- Associated Press - Friday, January 3, 2020

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) - Republican U.S. Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith of Mississippi filed papers Friday to run for reelection, emphasizing her loyalty to President Donald Trump on border security and other issues.

Speaking to more than 100 supporters at the state GOP headquarters, Hyde-Smith recalled how she backed Trump’s nomination of Brett Kavanaugh to the U.S. Supreme Court in 2018, when Kavanaugh faced accusations of sexual misconduct as a young man.

“Guys, we got through that, and right won,” Hyde-Smith said.

She said Trump told her that she “went through the fire” for Kavanaugh, and she said she told the president that he goes through fire all the time.

“You know what we’ve got to do? We’ve got to march through that fire,” Hyde-Smith said. “We cannot let the liberals win.”

A Democratic challenger in this year’s Senate race, Mike Espy, has been reminding voters about a “public hanging” comment Hyde-Smith made in 2018 that dredged up Mississippi’s painful racist history.

Hyde-Smith was the state agriculture commissioner when Republican Gov. Phil Bryant appointed her in early 2018 to temporarily succeed longtime Sen. Thad Cochran Cochran, who retired amid health concerns. She is the first woman to represent Mississippi in Congress.

Bryant leaves office when his second term ends Jan. 14. He tweeted Thursday that he will campaign for Hyde-Smith this year “as if the fate of America depended on her single election. If Mike Espy and the liberal Democrats gain the Senate we will take that first step into a thousand years of darkness.”

Espy is a former U.S. House member and former U.S. agriculture secretary. He lost to Hyde-Smith in a November 2018 special election to fill the last two years of Cochran’s six-year term.

That campaign was rocked by a video showing Hyde-Smith, who is white, praising a supporter by saying she’d attend a “public hanging” if the man invited her. She called it an “exaggerated expression of regard.”

The comment made Mississippi’s history of lynching a central campaign theme. Espy announced weeks ago that he would run for the Senate again this year, emphasizing his role as Mississippi’s first black congressman since Reconstruction.

“We can’t continue the change we need if we have a senator who openly laughs about public hangings and makes statements supporting voter suppression,” Espy said in his announcement.

Hyde-Smith said Friday that she’s not bothered by confrontation.

“I told the president, ‘We can say there’s more than one way to skin a cat,’” Hyde-Smith said, then added, as if quoting critics: “’Oh, my God, they abuse animals, too.’”

If elected, Espy would become Mississippi’s first African American U.S. senator since Reconstruction. He said he wants to reduce poverty, make health care more affordable, increase well-paying jobs, improve schools and end Trump’s trade war that’s pressuring farmers financially.

Candidates’ qualifying period in Mississippi started Thursday and ends Jan. 10. The state’s U.S. House, Senate and presidential primaries are March 10. If primary runoffs are needed, they will be March 31.

It’s unclear if Hyde-Smith will have any opposition in the Republican primary. She has focused on rural issues and opposition to abortion. Mississippi’s other Republican U.S. senator, Roger Wicker, stood by her Friday and said they are “teammates.”

Trump campaigned for Hyde-Smith in Mississippi in 2018, and he praised her when he held a rally in 2019 in Tupelo, days ahead of Mississippi’s gubernatorial election.

“Cindy Hyde-Smith - she’s incredible,” Trump said. “She’s tough and smart and strong, and she’s with us all the way.”

Federal Election Commission documents show Espy raised nearly $100,000 through Sept. 30 and had $131,000 on hand, while Hyde-Smith raised more than $983,000 and had $583,000 on hand.

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Follow Emily Wagster Pettus on Twitter: http://twitter.com/EWagsterPettus.

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