Archives
 By  Staff Reports Published 
1:36 pm Tuesday, May 7, 2002

Reorganizing the Legislature

By By Terry R. Cassreino / assistant managing editor
May 5, 2002
Jim Herring has a plan one that undoubtedly is of interest to anyone who follows Mississippi state government and the Legislature.
The chairman of the Mississippi Republican Party is eying next year's legislative elections, hoping to increase the number of GOP members in the state House and Senate.
Then, if successful, he wants to see both chambers organize along party lines much like the U.S. Congress with the dominant party controlling all leadership positions.
For example, Democrats today would control every major post in the state House and Senate because the Democratic Party holds the majority of seats in both bodies.
Republicans, the minority party in the state Legislature, wouldn't be able to hold committee chairmanships or serve as House speaker of Senate vice president.
The theory, Herring said, is that Mississippians would experience a full debate on important issues by hearing both the Democratic and Republican sides.
The danger, though, is that Republicans risk being left out of the mix rendered ineffective by Democratic leaders currently uninterested in organizing along party lines.
Let's look, for a minute, at the Mississippi Legislature.
The House has 122 members: 86 Democrats, 33 Republicans and three independents. The Senate has 52 members: 34 Democrats and 18 Republicans.
Tim Ford, a Democrat from Baldwyn, manages the House as speaker. Amy Tuck, the Democratic lieutenant governor, manages the Senate as its president.
Ford and Tuck appoint House and Senate committee chairmen. They, in turn, control the fate of proposals lawmakers sponsor deciding whether or not they will be debated.
Even though Ford and Tuck are Democrats, they still have placed high-profile Republicans in top leadership posts in the House and Senate giving the GOP a strong presence.
Republicans chair the Insurance, Public Health and Environmental Protection committees in the Senate. They also chair the Conservation, Municipalities and Fees and Salaries committees in the House.
Republicans admittedly don't control the Senate and House budget-writing and tax-writing committees. But the Democrats who do control those panels have had years of legislative experience.
Any talk of organizing the House and Senate along party lines likely would anger Democrats in charge, especially since they believe they've gone out of their way to be inclusive.
The result: Democrats could ignore the Republicans, give them measly assignments and relegate them to the back row.
That almost happened in the early 1990s when Kirk Fordice became the first GOP governor since Reconstruction and began trying to polarize Republicans and Democrats in the Legislature.
Democrats considered organizing the House and Senate on party lines. But after weeks of behind-the-scene talks, they backed off mainly because of what they had seen in Congress.
Legislative leaders didn't want to see Mississippi become a place of gridlock, a Capitol divided by extremes. They wanted to keep an organization in place that had worked so well for so many years.
Now, though, Mississippi Democrats could feel they are being pushed against the proverbial wall if top Republicans begin actively touting reorganization.
And if the Democrats reorganized, they could do what they almost did in the early 1990s shut the Republicans out.
But Herring said he believes reorganization is the only way to have a full debate of issues instead of a turf battle between the legislative and executive branches.
If the Democrats try to shut-out Republicans, he said, that's fine.

Also on Franklin County Times
Tiffin Motorhomes to produce new line
Main, News, Red Bay, ...
By Brady Petree For the FCT 
February 18, 2026
RED BAY — Tiffin Motorhomes is slated to open a new production line in Red Bay, according to Tiffin’s parent company, THOR Industries. Beginning May 1...
Dealer: Gold content not suitable for everyday use
Main, News, Z - News Main
By Addi Broadfoot For the FCT 
February 18, 2026
The push for a new $2.50 anniversary coin is raising logistical and economic questions, particularly about whether such a coin could be used in everyd...
Red Bay approves $3.6M budget
Main, News, Red Bay
By Brady Petree For the FCT 
February 18, 2026
RED BAY – City officials are expecting a slight decrease in sales tax revenue for the upcoming fiscal year but anticipating a larger general fund budg...
$5K TVA grant to bring student podcasting program to RES
News, Russellville
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
February 18, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — Elementary School students will soon be recording podcasts, interviewing community members and exploring career paths in a program bein...
State is overlooking qualified local leaders
Columnists, Opinion
February 18, 2026
When I was elected to the Alabama State Senate in 1978, I was 39 years old. Now at the age of 87, when I go out in the community, I meet people who re...
Opinion: Here and Now – White to perform March 7 at the Roxy
News, Russellville
HERE AND NOW
By Susie Hovater Malone Columnist 
February 18, 2026
By Susie Hovater Malone Columnist There is something special about a night out in a small town. People run into neighbors. They make a plan instead of...
Accessible basketball completes year 2
News, Russellville, Sports
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
February 18, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — Fifteen players took the court over four Saturdays at the Ralph C. Bishop Center for this year’s round of accessible basketball games. ...
Belgreen team wins Spark Tank contest
News, Russellville, Russellville Golden Tigers
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
February 18, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE Fourteen teams from three high schools pitched business ideas and competed for cash prizes during the second annual Franklin County Spark...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *