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"I don't think anybody in their right mind is going to pay any attention to this guy," said Jackson resident Vernon Archer, a former college professor in his 60s, who is black. "It's offensive, but it's so ridiculous you don't even know how to get mad." Still, Lambus has been invited to at least two debates in April. And as the lone GOP candidate, Lambus is expected to automatically advance as the Republican candidate while Democrats and independents jockey and jostle in the May primary to decide who reaches the June ballot. Lambus lives not far from the suspected crackhouse that Melton, as mayor, is charged with damaging in a vigilante raid in August 2006. Lambus charges that Melton was showboating and didn't live up to his promise to clean up the city's crime. It's not clear if Melton will be on the ballot. He is suing a Democratic committee for removing his name over alleged residency problems. Political scientist Marty Wiseman, director of Mississippi State University's Stennis Institute of Government, said the Republicans have shied away from fielding a serious contender for mayor. "They're being fairly realistic because of what the numbers say," Wiseman said. "Jackson's voting patterns, I would assume, are going to mimic those of African-Americans in state elections, which has stayed around 90 percent or more Democratic." And Wiseman said Lambus' message will not help his chances, adding "certainly someone that confrontational has no chance whatsoever."
[Associated
Press;
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