Jeramey Anderson

American politician from Mississippi (born 1991)

Jeramey Anderson
Member of the Mississippi House of Representatives
from the 110th district
Incumbent
Assumed office
November 26, 2013
Preceded byBilly Broomfield
Personal details
Born (1991-12-06) December 6, 1991 (age 32)
Pascagoula, Mississippi, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
EducationPearl River Community College (AS)
Tulane University (BS)
Websitewww.jerameyanderson.com

Jeramey Anderson (born December 6, 1991) is an American politician serving as a member of the Mississippi House of Representatives from the 110th district. Upon election in 2013, Anderson became the youngest African-American candidate to be elected to any legislature in the United States.[citation needed]

Early life and education

Born in Pascagoula, Mississippi, Anderson graduated from Moss Point High School. He earned an associate degree in criminal justice from Pearl River Community College, attending on a soccer scholarship. He then went on to Tulane University, where he completed his bachelor's degree in homeland security.[1]

Career

When he was 16, he founded the nonprofit Purple Knights of America, an organization created to mentor males ages 11 through 18.[2] Anderson is also the founder and CEO of NexiWorks, a digital marketing agency based in Mississippi.[citation needed]

Mississippi House of Representatives

After finishing first in a special election on November 5, 2013, he ran against the former mayor of Moss Point (Aneice Liddell) in a runoff election to replace then-Representative Billy Bromfield, who vacated his House seat after winning the election mayor of Moss Point.[1] Both Anderson and Liddell ran as independents.[citation needed] He was sworn in on his 22nd birthday.[1] Anderson has spoken at several high school and college commencements across the country, and was recognized as a “Young Riser” at the 2015 BET Honors by BET.[citation needed]

Running as a Democrat, Anderson was reelected in 2015. In 2017, he filed for the 4th Congressional District and won the Democratic primary. He faced four-term incumbent Republican Steven Palazzo and Reform Party candidate Lajena Sheets in the general election in November 2018.[3]

Anderson announced on November 11, 2020 that he would be running for mayor of Moss Point in the 2021 elections.[4]

In his first term, Anderson sponsored numerous bills that were signed by the governor. These included forming a Commission Against Interpersonal Violence within the state health department, one granting increases in Homestead Property Tax Exemption for disabled veterans, and extending those exemptions to the unmarried surviving spouse of such veterans, and one mandating authorized insurers to provide policy and premium information to the Department of Insurance. In 2017, Anderson led efforts to thoroughly vet the state education budget formula.[5]

Elections

2013 Mississippi House of Representatives special election

In the special election for the House seat left vacant by the departure of Billy Bromfield, Anderson beat Aneice Liddell in the runoff by 59% TO 41%.[6]

2017 Mississippi House of Representatives election

In November 2017, Anderson announced that he would seek the Democratic nomination for Mississippi's 4th Congressional District in 2018.[7]

2018 U.S. House of Representatives campaign

In June 2018, Anderson won the Democratic primary for Mississippi's 4th congressional district without opposition.[8]

Anderson finished second to Steven Palazzo in the general election, on November 6, 2018, with 152,633 (68.2% of votes) for Palazzo to 68.787 (30.7%) for Anderson, and 2,312 (1.0%) for Lajena Sheets of the Reform Party.[9]

References

  1. ^ a b c Moss Point's Jeramey Anderson sworn into the Mississippi House of Representatives, Gulf Live, December 6, 2013. Retrieved July 31, 2018.
  2. ^ Byng, Rhonesha (December 17, 2013). "The Youngest Person Elected To The Mississippi House of Representatives Is Still In College". Huffington Post. Retrieved October 31, 2018.
  3. ^ Jeramey D. Anderson, Mississippi House of Representatives. Retrieved July 31, 2018.
  4. ^ Mississippi Lawmaker Running for Moss Point Mayor in 2021, Retrieved December 19, 2020.
  5. ^ Moss Point lawmaker starts petition on state education funding, Sun Herald, Justin Vicory, March 23, 2017. Retrieved July 31, 2018.
  6. ^ 2013 Special Election Runoff, Mississippi Secretary of State. Retrieved July 31, 2018.
  7. ^ "Democratic state lawmaker running for Mississippi's 4th Congressional District". The Clarion Ledger. Retrieved October 31, 2018.
  8. ^ "Rep. Steven M. Palazzo, Jeramey Anderson win Mississippi 4th Congressional District primaries". Washington Post. Archived from the original on November 1, 2018. Retrieved October 31, 2018.
  9. ^ Jeramy Anderson, Ballotpedia,Retrieved November 9, 2021.

