S.C. Sen. Josh Kimbrell exits governor race

Summary

State Sen. Josh Kimbrell ended his South Carolina governor campaign but remained on the June 9 GOP primary ballot.

Why this matters

Kimbrell’s exit narrowed the Republican primary field to five candidates, though his name remained on the ballot as early voting continued. The change could affect voter decisions ahead of the June 9 primary.

State Sen. Josh Kimbrell ended his campaign for South Carolina governor Wednesday, the Spartanburg County Republican said in a video posted to social media.

Kimbrell remained on the June 9 Republican primary ballot. His announcement came with two days left in early voting.

Kimbrell, first elected to the state Senate in 2020, said his decision to leave the six-way race involved several factors, “including some of the nastiest politics I’ve ever experienced in my life” since launching his campaign last June.

His campaign faced months of legal disputes tied to the private aircraft chartering business he founded in 2017. Two weeks after Kimbrell entered the governor’s race, former business partner Frank Rogers sued him, accusing him of funneling more than $2 million from the business into personal and campaign expenses.

Kimbrell denied the allegations and filed a defamation countersuit.

In a 21-minute Facebook video posted in December, Kimbrell said the legal fight left him thousands of dollars in debt and forced him to sell the home he shared with his wife and two children.

Beyond the debates, Kimbrell did not appear to campaign publicly and ranked last in various polls. He also trailed the field in fundraising, reporting about $80,000 raised through March 31, according to his latest filings with the state Election Commission. The other five candidates each raised or self-funded millions of dollars, reports showed.

In Wednesday’s video, he said he was still deciding whom to support for governor and would back the candidate he believed “will carry forward an agenda of pro-family, pro free markets, pro limited government in our state.”

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