0

McQuirter, Greer Wins Signal Change for Hinds Board

Darrel McQuirter (left) and Tony Greer's (right) walloping of their opponents for two seats on the Hinds County Board of Supervisors could be a game changer for the five-member board.

Darrel McQuirter (left) and Tony Greer's (right) walloping of their opponents for two seats on the Hinds County Board of Supervisors could be a game changer for the five-member board.

Darrel McQuirter and Tony Greer's walloping of their opponents for two seats on the Hinds County Board of Supervisors could be a game changer for the five-member board.

Unofficial results show that McQuirter, the director of the county's planning and zoning division, bested current interim Supervisor Alphonso Hunter 74.5 percent to Hunter's 24.2 percent to serve out the remainder of late Supervisor Doug Anderson's term.

McQuirter was the Democrat in the race; Hunter sought the seat as an Independent.

Tony Greer, a Clinton alderman and Republican, secured the District 4 slot vacated when Phil Fisher won election as mayor of Clinton this summer. Despite the presence of four contenders that raised the possibility of a runoff, Greer collected 70 percent of the vote to Democrat James "Lap" Baker's 17 percent.

JFP Talks to Darrel McQuirter

Read an interview with District 2 Hinds County supervisor candidate Darrel McQuirter

Two Independents—James Ira Duke and Dan Smith—garnered about 13 percent of votes together in the special election where turnout was low, with just 13.7 percent of the 63,222 registered voters casting ballots Nov. 5.

The race took a divisive turn in the days preceding the election as flyers attempting to paint McQuirter as an agent of the Tea Party and Ku Klux Klan began showing up around town. The flyers zeroed in on McQuirter's ties to Clinton Republicans, whom the flyers called racist. McQuirter and Hunter denounced the flyers.

Throughout his campaign, McQuirter did tout his support from Clinton officials with whom he worked during his time as a city of Clinton employee. These included Fisher and former Mayor Rosemary Aultman.

Greer also expressed optimism for McQuirer's bid. Overnight, Greer posted a photograph of himself and McQuirter and a message that states: "Victory! … This picture says it all. Darrel McQuirter for Supervisor District 2 and I won our races. He got 76% and I got 70%. Both mandates."

The election will likely tip the scales of power on the board of supervisors, where board President Robert Graham and Vice President Kenneth Stokes now run the show. Along with Hunter, the three men have had the votes to do whatever they want on spending as well as on hiring and firing of employees.

Hunter had the support of District 5's Stokes, who, along with his wife, Jackson Councilwoman LaRita Cooper-Stokes, have created an effective turnout machine in Ward 3, part of which lies in Hinds County's District 2.

District 2 also represents a crucial swing vote on the county board, where Stokes and Graham are often allied and the District 4 supervisor often allies with Peggy Hobson Calhoun of District 3.

Comments

JLucas 10 years, 5 months ago

Congratulations to Mr. McQuirter and Alderman Greer on their well deserved victories. Mr. McQuirter in particular, given the fact he won 3 elections despite running against a well orchestrated grassroots political machine run by Stokes and his sychophants. The voters of Hinds have finally had their say and I am so thankful that the usual forces of miseducation, ignorance, and racial division that have kept Stokes in office for over 20 years weren’t enough to derail his campaign.

And then there's this:

“Hunter had the support of District 5's Stokes...”

For this fact alone Stokes should be tossed out on his fat behind in the next election. An elected Democrat shamelessly campaigning for an “independent” (LOL yeah right) against the rightfully nominated Democrat. Even Rep. Thompson wasn't willing to cross that line. If Hunter had any integrity he would have saved the county a few nickels and honored his pledge not to run like Mr. Walker (who i have way more respect for, especially given his professional approach as an interim)

0

Sign in to comment