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In a lively June 3, 2025, interview on The Clay Edwards Show, Zach Servis, an independent candidate for Jackson, Mississippi’s mayor, pitched his transformative vision on election day. Speaking with raw conviction, Servis urged voters to back him for a fundamental overhaul of the city’s mismanaged, corrupt administration. He highlighted decades of poor decision-making and recent theft by officials, positioning himself as a trustworthy outsider who’s never lied to voters. Servis touted his track record of exposing issues, like revealing a hidden deputy public works director, proving his impact without mayoral power. He promised accountability, readiness to act on day one, and a no-nonsense approach to governance, vowing to reassign or oust underperforming officials. Addressing prison labor, Servis revealed he’d already proposed a community service ordinance to pay off misdemeanors, which Mayor Lumumba delayed but later adopted. His candid, unfiltered style and commitment to transparency earned host Clay Edwards’ respect, who predicted Servis could siphon votes from frontrunner John Horhn, potentially swinging the race. Servis’ bold, anti-establishment rhetoric and focus on systemic change resonated as a call to disrupt Jackson’s stagnant politics.
By Clay Edwards4.5
105105 ratings
In a lively June 3, 2025, interview on The Clay Edwards Show, Zach Servis, an independent candidate for Jackson, Mississippi’s mayor, pitched his transformative vision on election day. Speaking with raw conviction, Servis urged voters to back him for a fundamental overhaul of the city’s mismanaged, corrupt administration. He highlighted decades of poor decision-making and recent theft by officials, positioning himself as a trustworthy outsider who’s never lied to voters. Servis touted his track record of exposing issues, like revealing a hidden deputy public works director, proving his impact without mayoral power. He promised accountability, readiness to act on day one, and a no-nonsense approach to governance, vowing to reassign or oust underperforming officials. Addressing prison labor, Servis revealed he’d already proposed a community service ordinance to pay off misdemeanors, which Mayor Lumumba delayed but later adopted. His candid, unfiltered style and commitment to transparency earned host Clay Edwards’ respect, who predicted Servis could siphon votes from frontrunner John Horhn, potentially swinging the race. Servis’ bold, anti-establishment rhetoric and focus on systemic change resonated as a call to disrupt Jackson’s stagnant politics.

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