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This story originally appeared in the Jackson Free Press. It was added to the Mississippi Free Press website in 2025.
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With the cloud of an impeachment inquiry and questions about his calls with foreign leaders hanging overhead, President Donald Trump began October by endorsing another embattled Republican who is also embroiled in allegations of scandal: Mississippi Lt. Gov. Tate Reeves, who is the GOP nominee for governor in this November’s statewide elections.

“Mississippi, there is a VERY important election for Governor on November 5th. I need you to Get Out and Vote for our Great Republican nominee, @TateReeves,” Trump tweeted on Oct. 2. “Tate is strong on Crime, tough on Illegal Immigration, and will protect your Second Amendment.”

Trump stands accused of holding up $391 million in congressionally appropriated aid to Ukraine, which is daily under threat from Russia, in exchange for a political favor. Official White House partial transcripts corroborate a whistleblower’s claim that Trump asked Ukranian President Volodymyr Zelensky to do him “a favor” by launching an investigation of potential Democratic 2020 opponent Joe Biden and his son, Hunter Biden, and their business dealings in Ukraine. In return, Trump suggested, he would help Ukraine.

Despite the air of scandal, the Mississippi GOP celebrated Trump’s endorsement in an email on Oct. 3.

“President Trump knows there is only one conservative in the race—only one conservative who will support his economy-driving agenda, only one conservative who will lead Mississippi with policy grounded in the extraordinary notions of liberty and freedom. That conservative is Tate Reeves,” GOP chairman Lucien Smith wrote.

Just after the launch of the impeachment inquiry, Reeves defended Trump, writing on Twitter that “This New Democrat(ic) Party is out of control and truly dangerous.”

Hood Ad: Reeves ‘Used Political Pressure’ for Road Project

Like Trump, Reeves has faced an official inquiry and fought to stave off allegations of corruption in recent months. Last month, Mississippi Attorney General Jim Hood, who is Reeves’ Democratic opponent, released the results of an investigation that seems to corroborate claims, which The Clarion-Ledger first reported in 2018, that Reeves pressured the Mississippi Department of Transportation to use $2 million in taxpayer funds to build a frontage road that would have connected his gated private community to a popular shopping center in Flowood.

With just over a month left in the campaign, Hood has begun running a TV ad highlighting the reporting in last year’s Clarion-Ledger’s story. The ad does not include references to the results of the attorney general’s office report. It opens with a computer-generated map showing Reeves’ private subdivision and how the frontage road would have connected it to the Dogwood Festival shopping mall.

“This is Tate Reeves’ gated community, this a nearby shopping mall, and this a $2 million taxpayer-paid road that Reeves used political pressure to try to build,” a male voice intones.

The ad switches to a clip of Reeves saying, “I had nothing to do with it.”

“The Clarion-Ledger shows he did,” the voice responds.

The ad then switches to a shot of Hood standing on a dirt road at his country farm. (Despite Trump’s suggestion that Hood is a “liberal” who wants to take guns away, Hood is a long-time hunter and considers himself an outdoorsman).

“I built this road on my farm with horsepower and my sweat,” Hood says. “Tate Reeves tried to build a road with your tax dollars to his own gated community and got caught. As governor, the roads I build won’t be to a politician’s driveway. They’ll be to you.”

Video

Reeves Video

Award-winning News Editor Ashton Pittman, a native of the South Mississippi Pine Belt, studied journalism and political science at the University of Southern Mississippi. Previously the state reporter at the Jackson Free Press, he drove national headlines and conversations with award-winning reporting about segregation academies. He has won numerous awards, including Outstanding New Journalist in the South, for his work covering immigration raids, abortion battles and even former Gov. Phil Bryant’s unusual work with “The Bad Boys of Brexit" at the Jackson Free Press. In 2021, as a Mississippi Free Press reporter, he was named the Diamond Journalist of the Year for seven southern U.S. states in the Society of Professional Journalists Diamond Awards. A trained photojournalist, Ashton lives in South Mississippi with his husband, William, and their two pit bulls, Dorothy and Dru.