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What to expect in South Carolina’s state primaries

What to expect in South Carolina’s state primaries
YOUR TOWN WILL GET IN. JUST JUST A FEW MINUTES. THANK YOU CHRIS. BACK TO OUR COMMITMENT 2024 COVERAGE. VOTERS WILL SELECT THE REPUBLICAN NOMINEE FOR U.S. HOUSE DISTRICT FOUR IN NOVEMBER’S GENERAL ELECTION. HERE’S A LOOK AT THE CONTENDERS. INCUMBENT WILLIAM TIMMONS IS GOING UP AGAINST ADAM MORGAN, OUR JANE ROBALO IS LIVE IN GREENVILLE COUNTY WITH A CLOSER LOOK AT THIS RACE. JANE. WELL, CAROL AND NIGEL. WILLIAM TIMMONS HASN’T REALLY FACED A CHALLENGE LIKE THIS SINCE HE WON THE SEAT BACK IN 2018, BUT HE HAD TO FACE A RUNOFF WITH LEE BRIGHT IN ORDER TO DO THAT. HIS CHALLENGER, ADAM MORGAN, HAS SERVED THREE TERMS IN THE SOUTH CAROLINA STATE HOUSE. HE IS NOT RUNNING AGAIN FOR THAT SEAT, WHICH HE WOULD BE ALLOWED TO DO. BOTH CANDIDATES TELL US TODAY THAT THEY FEEL VERY CONFIDENT. WILLIAM TIMMONS WAS OUT THIS MORNING WITH HIS CAMPAIGN TEAM AT THE CORNER OF POINSETT HIGHWAY, ACROSS FROM CHERRYDALE MALL. THEY WERE WAVING SIGNS AND WAVING AT PEOPLE, ENCOURAGING PEOPLE TO VOTE FOR THEM. WE ASKED HIM HOW HE WOULD USE A FOURTH TERM TO BETTER REPRESENT THE PEOPLE OF THE FOURTH DISTRICT. YOU KNOW, MY RECORD IS VERY STRONG. FOR THE LAST FIVE AND A HALF YEARS, I’VE VOTED CONSERVATIVE, BUT I’VE ALSO GOTTEN RESULTS. MY COLLEAGUES TRUST ME AND THEY RESPECT ME. AND THAT’S WHY PRESIDENT TRUMP ENDORSED ME. AND THAT’S WHY THE GOVERNOR WAS UP HERE YESTERDAY. SO I THINK OUR RECORD SEPARATE US. EVERYBODY ELSE VOTED EARLY. CHALLENGER ADAM MORGAN SAYS. AND HIS WIFE, MEGAN WENT TO VOTE THIS MORNING. THEY HAD THEIR THREE YOUNG CHILDREN IN ATTENDANCE AS WELL. WE ASKED THE FOUNDER OF THE SOUTH CAROLINA FREEDOM CAUCUS HOW HE WOULD SERVE THE PEOPLE OF THE FOURTH DISTRICT IN WASHINGTON, D.C., JUST SHOWING UP MORE, BEING MORE PRESENT IN DISTRICT AND A REALLY LEADING THE FIGHT AGAINST SOME OF THE MAJOR ISSUES OF OUR TIME WITH THE STRANGLEHOLD OF LOBBIED SPECIAL INTERESTS ON GOVERNMENT, REALLY AT ALL LEVELS. I’VE BEEN LEADING THE FIGHT AGAINST THAT AT THE STATE LEVEL. AS CHAIR OF THE FREEDOM CAUCUS. AND I’LL TAKE THAT SAME FIGHT TO WASHINGTON IN. NOW, MORGAN IS CHALLENGING TIMMONS FROM THE RIGHT, SAYING THAT TIMMONS IS NOT CONSERVATIVE ENOUGH. BUT TIMMONS, AS YOU JUST HEARD A MOMENT AGO, SAYS HE HAS THE ENDORSEMENT. SO FORMER PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP OF SOUTH CAROLINA, GOVERNOR HENRY MCMASTER AND THAT SHOULD PROVE TO VOTERS THAT HE IS INDEED STANDING ON CONSERVATIVE VALUES IN GREENVILLE JANE ROBELOT WYFF NEWS FOUR. JANE, THANK YOU. NOW TO THE RACE FOR U.S. HOUSE DISTRICT THREE. THERE’S QUITE A LONG LIST OF REPUBLICAN AND DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATES VYING TO GET ON THE NOVEMBER BALLOT. OUR PEYTON FURTADO IS LIVE IN ANDERSON WITH MORE ON WHAT IS AT STAKE. PEYTON. NIGEL, QUITE A LONG LIST. YOU’RE ABSOLUTELY RIGHT. WE’VE GOT THREE REASONS WHY YOU SHOULD BE WATCHING THIS RACE. ONE, NINE DIFFERENT CANDIDATES IN THIS RACE SEVEN REPUBLICANS, TWO. DEMOCRATS, TWO. NO INCUMBENTS INVOLVED IN THIS ONE. THIS WAS JEFF DUNCAN’S DISTRICT. DISTRICT THREE. HE IS NOT RUNNING AGAIN THIS YEAR. AND THREE, THIS IS A MAJOR REGION. THIS AREA MAKES UP ABBEVILLE, ANDERSON COUNTY, GREENWOOD COUNTY, LAURENS, MCCORMICK, OCONEE, PICKENS COUNTIES, AS WELL AS PARTS OF GREENVILLE AND NEWBERRY COUNTIES AND SOME COUNTIES THAT I DIDN’T EVEN MENTION OUTSIDE OF OUR VIEWING AREA. NOW, WE CAUGHT UP