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'I Just Apologized For Anything': Hyde-Smith Says She Might Have Hurt People's 'Feelings' With Hanging Remark

Mississippi Senate candidate Cindy Hyde-Smith (R) refused over the weekend to explain why her remark about public hangings was offensive to African-Americans.

Mississippi Senate candidate Cindy Hyde-Smith (R) refused over the weekend to explain why her remark about public hangings was offensive to African-Americans.

During a campaign stop on Saturday, NBC's Vaughn Hilyard caught up with Hyde-Smith and asked her to articulate why she felt the need to apologize after telling a supporter that she would attend a "public hanging" if he invited her.

"[People] were questioning what you were apologizing for," Hilyard noted. "Could you clarify and articulate what it was you were apologizing for?"

"If I hurt anybody's feelings!" Hyde-Smith replied. "You know, we're just staying on the issues that are on people's minds. That is lower taxes, less regulation -- you know, Second Amendment. All of those things."

"So, you know, just anytime I've said anything that somebody got offended, I want to apologize," she added.

"Could you acknowledge what offended people?" the NBC reporter pressed.

"You would have to ask [them]," Smith insisted. "I just apologized for anything I could have possibly said."

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