Michael Guest wins open U.S. House seat for 3rd Congressional District
Published 11:56 pm Tuesday, November 6, 2018
JACKSON (AP) — A Republican prosecutor has won an open seat representing Mississippi in the U.S. House of Representatives.
Michael Guest, a longtime district attorney in suburban Jackson, defeated Democrat Michael Ted Evans of Preston and Reform Party member Matthew Holland in Mississippi’s 3rd Congressional District on Tuesday.
Winning a competitive Republican primary, Guest supported higher infrastructure spending, immigration changes, and more consumer choice in health care.
Evans ran as a populist-but-conservative Democrat who voiced distaste for Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi and opposes abortion. He opposed President Donald Trump’s trade policies and supported broader health coverage.
The district has been represented for the last 10 years by the retiring Gregg Harper. Like Guest, he’s a Rankin County Republican. The district runs diagonally across 24 counties from Natchez through the Jackson suburbs and farther northeast to Starkville.
Kelly wins second term
Republican U.S. Rep. Trent Kelly has won a second full term in a north Mississippi congressional seat, defeating Democratic challenger Randy Wadkins.
Kelly, a former district attorney, first won election to Congress from the 1st District in 2015 after U.S. Rep. Alan Nunnelee died. Kelly heavily outraised Wadkins, a University of Mississippi chemistry professor.
Kelly, a Mississippi National Guard general, emphasized support for higher military spending. He also wants to keep decreasing regulations and supports President Donald Trump on trade.
Wadkins entered the race citing disagreements with Kelly and Trump, especially over health care. Wadkins supported plans for government-funded health insurance for all Americans.
The 22-county district stretches from suburbs of Memphis, Tennessee, to Tupelo and Columbus. Also running was Reform Party member Tracella Lou O’Hara Hill.
Palazzo wins re-election
U.S. Rep. Steven Palazzo has won a fifth term in the U.S. House.
Palazzo defeated state Rep. Jeramey Anderson and Reform Party member Lajena Sheets on Tuesday.
First elected in 2010, Palazzo touted support for military spending in a district where the largest employer is military shipbuilder Ingalls Shipbuilding. He urged voters to re-elect him as a show of support to President Donald Trump.
Anderson had called for broader health coverage, an increased minimum wage, and less punitive criminal sentencing.
Palazzo raised nearly $700,000 since 2017 began, compared to $131,000 for Anderson.
The district covers 14 counties from Laurel to the Gulf Coast.
Thompson wins 13th term
Democrat Bennie Thompson of Mississippi cruised to his 13th full term in the U.S. House of Representatives.
Thompson won the race in the 2nd District, which spans 26 counties including the Mississippi Delta and parts of the Jackson area, overcoming independent Troy Ray and Reform Party candidate Irving Harris.
A Hinds County supervisor before he was first elected in 1993, the 70-year-old Thompson is in line to become chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee if Democrats retake the majority in Congress.
Thompson, arguably the most powerful African-American politician in Mississippi, has emerged as a frequent critic of President Donald Trump.
The incumbent raised nearly $900,000 over the last two years a Federal Election Commission report shows, while neither Ray nor Harris filed campaign finance reports.