Voters in seven Mississippi legislative districts, including five House and two Senate districts, will choose candidates in Republican and Democratic special primary elections on Tuesday, Aug. 5.
The affected districts must host elections this year after a three-judge panel ordered the Mississippi Legislature to undergo redistricting to ensure Black voters had equal participation in the political process.Â
Those districts include Senate District 1, Senate District 2, Senate District 11, Senate District 41, Senate District 42, Senate District 44, House District 16 and House District 41.
The Democratic and Republican candidates that voters choose in Tuesday’s election will head to the special election on Nov. 4.
Mississippi House Primaries
House District 16: Chickasaw, Lee, Monroe and Pontotoc Counties
Democrats:
- Rickey Thompson (incumbent)
- Brady Davis
House District 41: Lowndes County
Democrats:
- Kabir Karriem (incumbent)
- Pierre D. Beard, Sr.
Mississippi Senate Primaries
Senate District 1: DeSoto and Tate Counties
Republicans:
- Michael McLendon (incumbent)
- Jon Stevenson
Senate District 2: DeSoto and Tunica counties
Democrats:
- Theresa Gillespie Isom
- Robert J. Walker
Senate District 11: Coahoma, DeSoto, Quitman, Tate and Tunica Counties
Democrats:
- Reginald Dejuan Jackson (incumbent)
- Abe M. Hudson, Jr.
Senate District 42: Forrest, Greene, Jones and Wayne counties
Republicans:
- Robin Robinson (incumbent)
- RJ Robinson
- Don Hartness
Senate District 44: Lamar, Perry and Forrest Counties
Republicans:
- Chris Johnson (incumbent)
- Patrick Lott
Fourteen special legislative elections are set for Nov. 4, including three special elections set to fill legislative seats that are empty after a senator retired and two legislators became mayors.Â
Those districts are Senate District 26, which Jackson Mayor John Horhn previously represented; House District 26, which Clarksdale Mayor Orlando Paden formerly served and Senate District 24, which retired Sen. David Jordan formerly represented.
Because Horhn, Paden and Jordan resigned from their legislative positions, Mississippi law does not require primary elections for the affected districts. Aug. 21 is the qualifying deadline for those who want to run for office to represent Senate District 24, Senate District 26 and House District 26. The candidates running for those offices will be nonpartisan, and the winners will declare their party affiliation after Gov. Tate Reeves swears them into office.
The Mississippi Secretary of State’s website has a My Election Day tool that allows Mississippians to type in their address to see where they go to vote and which candidates will be on the ballot. The Mississippi Free Press urges voters to also call their local election officials to confirm their polling place.
Mississippians will vote for legislative offices in the Tuesday, Aug. 5 special primary election. Any eligible registered voter who registered in person or had their voter registration application postmarked by July 3 can cast a ballot in the special primary election.
Polls are open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Contact your local circuit clerk or election commissioners for polling place information. Voters must bring an accepted form of voter ID to the polls. For more information, visit sos.ms.gov/yall-vote.