External links

  • Jeramey for Congress
  • Office of Representative Jeramey Anderson
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Speaker of the House
Jason White (R)
Speaker pro tempore
Manly Barton (R)
  1. Lester Carpenter (R)
  2. Brad Mattox (R)
  3. William Tracy Arnold (R)
  4. Jody Steverson (R)
  5. John Faulkner (D)
  6. Justin Keen (R)
  7. Kimberly Remak (R)
  8. Trey Lamar (R)
  9. Cedric Burnett (D)
  10. Josh Hawkins (R)
  11. Lataisha Jackson (D)
  12. Clay Deweese (R)
  13. Steve Massengill (R)
  14. Sam Creekmore IV (R)
  15. Beth Luther Waldo (R)
  16. Rickey W. Thompson (D)
  17. Shane Aguirre (R)
  18. Jerry Turner (R)
  19. Randy Boyd (R)
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  22. Jon Ray Lancaster (R)
  23. Andrew Stepp (R)
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  26. Orlando Paden (D)
  27. Kenji Holloway (D)
  28. Doc Harris (R)
  29. Robert L. Sanders (D)
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  36. Karl Gibbs (D)
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  38. Cheikh Taylor (D)
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  40. Hester Jackson-McCray (D)
  41. Kabir Karriem (D)
  42. Carl L. Mickens (D)
  43. Rob Roberson (R)
  44. C. Scott Bounds (R)
  45. Keith Jackson (D)
  46. Karl Oliver (R)
  47. Bryant Clark (D)
  48. Jason White (R)
  49. Willie Bailey (D)
  50. John Hines (D)
  51. Timaka James-Jones (D)
  52. Bill Kinkade (R)
  53. Vince Mangold (R)
  54. Kevin Ford (R)
  55. Oscar Denton (D)
  56. Clay Mansell (R)
  57. Lawrence Blackmon (D)
  58. Jonathan McMillan (R)
  59. Brent Powell (R)
  60. Fred Shanks (R)
  61. Gene Newman (R)
  62. Lance Varner (R)
  63. Stephanie Foster (D)
  64. Shanda Yates (I)
  65. Chris Bell (D)
  66. Fabian Nelson (D)
  67. Earle S. Banks (D)
  68. Zakiya Summers (D)
  69. Tamarra Butler-Washington (D)
  70. Bo Brown (D)
  71. Ronnie Crudup Jr. (D)
  72. Justis Gibbs (D)
  73. Jill Ford (R)
  74. Lee Yancey (R)
  75. Celeste Hurst (R)
  76. Gregory Holloway Sr. (D)
  77. Price Wallace (R)
  78. Randy Rushing (R)
  79. Mark Tullos (R)
  80. Omeria Scott (D)
  81. Stephen Horne (R)
  82. Charles Young Jr. (D)
  83. Billy Adam Calvert (R)
  84. Troy Smith (R)
  85. Jeffery Harness (D)
  86. Shane Barnett (R)
  87. Joseph Tubb (R)
  88. Charles Blackwell (R)
  89. Donnie Scoggin (R)
  90. Noah Sanford (R)
  91. Robert Evans (D)
  92. Becky Currie (R)
  93. Timmy Ladner (R)
  94. Robert Johnson III (D)
  95. Jay McKnight (R)
  96. Angela Cockerham (I)
  97. Sam Mims V (R)
  98. Daryl Porter Jr. (D)
  99. Bill Pigott (R)
  100. Ken Morgan (R)
  101. Kent McCarty (R)
  102. Missy McGee (R)
  103. Percy Watson (D)
  104. Larry Byrd (R)
  105. Elliot Burch (R)
  106. Jansen Owen (R)
  107. Steve Lott (R)
  108. Stacey Hobgood-Wilkes (R)
  109. Manly Barton (R)
  110. Jeramey Anderson (D)
  111. Jimmy Fondren (R)
  112. John Read (R)
  113. Henry Zuber III (R)
  114. Jeffrey Guice (R)
  115. Zachary Grady (R)
  116. Casey Eure (R)
  117. Kevin Felsher (R)
  118. Greg Haney (R)
  119. Jeffrey Hulum III (D)
  120. Richard Bennett (R)
  121. Carolyn Crawford (R)
  122. Brent Anderson (R)