Yesterday’s election results were clearly not what Republican leaders were hoping for, but the day wasn’t a total loss for the party: as the Clarion Ledger reported, the GOP candidate prevailed in Mississippi’s gubernatorial election.
Republican Lt. Gov. Tate Reeves won the race for Mississippi governor Tuesday night, defeating Democratic Attorney General Jim Hood.
Republicans were on track Tuesday to control all statewide elected offices in Mississippi and are expected to maintain super-majority control of the Legislature. It will be the first time since Reconstruction that Republicans control all statewide elected offices in Mississippi.
With just about all of the votes counted, it looks like Reeves won 52.2% to 46.5%. That’s hardly a razor-thin margin, though given the fact that Donald Trump — who campaigned in Mississippi late last week — won the state by 17 points, yesterday’s outcome was fairly close.
Indeed, in the last few election cycles, the Republican candidate in Mississippi’s gubernatorial race has dominated, winning by 18 points (in 2007), 22 points (in 2011), and 34 points (in 2015). This year’s contest was the closest Mississippi has seen in two decades.
Even if state Attorney General Jim Hood (D) had won the most votes, he almost certainly would’ve lost anyway: Mississippi operates under an unusual system, created in the Jim Crow era to undermine the electoral strength of the state’s African-American community, in which Hood also would’ve had to have won a majority of the state’s 122 legislative districts. If not, the election would go to state lawmakers, where Republicans have an overpowering majority.









