The 1983 Mississippi gubernatorial election took place on November 8, 1983, in order to elect the
Governor of Mississippi. Incumbent Democrat
William Winter was term-limited, and could not run for reelection to a second term. As of 2023[update], this is the last time that
Hinds County has voted for the Republican candidate. Many also consider this election the last time that Democrats won a substantial victory in a Mississippi gubernatorial election.
As of 2024, this is the last Mississippi gubernatorial election and the most recent Mississippi gubernatorial election to feature major party nominees who are now both deceased.
Democratic primary
No candidate received a majority in the Democratic primary, so a runoff was held between the top two candidates. The runoff election was won by Attorney General
William Allain, who defeated former Lieutenant Governor
Evelyn Gandy.
In the campaign, the private detective
Rex Armistead, formerly with the
Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission, helped to spread rumors that Allain had
sexual intercourse with two African-American male
transvestites.[3][4][5] Allain denied the charges.[4] The transvestites went on the record with a
lie detector but in 1984, after the election had been held, they claimed that they had never met Allain and had been paid for their testimony.[3][6]
Bramlett lost the general election, 288,764 (38.9 percent) to Allain's 409,209 (55.1 percent).
Charles Evers, the African American
civil rights activist from
Fayette, ran as an Independent and polled 30,593 (4.1 percent).[7] Gil Carmichael, who defeated Bramlett for the GOP gubernatorial nomination in a very close race in 1979, ran in 1983 for
lieutenant governor as a low-budget independent candidate in an apparent attempt to gain a larger share of the African-American vote against the incumbent Democrat
Brad Dye, who prevailed with 464,080 votes (64.3 percent) to Carmichael's 257,623 (35.7 percent). Bramlett, spending over $1.1 million total (and outspending Allain as well)[8] outpolled Carmichael by just over 31,000 votes when both were on the ballot as de facto
ticket mates.[7]
Historian
David Sansing described the 1983 contest as "one of the most tumultuous campaigns in the history of Mississippi politics."[10] Journalist
Charles Overby wrote that the sex scandal accusations were "a lot stranger than fiction".[11] The allegations and the 1983 campaign have been covered in several works, including William Franklin West's 1995 master's thesis, The Case of the Reluctant Story: The Allain Sex Scandal; a chapter in Jere Nash and Andy Taggart's Mississippi Politics; and several pages in John Howard's 199 book on gay history in Mississippi, Men Like That.[11] Through the passage by Mississippi voters of a 1986 amendment to the state constitution, Allain became the first Governor in a century eligible to run for reelection in 1987, but up to the filing deadline for candidates that year declined to say whether or not he would, and the deadline passed without him filing to.[12]