Skip to content
News
Business
Culture
Opinion
Issues
About
Who We Are
Our Approach
Staff & Contributors
Sponsorship
Y’all Archive
Search
Donate
News
Opinion
Business
Culture
About Us
Who We Are
Our Approach
Staff & Contributors
News
News
|
Sarah Ulmer
•
March 18, 2021
Nancy New and Zach New indicted in Federal Court
Today, Nancy New and Zach New have been charged in federal court for money laundering, ID theft and wire fraud. The indictments say the crimes were committed while Nancy served as the President of New Learning Resources and Zach was the Vice-President. New Learning Resources is a for-profit entity doing business as the New Learning…
News
|
Frank Corder
•
March 18, 2021
Sheriff Mike Ezell says George Floyd Justice in Policing Act would devastate law enforcement
Jackson County Sheriff Mike Ezell joined Y’all Politics on Thursday to discuss the harm the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act passed by the U.S. House of Representatives could do to local law enforcement in Mississippi and nationwide. Sheriff Ezell said police agencies are having a hard enough time as it is recruiting and retaining…
News
|
Magnolia Tribune
•
March 18, 2021
Hyde-Smith cosponsors pair of gun bills
Second Amendment Measures Would Create Firearms Safety Tax Credits, Drop Prohibition-Era Regulations on Short-Barreled Rifles U.S. Senator Cindy Hyde-Smith (R-Miss.) is cosponsoring a pair of Second Amendment-related bills to promote firearm safety through tax credits and to remove Prohibition-era regulations on short-barreled rifles. Hyde-Smith on Wednesday joined Senator Roger Marshall (R-Kan.) to introduce the Firearms…
News
|
Magnolia Tribune
•
March 18, 2021
YP Daily Roundup 3/18/21
YP – Mississippi leads nation in new business applications over past year Mississippi had the highest percent increase in new business applications in the nation between January 2020 and January 2021, a whopping 164%, with over 6,000 new applications in January 2021 alone. This data from the U.S. Census Bureau was presented by Visual Capitalist…
News
|
Magnolia Tribune
•
March 17, 2021
Wicker, Hyde-Smith Support Effort to Rename Tupelo Post Office for Mississippi Veteran
Senate Committee Advances Bill to Name Building After Vietnam War Veteran Colonel Carlyle ‘Smitty’ Harris U.S. Senators Roger Wicker, R-Miss., and Cindy Hyde-Smith, R-Miss., today cheered committee approval of legislation to rename the U.S. post office at 500 West Main Street in Tupelo after Mississippi native and Vietnam War veteran Colonel Carlyle “Smitty” Harris. Wicker…
News
|
Frank Corder
•
March 17, 2021
Federal tax filing deadline being extended to May 17. Mississippi state filing deadline likely staying at April 15.
