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On my FAFO Friday episode of The Clay Edwards Show, I tackled a heated story out of Gulfport, Mississippi, where the Mississippi Republican Party, led by Chairman Mike Hurst, accused Democratic mayoral candidate Sonya Williams Barnes of vote-buying ahead of the June 3, 2025, election. Broadcasting from Flora on 103.9 FM WYAB, I dug into the GOP’s claims that Barnes’ campaign violated Mississippi law by offering meal vouchers—worth about $10 at Ms. Audrey’s Southern Kitchen—for absentee votes and hosting a “Vote & Vibe Day Party” with free brunch for voters. Hurst called it “illegal, immoral, and un-American,” citing video evidence of vouchers handed out at City Hall. I noted the Attorney General’s office, under Lynn Fitch, is investigating, believing Barnes may have broken campaign finance laws. A local pastor, Eddie Hartwell Sr., claimed the vouchers were his idea to boost voting, not tied to any candidate, but I questioned the timing, just days before the election against Republican Hugh Keating. I pointed out past similar controversies in 2005 and 2010, deemed legal then, but the GOP’s pushing hard, with Hurst demanding vigilance. Barnes denied wrongdoing, calling it a GOP scare tactic, while my callers and I leaned skeptical, seeing it as Democrats possibly exploiting Gulfport’s shifting demographics to flip the seat.
By Clay Edwards4.5
105105 ratings
On my FAFO Friday episode of The Clay Edwards Show, I tackled a heated story out of Gulfport, Mississippi, where the Mississippi Republican Party, led by Chairman Mike Hurst, accused Democratic mayoral candidate Sonya Williams Barnes of vote-buying ahead of the June 3, 2025, election. Broadcasting from Flora on 103.9 FM WYAB, I dug into the GOP’s claims that Barnes’ campaign violated Mississippi law by offering meal vouchers—worth about $10 at Ms. Audrey’s Southern Kitchen—for absentee votes and hosting a “Vote & Vibe Day Party” with free brunch for voters. Hurst called it “illegal, immoral, and un-American,” citing video evidence of vouchers handed out at City Hall. I noted the Attorney General’s office, under Lynn Fitch, is investigating, believing Barnes may have broken campaign finance laws. A local pastor, Eddie Hartwell Sr., claimed the vouchers were his idea to boost voting, not tied to any candidate, but I questioned the timing, just days before the election against Republican Hugh Keating. I pointed out past similar controversies in 2005 and 2010, deemed legal then, but the GOP’s pushing hard, with Hurst demanding vigilance. Barnes denied wrongdoing, calling it a GOP scare tactic, while my callers and I leaned skeptical, seeing it as Democrats possibly exploiting Gulfport’s shifting demographics to flip the seat.

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