The 2015 Mississippi Attorney General election was held on November 3, 2015, to elect the Attorney General of Mississippi. Incumbent Democratic Attorney General Jim Hood, who had been the only statewide elected Democrat in Mississippi since 2008, sought and won reelection to a fourth term. As of 2023, this remains the last time that a Democrat has won a statewide election in Mississippi.
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Hood: 50–60% 60–70% 70–80% 80–90% >90% Hurst: 50–60% 60–70% 70–80% | |||||||||||||||||
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Primaries Edit
Democratic nomination Edit
Candidate Edit
Republican primary Edit
Candidate Edit
- Mike Hurst, Assistant U.S. Attorney[2]
Results Edit
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Republican | Mike Hurst | 217,201 | 100.00% | |
Total votes | 217,201 | 100.00% |
General election Edit
Results Edit
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Jim Hood (incumbent) | 395,969 | 55.29% | |
Republican | Mike Hurst | 320,192 | 44.71% | |
Total votes | 716,161 | 100.00% | ||
Democratic hold |
County results Edit
Jim Hood (D) |
Mike Hurst (R) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
County | # | % | # | % |
Adams | 5,046 | 2,336 | ||
Alcorn | 5,273 | 5,136 | ||
Amite | 2,838 | 2,193 | ||
Attala | 3,043 | 2,028 | ||
Benton | 1,721 | 1,022 | ||
Bolivar | 7,177 | 2,122 | ||
Calhoun | 3,122 | 2,015 | ||
Carroll | 2,226 | 1,824 | ||
Chickasaw | 4,530 | 1,221 | ||
Choctaw | 1,424 | 1,366 | ||
Claiborne | 3,093 | 404 | ||
Clarke | 3,150 | 2,729 | ||
Clay | 5,180 | 2,031 | ||
Coahoma | 2,977 | 957 | ||
Copiah | 4,960 | 2,385 | ||
Covington | 3,527 | 2,815 | ||
DeSoto | 6,656 | 14,344 | ||
Forrest | 8,871 | 8,323 | ||
Franklin | 1,846 | 1,208 | ||
George | 2,155 | 3,860 | ||
Greene | 1,701 | 2,119 | ||
Grenada | 4,150 | 2,644 | ||
Hancock | 3,340 | 5,065 | ||
Harrison | 14,802 | 16,235 | ||
Hinds | 43,464 | 14,335 | ||
Holmes | 4,275 | 700 | ||
Humphreys | 2,058 | 574 | ||
Issaquena | 404 | 165 | ||
Itawamba | 3,712 | 3,198 | ||
Jackson | 10,139 | 14,515 | ||
Jasper | 4,073 | 2,255 | ||
Jefferson | 2,487 | 246 | ||
Jefferson Davis | 2,900 | 1,181 | ||
Jones | 7,242 | 10,251 | ||
Kemper | 2,830 | 957 | ||
Lafayette | 5,835 | 5,164 | ||
Lamar | 4,696 | 8,923 | ||
Lauderdale | 8,819 | 8,157 | ||
Lawrence | 2,788 | 2,081 | ||
Leake | 3,344 | 2,666 | ||
Lee | 9,626 | 9,749 | ||
Leflore | 5,127 | 1,821 | ||
Lincoln | 5,029 | 5,324 | ||
Lowndes | 10,241 | 7,258 | ||
Madison | 12,744 | 14,802 | ||
Marion | 3,237 | 4,240 | ||
Marshall | 4,290 | 2,136 | ||
Monroe | 6,328 | 4,329 | ||
Montgomery | 2,296 | 1,553 | ||
Neshoba | 3,153 | 4,140 | ||
Newton | 2,486 | 4,359 | ||
Noxubee | 2,817 | 669 | ||
Oktibbeha | 6,494 | 4,720 | ||
Panola | 7,030 | 4,033 | ||
Pearl River | 2,798 | 6,299 | ||
Perry | 2,086 | 1,910 | ||
Pike | 7,270 | 4,576 | ||
Pontotoc | 4,548 | 3,793 | ||
Prentiss | 3,507 | 2,951 | ||
Quitman | 2,069 | 691 | ||
Rankin | 12,590 | 21,410 | ||
Scott | 4,128 | 2,985 | ||
Sharkey | 1,337 | 347 | ||
Simpson | 4,126 | 3,649 | ||
Smith | 2,855 | 2,872 | ||
Stone | 2,358 | 2,857 | ||
Sunflower | 4,406 | 1,319 | ||
Tallahatchie | 2,575 | 1,026 | ||
Tate | 3,046 | 2,957 | ||
Tippah | 3,225 | 3,196 | ||
Tishomingo | 3,217 | 3,421 | ||
Tunica | 1,709 | 743 | ||
Union | 3,907 | 3,709 | ||
Walthall | 2,813 | 1,930 | ||
Warren | 7,186 | 4,781 | ||
Washington | 7,260 | 2,374 | ||
Wayne | 3,453 | 2,911 | ||
Webster | 1,773 | 1,711 | ||
Wilkinson | 2,616 | 960 | ||
Winston | 3,841 | 2,493 | ||
Yalobusha | 2,306 | 1,506 | ||
Yazoo | 4,333 | 2,388 |
Notes Edit
- ^ "AG Hood qualifies for re-election". The Clarion-Ledger. February 20, 2015. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
- ^ The Associated Press (February 27, 2015). "GOP federal prosecutor to challenge Mississippi AG Jim Hood". The Clarion-Ledger. Retrieved March 1, 2015.
- ^ "2015 Republican Primary". Mississippi Secretary of State. Archived from the original on February 25, 2021. Retrieved September 2, 2019.
- ^ "2015 General Election". Mississippi Secretary of State. Retrieved September 2, 2019.
- ^ County Level Election Results 2015[permanent dead link]. Mississippi Secretary of State. Retrieved February 24, 2019