SC early voting surges as map bill stalls in Senate

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1–2 minutes

Summary

South Carolina set a first-day early voting record as many voters cited concern over a congressional redistricting bill that later stalled in the Senate.

Why this matters

The story shows how legislative action on election maps can affect voter behavior and election administration in real time. It also gives South Carolina voters key dates for early voting and Election Day.

South Carolina set a record for first-day early voting in a primary Tuesday, with many voters saying they wanted to cast ballots before lawmakers could change the state’s congressional map.

By 3 p.m., 44,600 people had voted in person, nearly double the previous single-day primary early-voting record of just over 23,000 set on the final day of early voting in June 2024, according to the State Election Commission. The agency had also received nearly 4,200 mailed absentee ballots.

Later Tuesday, senators effectively ended a bill to redraw the state’s congressional districts. Some Republicans who changed their positions cited the number of early votes for congressional candidates that would have to be discarded.

U.S. Rep. Jim Clyburn, South Carolina’s only Democrat in Congress, voted Tuesday in Orangeburg County. His 6th District was central to the redistricting debate. The proposed map would have moved his home in Santee into the 2nd District, potentially putting him in a general election contest with U.S. Rep. Joe Wilson. Clyburn said he would file in whatever district includes his Orangeburg County home.

Clyburn criticized the proposal and thanked Republican senators who opposed it.

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