WITH SOME VOTERS TODAY TO HEAR WHAT’S IMPORTANT TO THEM ABOUT THAT RACE. THE BORDER INFLATION. UH, THE ANTI-SEMITIC, UH, SURGE. IT SEEMS TO BE, UH, TAKING OVER THE COUNTRY. ANOTHER THING COMING UP WITH A LOT OF VOTERS, THE ECONOMY NOW ON THE REPUBLICAN SIDE, WE’VE GOT CHERI BIGGS, KEVIN BISHOP, MARK BURNS, FRANKIE FRANCO, PHIL HEALY, STUART JONES AND ELSPETH SNOW MURDAUGH. AND ON THE DEMOCRAT SIDE, WE’VE GOT TWO CANDIDATES, BRIAN BEST AND FRANCIS GILDNER. WE’RE GOING TO KEEP A CLOSE EYE ON THIS RACE AND KEEP YOU UP TO DATE AS THE POLLING PLACE CLOSES AT 7:00. WE’LL ALSO BE HERE AT 6:00 WITH MORE INFORMATION, BUT FOR NOW, LIVE IN ANDERSON. I’M PEYTON FURTADO WYFF NEWS FOUR. THANK YOU PEYTON AND GREENVILLE COUNTY, SEVERAL COUNCIL SEATS AND OTHER MAJOR POSITIONS ARE UP FOR GRABS. ONLY ONE RACE HAS DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATES. IT’S OUR RASHAD WILLIAMS IS FOLLOWING THIS. AND RASHAD, HOW IS VOTER TURNOUT SO FAR? WELL, CAROL, AT LAST CHECK. CONWAY BELANGIA, WHO OVERSEES ELECTIONS IN GREENVILLE COUNTY, SAYS THAT VOTER TURNOUT IS JUST OVER 10%, WHICH HE SAYS IS PRETTY LOW FOR A PRIMARY ELECTION LIKE TODAY. AND HE HOPES THAT THE VOTER TURNOUT WILL AT LEAST SURPASS 15% BY THE 7 P.M. CUTOFF. NOW, AMONG THAT TEN PLUS PERCENT IS MARCUS RUSSELL. WE CAUGHT UP WITH HIM AFTER HE VOTED TODAY HERE AT COUNTY SQUARE. MARCUS RUSSELL BASICALLY JUST SAID THAT IT IS IMPORTANT THESE LOCAL RACES REALLY ALLOW FOR INDIVIDUALS TO HAVE CHANGE WHEN IT COMES TO THE LOCAL LEVEL. HE FEELS LIKE THESE ARE MORE IMPORTANT THAN SOME OF THE NATIONAL RACES. LET’S GET INTO SOME OF THE LOCAL RACES. COUNTY COUNCIL DISTRICT 25. THE ONLY DEMOCRATIC RACE INCUMBENT INES FANT, IS ON THE BALLOT AGAINST THREE CHALLENGERS DERRICK QUARLES, PATRICK PRINCE AND LISA SWEENEY. THERE IS NO INCUMBENT FOR COUNTY COUNCIL DISTRICT 22 FOR REPUBLICAN CHALLENGERS WHO ARE LISTED HERE ON YOUR SCREEN ARE VYING FOR THAT SPOT IN DISTRICT 20. REPUBLICAN INCUMBENT STEVE SHAW HAS TWO REPUBLICAN OPPONENTS LOOKING FOR THEIR CHANCE TO SIT IN THE SEAT. AND IN THE RACE FOR GREENVILLE COUNTY SHERIFF, REPUBLICAN INCUMBENT HOBART LEWIS IS TAKING ON REPUBLICAN MIKE FAULKNER. WE HAVE LESS THAN TWO HOURS TO GO, AND WE HOPE TO BRING YOU SOME SOUND FROM MARCUS RUSSELL COMING UP IN THE NEXT HOUR, OR TO HELP VOTERS GET OUT HERE BEFORE AGAIN, AGAIN, BEFORE THAT 7 P.M. CUTOFF. SEVERAL INCUMBENTS THIS EVENING ARE HOPI
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What to expect in South Carolina’s state primaries
Federal and state lawmakers in South Carolina will go before voters on Tuesday in primary elections, where the latest skirmish in an ongoing feud involving a former Republican U.S. House Speaker will play out.Voters will decide nearly 90 contested primaries for the House of Representatives and both chambers of the state legislature. Republicans’ grip on those offices is likely not at risk this fall, but one contest may further exacerbate a high-profile rift within the party.Rep. Nancy Mace is running for a third term in the 1st Congressional District in the state’s Lowcountry along the Atlantic coastline near Charleston. In 2023, she was one of eight U.S. House Republicans to break with the party and vote to oust Rep. Kevin McCarthy as Speaker of the House. Since then, McCarthy has thrown the weight of his political operation and fundraising prowess against the defectors and has backed challengers to unseat them in their primaries. In April, McCarthy’s political action