State Rep. David Gibbs dies at 76

Rep. David Gibbs

From Media Reports

TUPELO – State Rep. David Gibbs, recalled by colleagues as a common-sense lawmaker who preferred to keep a low profile and make things happen behind the scenes, died Sunday. He was 76.

Rep. David Gibbs

Gibbs, who had cancer, died about 5 a.m. Sunday, said Rep. Kenny Wayne Jones, D-Canton, chairman of the Legislative Black Caucus. He had been hospitalized at Northeast Mississippi Medical Center in Tupelo. Hospital spokeswoman Deborah Pugh confirmed his death.

Citing his illness, Gibbs had submitted his resignation letter Tuesday, but then sent word a day later that he wanted to rescind it. The letter was never filed with the Secretary of State’s office.

The Democrat from West Point was a quiet legislator with a keen strategic eye, said Rep. Bobby Moak, D-Bogue Chitto, the House Democratic leader.

“We don’t have very many folks in government who do that,” Moak said. “They like to be the pretty butterfly fluttering out front, whereas David was the guy who saw it all and put it together and in the end told you where the field of flowers were.”

Gibbs was first elected in 1992 to the seat vacated by Scott Ross, who is now mayor of West Point.

“He was always committed to the process of looking out for folks who were less fortunate and didn’t have a voice,” Jones said.

Republican House Speaker Phillip Gunn also praised Gibbs’ work.

He represented District 36, which includes parts of Clay, Lowndes and Monroe counties. Before serving in the Legislature, he was a member of the Clay County Board of Supervisors.

Gov. Phil Bryant has 30 days to set a special election, which would take place at least 40 days later. If a runoff was necessary, that could leave the seat empty for this year’s three-month legislative session.

Jones and Moak said Gibbs’ main interest was in legislation that would help his district.

But no matter what the issue, Moak said, Gibbs was always worth consulting.

“David was a pretty good political engineer of how you get to a certain goal line. He’d say, ‘Moak, I think you need to do this, this and this, and you need to talk to these folks.'”

He also was a senior member of the state Democratic executive committee, said Rickey Cole, chairman of the state Democratic Party.

“His was consistently a voice of quiet, strong and reliable common sense. He believed that only by working together could we make life better for everyone,” Cole wrote in a statement. “The Mississippi Legislature and the Democratic Party are much the poorer in the absence of our good and wise friend David Gibbs.”

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