1984 United States presidential election in Mississippi explained

See main article: 1984 United States presidential election.

Election Name:1984 United States presidential election in Mississippi
Country:Mississippi
Flag Image:Flag of Mississippi (1894-1996).svg
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1980 United States presidential election in Mississippi
Previous Year:1980
Next Election:1988 United States presidential election in Mississippi
Next Year:1988
Election Date:November 6, 1984
Image1:Ronald Reagan presidential portrait (cropped).jpg
Nominee1:Ronald Reagan
Party1:Republican Party (United States)
Home State1:California
Running Mate1:George H. W. Bush
Electoral Vote1:7
Popular Vote1:581,477
Percentage1:61.85%
Nominee2:Walter Mondale
Party2:Democratic Party (United States)
Home State2:Minnesota
Running Mate2:Geraldine Ferraro
Electoral Vote2:0
Popular Vote2:352,192
Percentage2:37.46%
Map Size:305px
President
Before Election:Ronald Reagan
Before Party:Republican Party (United States)
After Election:Ronald Reagan
After Party:Republican Party (United States)

The 1984 United States presidential election in Mississippi took place on November 6, 1984. All fifty states and the District of Columbia, were part of the 1984 United States presidential election. Mississippi voters chose seven electors to the Electoral College, which selected the president and vice president of the United States.

Mississippi was won by incumbent United States President Ronald Reagan of California, who was running against former Vice President Walter Mondale of Minnesota. Reagan ran for a second time with former C.I.A. Director George H. W. Bush of Texas, and Mondale ran with Representative Geraldine Ferraro of New York, the first major female candidate for the vice presidency.

All but two counties gave either Mondale or Reagan an outright majority; Leflore and Issaquena Counties gave Reagan a plurality. Reagan's best county was Lamar, where he got 79.9% of the vote; Mondale's was Jefferson, where he got 77.9%. Despite Reagan's overall landslide win in the state, Jefferson County, which possessed the largest African-American share of United States county's population, gave Mondale his fourth-largest vote share of any county or county-equivalent, after the District of Columbia, Macon County, Alabama, and majority-Native American Shannon County, South Dakota.[1]

, this is the last election in which the following counties voted for a Republican presidential candidate: Clay, Issaquena, Jefferson Davis, Sunflower, and Tallahatchie.[2] This marked the first time in history that Mississippi voted Republican in consecutive elections (or that a Republican carried the state twice), and the first such occasion for any party since 1956.

79% of white voters supported Reagan while 20% supported Mondale.

Results

1984 United States presidential election in Mississippi
PartyCandidateVotesPercentageElectoral votes
RepublicanRonald Reagan (incumbent)581,477 61.85%7
DemocraticWalter Mondale352,19237.46%0
LibertarianDavid Bergland2,336 0.25%0
Workers WorldLarry Holmes1,169 0.12%0
Socialist Workers PartyMelvin Mason1,0320.11%0
IndependentLyndon LaRouche1,001 0.11%0
America FirstBob Richards6290.07%0
New Alliance PartyDennis Serrette3560.04%0
Totals940,192100.0%7

