Greenwood Commonwealth. February 14, 2023.
Editorial: Somebody Grab Favre’s Shovel
There is an old saying about crisis management: When you’re in a hole, stop digging.
Now there is a 2023 footnote to that old saying: Somebody needs to take Brett Favre’s shovel away, because the hole he’s digging just keeps getting deeper.
The former NFL quarterback, who is wrapped up in Mississippi’s ongoing welfare fraud scandal, has sued State Auditor Shad White and two members of the national sports media, Shannon Sharpe and Pat McAfee. Favre accuses all three of defaming him.
The lawsuit against White claims he has “carried out an outrageous media campaign of malicious and false accusations” against Favre in order to further the auditor’s political career.
The lawsuit against Sharpe is based on the former NFL tight end’s critical remarks on an ESPN show he co-hosts. The claim against McAfee, another retired pro football player who hosts a popular sports podcast, is based on comments he made about Favre on his show and on his Twitter account.
Sharpe, according to the lawsuit, said on his ESPN show that Favre’s involvement in the allocation of welfare money for projects that didn’t help the poor was stealing “from the lowest of the low.” Citing a text message uncovered by Mississippi Today, in which Favre asked if there was any way the media would find out what was going on, Sharpe said anyone asking that knows they’re doing something wrong.
McAfee, according to the lawsuit against him, stated on his podcast that Favre was stealing from poor people in Mississippi.
Honestly, if Favre is in the mood for litigation, he ought to cut to the chase and sue Mississippi Today — for doing a good job of looking after public funds. The news organization uncovered all the wrongdoing with welfare money and made it plain that the people who were supposed to make sure it got spent properly were not bothering to do so.
Favre stands very little chance of winning these lawsuits. He has been a public figure for more than 30 years, and the legal bar of defaming him will be high. Plus, his involvement in the welfare case, based on Mississippi Today’s reporting, is plain to see.
Attorneys for White, Sharpe and McAfee will get to depose Favre — ask him questions under oath in advance of any trial. Given what has been made public about the welfare misspending, it’s stunning that Favre is willing to be questioned about this in an adversarial situation. He seems intent on digging a deeper hole.
The defendants are sure to be adversarial. White’s spokesman said in response to the lawsuit that everything White has said about the case is true, and is backed up by work from employees in his office. The spokesman also noted Favre has repaid some of the money the Audit Department demanded from him, and that there is “clear documentary evidence showing he benefited from misspent funds.”
It’s just hard to see how these lawsuits will help Favre rebuild his reputation.
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Vicksburg Post. February 10, 2023.
Editorial: Postpartum Medicaid expansion should be a ‘no-brainer’
Once again, it seems like a simple proposition.
Should health care coverage for Mississippi mothers on Medicaid be extended to a full year after they give birth to a child?
That’s the proposal before Mississippi legislators this session. While many of the lawmakers have expressed support for expanding Medicaid services, efforts to pass the measure in both the Senate and the House are hampered by politics.
It’s frustrating enough that Mississippi is one of only 11 states that has not expanded Medicaid. But knowing that among those 11 holdout states Mississippi is only one of two states that has not expanded pregnancy coverage? Well, that’s shameful.
Nearly six in 10 births in Mississippi are covered by Medicaid. And those mothers are facing the uphill battles of poverty, limited access to health care, and living in a state with the nation’s highest infant mortality rate and one of the nation’s highest maternal mortality rates.
In what should be, as one state lawmaker said, a “no-brainer,” the legislation remains stalled by politics.
Last year, the state Senate passed the legislation, endorsed by Senators on both sides of the aisle. This year, the Senate has held hearings with health care experts to continue to sound the alarm about the maternal mortality crisis in our state. The state Senate passed Postpartum Medicaid Expansion on Tuesday.
But the legislation hit a political wall in the House, where Speaker Philip Gunn, R-Clinton, remains adamantly opposed to any sort of legislation he believes hints at Medicaid expansion.
And now, despite bipartisan support for the expansion, Mississippi still has not taken action to help support some of the most fragile and needy residents of our state.
Last week, Mississippi Today undertook a poll of all 174 state lawmakers to find out just where they stand on the issue; not surprisingly, the poll confirms statewide bipartisan support for the measure.
Sen. Briggs Hopson, R-Vicksburg, responded that he was in support of the measure, as did Rep. Oscar Denton, D-Vicksburg. Rep. Kevin Ford, R-Vicksburg, did not respond to the poll.
We suspect if this same poll was conducted among the voters of Mississippi, most would support expanding postpartum health care coverage under Medicaid as well.
But public opinion polls are no match for politics, as we’ve learned the hard way in our state. And once again, a seemingly “no-brainer” solution to a critical problem escapes our grasp.
We will say it again: Mississippians deserve state leaders willing to put aside partisan politics to focus on finding solutions. And while that might not be simple to do, it’s absolutely necessary.
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