The Internal Revenue Service is delaying the annual tax filing deadline for a second straight year, according to the U.S. House Ways and Means Committee. No official release has yet been issued by the IRS. House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Richard E. Neal (D-MA) and Oversight Subcommittee Chairman Bill Pascrell, Jr. (D-NJ) today applauded…
News
|
Magnolia Tribune
•
March 17, 2021
Hyde-Smith Testifies against Equality Act at Senate Judiciary Committee to Protect Girls’, Women’s Rights
Before Judiciary Committee, Miss. Senator Highlights Harmful Effects of Pending ‘Equality Act’ ### U.S. Senator Cindy Hyde-Smith (R-Miss.) today provided testimony on the harmful effects on girls and women that would result from provisions of the Equality Act (HR.5), a House-passed measure that would significantly alter how the United States addresses gender identity. In testimony…
News
|
Magnolia Tribune
•
March 17, 2021
Wicker, Colleagues reintroduce Protect and Serve Act to increase penalties for targeting law enforcement officers
Legislation Would Increase Punishments for Targeting Law Enforcement ### U.S. Senator Roger Wicker, R-Miss., this week joined his colleagues in reintroducing the Protect and Serve Act, legislation that would create federal penalties for individuals who deliberately target local, state, or federal law enforcement officers with violence. “Intentional attacks on law enforcement officers are reprehensible and should be…
News
|
Frank Corder
•
March 17, 2021
American Society of Civil Engineers highlights Mississippi’s infrastructure progress
The American Society of Civil Engineers released a video project entitled “American Infrastructure: The Long Haul” highlighting the progress Mississippi has made with its bridges and infrastructure repairs. It advocates for increased funding in Congress for surface transportation improvements nationwide. The 9 minute video documents the work of the Mississippi Department of Transportation, former Governor…
News
|
Magnolia Tribune
•
March 17, 2021
Attorney General Fitch Urges Feds to Not Hold State Tax-Cutting Authority Hostage
Attorney General Lynn Fitch joined twenty-one state attorneys general urging the U.S. Department of Treasury (“Treasury”) to take immediate action to ensure the American Rescue Plan Act (“Act”) does not strip states of their core authority to implement basic state tax policy. “With this bill, Congress again defies the Constitution in an effort to strip…
Posts pagination
Prev
1
…
559
560
561
562
563
…
4,306
Next
News
|
Magnolia Tribune
•
March 17, 2021
Wicker, Hyde-Smith & colleagues: Biden escalating border crisis by unlawfully freezing wall funding
Forty Senators Seek GAO Ruling on Infringement of Congress’ Constitutional Power of the Purse Amid the rapidly escalating crisis along the southern border, U.S. Senators Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) and Cindy Hyde-Smith (R-Miss.) today joined Republican colleagues to challenge President Biden’s suspension of border wall funding and construction without lawful justification. Wicker and Hyde-Smith are among…
News
|
Sarah Ulmer
•
March 17, 2021
Finance Chair elaborates on Senate’s position regarding House income tax plan
Chairman of Finance, Senator Josh Harkins, sat down to discuss the reasons behind why the Senate did not move forward with HB 1439, the Mississippi Tax Freedom Act. The deadline for original floor action on bills coming from the opposite chamber was Tuesday. That means, the Mississippi Tax Freedom Act had to be taken up…
News
News
|
Frank Corder
•
June 26, 2026
Gipson, Watson stump for higher office at Neshoba
News
|
Lindsay Whitehurst, Associated Press
, Fatima Hussein, Associated Press
•
June 26, 2026
Disagreements between Supreme Court justices bubble into public view as major rulings loom
News
|
Frank Corder
•
June 26, 2026
Mississippi House not “scared” of conversations on “sacred” issues, Speaker White tells Neshoba fairgoers
Business
Business
|
Frank Corder
•
June 23, 2026
Keytronic announces $8.89 million expansion in Corinth
Business
|
Frank Corder
•
June 17, 2026
Gould Industries locating in southwest Mississippi
Business
|
Frank Corder
•
June 16, 2026
U.S. Army contracts with General Atomics for long-range maneuvering projectile program
Culture
Culture
|
Susan Marquez
•
June 26, 2026
Mississippi to celebrate America’s 250th birthday
Culture
|
Alistair Begg
•
June 26, 2026
Keeping ourselves in God’s love
Culture
|
Eric Olson, Associated Press
•
June 25, 2026
NCAA panel approves new eligibility rules giving Division I athletes 5 years to play 5 seasons
Opinion
Opinion
|
Russ Latino
•
June 26, 2026
An American Inheritance for Everyone
Opinion
|
Russ Latino
•
June 25, 2026
An American Inheritance: The Longest Surviving Constitution on the Planet
Opinion
|
Sid Salter
•
June 24, 2026
Neshoba County Fair continues to evolve, but the core family principle abides
All the latest delivered to your inbox!
Email
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Email
(Required)
By joining our newsletter, you are confirming that you agree with the
Privacy Policy
Cat Title
|
Author
•
Date
Title Placeholder