Results by county

CountyRonald Reagan
Republican
Walter Mondale
Democratic
Various candidates
Other parties
MarginTotal votes cast
%%%%
Adams9,44054.32%7,84945.17%890.51%1,5919.15%17,378
Alcorn7,20358.66%4,86239.60%2141.74%2,34119.06%12,279
Amite3,46357.24%2,56942.46%180.30%89414.78%6,050
Attala4,87059.28%3,32740.50%180.22%1,54318.78%8,215
Benton1,73750.12%1,71549.48%140.40%220.64%3,466
Bolivar6,93943.85%8,76955.42%1160.73%-1,830-11.57%15,824
Calhoun3,57967.06%1,74932.77%90.17%1,83034.29%5,337
Carroll2,82365.70%1,46234.02%120.28%1,36131.68%4,297
Chickasaw3,60560.52%2,32939.10%230.39%1,27621.42%5,957
Choctaw2,49168.00%1,16631.83%60.16%1,32536.17%3,663
Claiborne1,29428.86%3,17970.90%110.25%-1,885-42.04%4,484
Clarke4,55166.61%2,26233.11%190.28%2,28933.50%6,832
Clay4,11250.23%4,04649.42%290.35%660.81%8,187
Coahoma5,75944.96%6,83953.39%2121.65%-1,080-8.43%12,810
Copiah5,80655.74%4,59144.08%190.18%1,21511.66%10,416
Covington4,16564.95%2,21934.60%290.45%1,94630.35%6,413
DeSoto12,57673.88%4,36925.67%770.45%8,20748.21%17,022
Forrest15,71969.63%6,78630.06%710.31%8,93339.57%22,576
Franklin2,56462.86%1,49436.63%210.51%1,07026.23%4,079
George4,34672.10%1,65527.46%270.45%2,69144.64%6,028
Greene2,74467.55%1,29731.93%210.52%1,44735.62%4,062
Grenada5,18160.80%3,32539.02%150.18%1,85621.78%8,521
Hancock7,66274.07%2,63025.43%520.50%5,03248.64%10,344
Harrison33,99572.83%12,49526.77%1870.40%21,50046.06%46,677
Hinds56,95356.69%42,37342.18%1,1421.14%14,58014.51%100,468
Holmes3,10235.44%5,64164.45%100.11%-2,539-29.01%8,753
Humphreys2,30946.99%2,59652.83%90.18%-287-5.84%4,914
Issaquena51249.52%50148.45%212.03%111.07%1,034
Itawamba4,58762.96%2,67436.71%240.33%1,91326.25%7,285
Jackson29,58576.79%8,82122.89%1230.32%20,76453.90%38,529
Jasper3,72754.00%3,10444.97%711.03%6239.03%6,902
Jefferson85621.88%3,04977.94%70.18%-2,193-56.06%3,912
Jefferson Davis2,88451.81%2,64447.50%380.68%2404.31%5,566
Jones17,58670.47%7,29829.25%700.28%10,28841.22%24,954
Kemper2,35452.83%2,08946.88%130.29%2655.95%4,456
Lafayette6,00662.05%3,64637.67%280.29%2,36024.38%9,680
Lamar7,92979.85%1,96419.78%370.37%5,96560.07%9,930
Lauderdale18,80769.00%7,53427.64%9163.36%11,27341.36%27,257
Lawrence3,97063.49%2,27436.37%90.14%1,69627.12%6,253
Leake4,66362.04%2,84537.85%80.11%1,81824.19%7,516
Lee13,31267.47%6,20831.46%2101.06%7,10436.01%19,730
Leflore7,55049.63%7,44348.93%2191.44%1070.70%15,212
Lincoln8,89866.50%4,45833.32%250.19%4,44033.18%13,381
Lowndes12,04966.29%6,07833.44%500.28%5,97132.85%18,177
Madison9,29853.24%8,00245.82%1630.93%1,2967.42%17,463
Marion7,35566.11%3,75733.77%130.12%3,59832.34%11,125
Marshall4,38942.70%5,84556.87%440.43%-1,456-14.17%10,278
Monroe7,38762.28%4,43737.41%360.30%2,95024.87%11,860
Montgomery3,09362.07%1,88137.75%90.18%1,21224.32%4,983
Neshoba6,71571.71%2,63028.09%190.20%4,08543.62%9,364
Newton5,91173.23%2,12726.35%340.42%3,78446.88%8,072
Noxubee2,12341.23%2,92856.87%981.90%-805-15.64%5,149
Oktibbeha7,57459.65%5,09740.14%260.20%2,47719.51%12,697
Panola5,85051.43%5,46548.04%600.53%3853.39%11,375
Pearl River9,97876.10%3,08523.53%490.37%6,89352.57%13,112
Perry3,09865.30%1,41529.83%2314.87%1,68335.47%4,744
Pike8,25457.28%6,13742.59%200.14%2,11714.69%14,411
Pontotoc5,18267.80%2,43431.85%270.35%2,74835.95%7,643
Prentiss4,82162.35%2,89737.47%140.18%1,92424.88%7,732
Quitman2,19848.33%2,34351.52%70.15%-145-3.19%4,548
Rankin22,39379.10%5,87420.75%410.14%16,51958.35%28,308
Scott5,76363.66%3,27436.16%160.18%2,48927.50%9,053
Sharkey1,48743.76%1,72350.71%1885.53%-236-6.95%3,398
Simpson5,98367.04%2,89432.43%470.53%3,08934.61%8,924
Smith5,11676.24%1,57323.44%210.31%3,54352.80%6,710
Stone2,98071.07%1,18528.26%280.67%1,79542.81%4,193
Sunflower5,17851.21%4,91348.59%200.20%2652.62%10,111
Tallahatchie2,90151.38%2,72548.26%200.35%1763.12%5,646
Tate4,67761.89%2,84637.66%340.45%1,83124.23%7,557
Tippah4,70664.46%2,56635.15%290.40%2,14029.31%7,301
Tishomingo3,52754.87%2,87944.79%220.34%64810.08%6,428
Tunica1,10939.55%1,62157.81%742.64%-512-18.26%2,804
Union5,83767.74%2,76632.10%140.16%3,07135.64%8,617
Walthall3,30559.65%2,21940.05%170.31%1,08619.60%5,541
Warren12,95960.99%8,05437.90%2351.11%4,90523.09%21,248
Washington12,45453.19%10,61745.34%3431.46%1,8377.85%23,414
Wayne5,00063.81%2,81835.96%180.23%2,18227.85%7,836
Webster3,39070.71%1,39729.14%70.15%1,99341.57%4,794
Wilkinson1,72239.28%2,62759.92%350.80%-905-20.64%4,384
Winston5,19259.36%3,54340.51%110.13%1,64918.85%8,746
Yalobusha2,93455.52%2,33744.22%140.26%59711.30%5,285
Yazoo6,27554.99%5,03744.14%1000.88%1,23810.85%11,412
Totals581,47761.85%352,19237.46%6,5230.69%229,28524.39%940,192

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

See also

Works cited

Notes and References

  1. Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections; 1984 Presidential Election Statistics
  2. Sullivan, Robert David; ‘How the Red and Blue Map Evolved Over the Past Century’; America Magazine in The National Catholic Review; June 29, 2016