Department has to OK changes to voting laws in the state, including a recently adopted requirement that voters prove their identity before casting ballots on Election Day.

Secretary of State and voter ID booster Delbert Hosemann doesn't think Mississippi can get an impartial review of its voting mandate.

As an example Hosemann held a press conference today to talk about an April 29 posting from blogger J. Christian Adams on conservative political website PJMedia.com. The post reported that the site "has obtained Facebook postings from Department of Justice Voting Section employees demonstrating contempt" for Mississippi and others states that have implemented voter identification requirements at the polls.

According to the site, the alleged DOJ employee posted on the social networking site: "'Mississippi: Disgusting and Shameful.'... forget the magnolia state motto."

The site doesn't give the context surrounding the alleged statement nor does it provide a screenshot of the alleged Facebook page. Hosemann, a Republican who pushed hard for the voter ID ballot initiative during last year's election campaign, told reporters this morning that he talked to the employee, who he identified as Stephanie Celandine Gyamfi. Her LinkedIn profile states that she is a lead analyst for the DOJ and a 14-year employee of the agency.

"I asked if (the comments) were accurate. She told me those comments were taken out of context, and I should consider the source of those particular comments. The source was Christopher Adams, who's a former attorney with the Civil Rights Division of the United States Justice Department," Hosemann said at a press conference at the Capitol this morning that was attended by a throng of Tea Party supporters.

Based on the blog comments and the Justice Department's denial of voter ID laws in South Carolina and Texas, Hosemann isn't sure Mississippi will get a fair hearing.

"This is not my father's father's Mississippi," Hosemann said of the state's past treatment of would-be African American voters. He insisted that the state had made great strides to improve race relations and that he invited Justice Department officials to visit the Magnolia State.

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