By Taylor Vance and Julia James
Mississippi Today

Republican Gov. Tate Reeves was reelected Tuesday, defeating Democratic challenger Brandon Presley in a tight race that political experts around the country had closely eyed for weeks as a potential upset.
But Reeves held Presley off, winning 52% to 46%, according to results at 11:30 p.m.. Third-party candidate Gwendolyn Gray, an independent, garnered about 2%. The governorโs margin of victory is expected to shrink slightly as tens of thousands of votes were still uncounted in Hinds County, which experienced major election problems on Tuesday.
RESULTS: Mississippiโs general election 2023
Reeves, the 49-year-old who previously served two terms as lieutenant governor and two terms as state treasurer, will serve a second and final four-year term as governor beginning in January 2024. He will be the first person in Mississippi elected to both two terms as lieutenant governor and two terms as governor.
โThis victory sure is sweet,โ Reeves told cheering supporters at his watch party in Flowood. โYou know, we all now know what it means in a state like Mississippi when you stand up to the national liberals and you stand up to Joe Biden. They threw everything they had at Mississippi โ $13 million they threw at Mississippi. But you know what? Mississippi did not bend, Mississippi did not break, Mississippi is not for sale.”
In downtown Jackson, many of Presleyโs supporters left his watch party before the race was officially called. But at 10:45 p.m. Presley announced to dozens of attendees that heโd conceded the race to Reeves.
โTonightโs a setback, but weโre not going to lose hope because this campaign elevated issues that had to be talked about in Mississippi,โ Presley said. โMedicaid will be expanded at some point and you will have played a role in that.
โThis campaignโs been tough โฆ but I think weโve seen the best of Mississippi through it. Itโs been worth it to elevate these important issues.โ

For weeks, Republican political operatives publicly fretted over Reevesโ ability to enthuse the GOP voter base. In the closing days of the campaign, Republican elected officials swarmed the airwaves with pleas for turnout. And notably, less than a week from Tuesday, the Reeves campaign rolled out a video endorsement from former President Donald Trump that aired constantly on TV across the state.
In conservative pockets of the state on Election Day, Reeves matched or came close to matching the margins he earned four years ago against Democratic challenger Jim Hood. In Jones County, for instance, Reeves earned 66% of the vote against Presley. Four years ago, he earned 65% there.
And Presley did not make up enough of those Reeves margins with any other key demographic or locale. Presley hoped to perform better than Hoodโs 2019 campaign in northeast Mississippi, but Reeves held his ground there from four years ago.
Presley also hoped to inspire outstanding turnout from Black Mississippians. Black Mississippians did turn out in droves in some majority-minority counties, voting in higher numbers in 2023 than in 2019. But without more white voter support for Presley, his gains with Black voters were not enough to offset Reeves’ success.
Reeves, in particular, swamped Presley on the Gulf Coast โ a region of the state that has long served as the governorโs political firewall. Presley did not, as heโd hoped, make gains in the three coastal counties relative to Hood four years ago.
Perhaps one of the happiest people at Reeves’ party on Tuesday night was former Gov. Haley Barbour, who was mingling among the crowd with a glass of ice-cold bourbon in his hand and a bright smile on his face.
The former two-term governor told Mississippi Today that Reeves won reelection because heโs โdone a good jobโ leading the state through natural disasters and the COVID-19 virus while promoting his officeโs work on economic development.
โI sometimes say that his wife Elee has got more of a politicianโs personality than he does,โ Barbour said. โBut heโs got a record that is mighty good to run on.โ
While Reeves avoided the upset, he underperformed relative to his seven fellow statewide Republican incumbents. All seven other GOP statewide incumbents won with at least 59% of the vote against their Democratic challengers.
And Presley, when all the votes are counted, will have gotten closer than any Democratic gubernatorial nominee since 1999 to defeating a Republican nominee.
Reeves, for his part, spent much of his victory speech on Tuesday night decrying national liberals, his in-state detractors and the press. He ended his speech with a more hopeful look toward the future.
โI know that over these 20 years, Iโve made mistakes, but Iโve never stopped trying to earn your trust,โ Reeves said. โI promise you going forward Iโll work hard. I commit that Iโll stand firm, and Iโll do everything in my power to rally our fellow Mississippians โฆ I want you all to know I value your trust. Iโm humbled by your support. And Iโm fired up for the next four years.โ
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

