Jeffrey Hulum III

American politician
Jeffrey Hulum III
Member of the Mississippi House of Representatives
from the 119th district
Incumbent
Assumed office
August 5, 2022
Preceded bySonya Williams-Barnes
Personal details
Born (1976-07-23) July 23, 1976 (age 47)
Gulfport, Mississippi, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic

Jeffrey Hulum III (born July 23, 1976) is an American politician who is currently serving in the Mississippi House of Representatives from Mississippi's 119th House of Representatives district, a district based in the city of Gulfport. He was elected in a 2022 special election. He is a member of the Democratic Party.

Early life

Hulum was born in Gulfport, Mississippi, on July 23, 1976.[1]

Mississippi legislature

In the 2019 Mississippi House of Representatives election, Hulum unsuccessfully challenged incumbent Democrat Sonya Williams-Barnes in Mississippi's 119th House of Representatives district, losing in the Democratic primary.[2]

In May 2022, Williams-Barnes resigned from the district to join the Southern Poverty Law Center, triggering a special election.[3] The election was held on July 19, 2022. Hulum won against fellow Democrat Gary Fredericks by a large margin.[2]

Electoral history

2019 Mississippi's 119th House of Representatives district Democratic primary election[2]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Sonya Williams-Barnes (incumbent) 1,838 75.36%
Democratic Jeffrey Hulum III 601 24.64%
Total votes 2,439 100%
2022 Mississippi's 119th House of Representatives district special election[2]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Jeffrey Hulum III 844 68.12%
Democratic Gary Fredericks 395 31.88%
Total votes 1,239 100%
Democratic hold

References

  1. ^ "Jeffrey Hulum III". Mississippi House of Representatives. Retrieved December 10, 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d "Jeffrey Hulum III". Ballotpedia. Retrieved December 10, 2022.
  3. ^ Addleman, Brent. "Hulum III wins special election for Mississippi House District 119". The Center Square. Retrieved December 10, 2022.

External links

  • Jeffrey Hulum III at Ballotpedia
  • v
  • t
  • e
Speaker of the House
Jason White (R)
Speaker pro tempore
Manly Barton (R)
  1. Lester Carpenter (R)
  2. Brad Mattox (R)
  3. William Tracy Arnold (R)
  4. Jody Steverson (R)
  5. John Faulkner (D)
  6. Justin Keen (R)
  7. Kimberly Remak (R)
  8. Trey Lamar (R)
  9. Cedric Burnett (D)
  10. Josh Hawkins (R)
  11. Lataisha Jackson (D)
  12. Clay Deweese (R)
  13. Steve Massengill (R)
  14. Sam Creekmore IV (R)
  15. Beth Luther Waldo (R)
  16. Rickey W. Thompson (D)
  17. Shane Aguirre (R)
  18. Jerry Turner (R)
  19. Randy Boyd (R)
  20. Rodney Hall (R)
  21. Donnie Bell (R)
  22. Jon Ray Lancaster (R)
  23. Andrew Stepp (R)
  24. Jeff Hale (R)
  25. Dan Eubanks (R)
  26. Orlando Paden (D)
  27. Kenji Holloway (D)
  28. Doc Harris (R)
  29. Robert L. Sanders (D)
  30. Tracey Rosebud (D)
  31. Otis Anthony II (D)
  32. Solomon Osborne (D)
  33. Jim Estrada (R)
  34. Kevin Horan (R)
  35. Joey Hood (R)
  36. Karl Gibbs (D)
  37. Andy Boyd (R)
  38. Cheikh Taylor (D)
  39. Dana McLean (R)
  40. Hester Jackson-McCray (D)
  41. Kabir Karriem (D)
  42. Carl L. Mickens (D)
  43. Rob Roberson (R)
  44. C. Scott Bounds (R)
  45. Keith Jackson (D)
  46. Karl Oliver (R)
  47. Bryant Clark (D)
  48. Jason White (R)
  49. Willie Bailey (D)
  50. John Hines (D)
  51. Timaka James-Jones (D)
  52. Bill Kinkade (R)
  53. Vince Mangold (R)
  54. Kevin Ford (R)
  55. Oscar Denton (D)
  56. Clay Mansell (R)
  57. Lawrence Blackmon (D)
  58. Jonathan McMillan (R)
  59. Brent Powell (R)
  60. Fred Shanks (R)
  61. Gene Newman (R)
  62. Lance Varner (R)
  63. Stephanie Foster (D)
  64. Shanda Yates (I)
  65. Chris Bell (D)
  66. Fabian Nelson (D)
  67. Earle S. Banks (D)
  68. Zakiya Summers (D)
  69. Tamarra Butler-Washington (D)
  70. Bo Brown (D)
  71. Ronnie Crudup Jr. (D)
  72. Justis Gibbs (D)
  73. Jill Ford (R)
  74. Lee Yancey (R)
  75. Celeste Hurst (R)
  76. Gregory Holloway Sr. (D)
  77. Price Wallace (R)
  78. Randy Rushing (R)
  79. Mark Tullos (R)
  80. Omeria Scott (D)
  81. Stephen Horne (R)
  82. Charles Young Jr. (D)
  83. Billy Adam Calvert (R)
  84. Troy Smith (R)
  85. Jeffery Harness (D)
  86. Shane Barnett (R)
  87. Joseph Tubb (R)
  88. Charles Blackwell (R)
  89. Donnie Scoggin (R)
  90. Noah Sanford (R)
  91. Robert Evans (D)
  92. Becky Currie (R)
  93. Timmy Ladner (R)
  94. Robert Johnson III (D)
  95. Jay McKnight (R)
  96. Angela Cockerham (I)
  97. Sam Mims V (R)
  98. Daryl Porter Jr. (D)
  99. Bill Pigott (R)
  100. Ken Morgan (R)
  101. Kent McCarty (R)
  102. Missy McGee (R)
  103. Percy Watson (D)
  104. Larry Byrd (R)
  105. Elliot Burch (R)
  106. Jansen Owen (R)
  107. Steve Lott (R)
  108. Stacey Hobgood-Wilkes (R)
  109. Manly Barton (R)
  110. Jeramey Anderson (D)
  111. Jimmy Fondren (R)
  112. John Read (R)
  113. Henry Zuber III (R)
  114. Jeffrey Guice (R)
  115. Zachary Grady (R)
  116. Casey Eure (R)
  117. Kevin Felsher (R)
  118. Greg Haney (R)
  119. Jeffrey Hulum III (D)
  120. Richard Bennett (R)
  121. Carolyn Crawford (R)
  122. Brent Anderson (R)


Stub icon

This article about a Mississippi politician is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e