Nic Lott

Nicholas A. "Nic" Lott (born May, 1979 in Taylorsville, Mississippi, United States) is an American public servant who was the first African-American student body president elected at the University of Mississippi. Lott defeated five other candidates in the history making event for the state's oldest university, once plagued by the dark days of racism.[1]

The self-described conservative has previously worked under Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott[2] (no relation), and U.S. Congressman J.C. Watts and has interned in The White House during President George W. Bush's first year in office. During the 2003 Mississippi gubernatorial campaign, Lott was director of youth outreach for GOP nominee Haley Barbour. Following Barbour's victory over incumbent Gov. Ronnie Musgrove, Lott joined Barbour's administration as senior advisor for communications and public safety issues for the Mississippi Department of Corrections. He also served as an administrator for the Office of Justice Programs under the Department of Public Safety.

He is the former state chairman for the Mississippi Young Republicans and former state chairman for the Mississippi College Republicans.

Lott ran unsuccessfully for the Mississippi state senate in 2007 where he lost by a narrow 68 vote margin.[3]

He currently serves in Governor Phil Bryant's Administration as director of special compliance operations for renewal recovery.

An alumnus of the US Senate’s African-American Leadership Summit, Lott has received numerous honors including being selected for Who's Who in Black Mississippi, Top 40 Under 40 by the Mississippi Business Journal,[4] VIP Magazine’s “Top 10 Fascinating People” and the Business Chronicle’s “Young Guns: Top Business and Community Leaders.” He currently serves on the US Commission on Civil Rights State Advisory Committee, Congress of Racial Equality Board, Mississippi Community Education Center Board, Big Brothers Big Sisters of Mississippi Board, United Way Networth Committee, Leadership Greater Jackson Executive Committee, Coalition of Young Conservative Leaders Board, Young Leaders in Philanthropy, United Healthcare Advisory Board, and the University of Mississippi Central Alumni Board. He is a former member of the University of Mississippi ’s College of Liberal Arts Alumni Board .

Last year he was appointed by the Susan G. Komen Foundation to serves as one of eight Pink Tie Guys for the state of Mississippi. Pink Tie Guys serve as ambassadors for the organization in raising breast cancer awareness and raising funds for research.

Lott blogged for CNN's Anderson Cooper 360 during the inauguration of President Barack Obama. He appears as a political commentator and guest on multiple outlets including CNN, Fox News, WRBJ, WJSU, and WMPN. Lott recently appeared on a CNN Special Series focused on successful innovators who are working to make improvements within African American communities around the country. He is a weekly contributor to WJSU's political radio show "Issues and Images", a winner of the Mississippi Association of Broadcasters Award for Excellence in a Series, and serves on the Washington Post Advisory Panel. Lott appears in the documentary Mississippi Remixed, a fresh look at race relations in the Deep South.

Lott has a son, Nicholas.

Book References

The 2000 Presidential Election in the South By Robert P. Steed, Laurence W. Moreland

An American Insurrection By William Doyle

Sons of Mississippi By Paul Hendrickson

External links

References

  1. http://www.nytimes.com/2000/02/27/us/national-news-briefs-student-body-at-ole-miss-elects-first-black-leader.html/ Student Body at Ole Miss Elects First Black Leader
  2. "CNN.com". CNN.
  3. Lott wins Majority of Precincts, 3 of 4 Counties – but Still Short
  4. "Top 40 Under 40: Nic Lott, Spokesperson, Mississippi Department of Corrections". The Mississippi Business Journal (at findarticles.com). Mississippi. 2007-02-26. Retrieved 2009-05-02.
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