2019 Mississippi gubernatorial election


The 2019 Mississippi gubernatorial election took place on November 5, 2019, to choose the next Governor of Mississippi. Incumbent Governor Phil Bryant was ineligible to run for a third term due to term limits. The Democratic Party nominated incumbent Attorney General Jim Hood, the only Democrat holding statewide office in Mississippi; the Republican Party nominated incumbent Lieutenant Governor Tate Reeves. In the general election, Reeves defeated Hood in the general election by a margin of 5.08%, making this the closest gubernatorial election in Mississippi since 1999.

Background

Situated in the Deep South, Mississippi is one of the most Republican states in the country. No Democrat has been elected to the governorship since Ronnie Musgrove in 1999. However, the state's Democratic Attorney General, Jim Hood, who has held his office since 2004 and had yet to lose a statewide election, put the Republican's winning streak of four elections in a row to the test, as the race became unusually competitive. Reeves defeated Hood in the general election by a margin of 5.1%, making this the closest a Democrat had come to winning a Mississippi gubernatorial election since 1999. Hood pulled off the best performance by a Democrat since the 2003 Mississippi gubernatorial election, where fellow Democrat Ronnie Musgrove took 45.81% of the vote. Hood flipped the counties of Chickasaw, Lafayette, Madison, Panola, and Warren, which had all voted for Republican Donald Trump in the 2016 United States presidential election.
Uniquely among the states, the Constitution of Mississippi establishes a sort of Electoral College at the state level, for the election of Governor. Article 5, Section 140 of the state constitution states that each state House district is assigned an electoral vote, and that a candidate running for governor must receive a majority of electoral votes in addition to winning a majority of the popular vote in order to be elected governor. Article 5, Section 141 of the state constitution states that if no candidate wins both a popular and electoral vote majority, the state House of Representatives is assigned to decide the winner, choosing from the two highest popular vote winners. This provision came into play only one time in the state's history; Democratic candidate Ronnie Musgrove in the 1999 gubernatorial election garnered a plurality, but not a majority; the House selected Musgrove.
In the lead-up to the election, controversy emerged over these constitutional provisions establishing a state system of electoral votes, with a federal lawsuit claiming the provisions are racially biased. These provisions were put in place with the 1890 Mississippi Constitution, itself established by the segregationist Redeemers and overturning the Reconstruction-era 1868 Constitution, as part of Jim Crow Era policy to minimize the power of African Americans in politics. Because of this, as well as present gerrymandering that packs African Americans into a small number of districts, the plaintiffs claim the provisions should be struck down on the basis of racial bias.

Republican primary

Candidates

Nominee

Polling

Poll sourceDate
administered
Sample
size
Margin
of error
Lynn
Fitch
Tate
Reeves
Undecided
February 15–17, 2018500± 4.4%12%21%67%
December 13–15, 2017400± 5.0%18%37%45%

Results

Runoff

Democratic primary

Candidates

Nominee

Polling

Poll sourceDate
administered
Sample
size
Margin
of error
Jim
Hood

Lumumba
Undecided
January 29, 20182,145± 1.8%49%27%23%

Results

Other Candidates

Constitution Party

Declared
Declared

Predictions

Debates

Endorsements

Polling

;with Tate Reeves, Jim Hood, and Bill Waller Jr.
Poll sourceDate
administered
Sample
size
Margin
of error
Tate
Reeves
Jim
Hood
Bill
Waller Jr.
Undecided
January 30 – February 1, 2019625 ± 4.0%38%40%9%13%

;with Bill Waller Jr. and Jim Hood
Poll sourceDate
administered
Sample
size
Margin
of error
Bill
Waller Jr.
Jim
Hood
David
Singletary
Undecided
July 2–16, 20191,171 ± 4.2%53%41%6%
June 10–14, 2019610 ± 4.0%43%36%4%17%

Results