committee, Majority Committee PAC or “MC PAC,” made a $10,000 contribution to Mace’s primary opponent, Catherine Templeton, the former director of the state’s labor agency under then-Gov. Nikki Haley. A separate committee, American Prosperity Alliance, where a McCarthy ally serves as a senior adviser, has made contributions to a group called South Carolina Patriots PAC, which has spent more than $2.1 million to defeat Mace. American Prosperity Alliance has also made contributions to a group called the America Fund, which is one of the South Carolina Patriots PAC’s principal donors.McCarthy backed Mace as recently as her 2022 reelection bid, but the relationship deteriorated quickly since the Speaker vote. McCarthy told reporters in February that he hopes Mace “gets the help to straighten out her life. She’s got a lot of challenges.” Mace responded in a fundraising video that McCarthy “lied to the American people” and that he is “a loser.” She has described Templeton as McCarthy’s “puppet.” In addition to McCarthy, Templeton’s other supporters include former Speaker Newt Gingrich and Rep. Joe Wilson of the nearby 2nd Congressional District. Mace has the backing of former President Donald Trump and current Speaker Mike Johnson.Other key races on Tuesday include the GOP primaries in the state’s 3rd and 4th Congressional Districts. In the 3rd District, a crowded field of seven Republicans is competing for the nomination to replace Rep. Jeff Duncan, who announced in January that he would not seek an eighth term. In the 4th District, three-term Rep. William Timmons faces a challenge from state Rep. Adam Morgan, founder of South Carolina’s version of the U.S. House Republicans’ Freedom Caucus. Voters in the 3rd District gave Trump 68% of the vote in 2020, while 58% of 4th District voters backed the then-president. Further down the ballot are about two dozen state Senate primaries and just shy of 60 state House primaries. All 170 state legislative seats are up for election in November. Republicans enjoy lopsided majorities in both chambers. The congressional elections will use district boundaries that have been at the center of an ongoing legal dispute over the representation of the state’s Black voters. In late May, the Supreme Court upheld a Republican-drawn map that drew Mace into a considerably safer district than the one she was first elected into in 2020. A lower court ruled in 2023 that the map discriminated against Black voters by intentionally diluting their voting power.Here’s a look at what to expect on Tuesday:PRIMARY DAYThe South Carolina state primary will be held Tuesday. Polls close at 7 p.m. ET.WHAT’S ON THE BALLOTThe Associated Press will provide vote results and declare winners in 88 races, including nine contested primaries for the U.S. House, 23 for the state Senate and 56 for the state House.WHO GETS TO VOTESouth Carolina has an open primary system, which means any registered voter may participate in any party’s primary.DECISION NOTESIn South Carolina, primaries with three or more candidates are subject to a runoff if no candidate receives more than 50% of the vote. If the leading candidate in a contest hovers near the 50% mark, the race might not be called until additional votes are counted. The AP will either call winners in races in which a candidate has clearly received more than 50% of the vote or, if no candidate has received a majority, declare that each of the top two vote-getters has advanced to a runoff. In the 1st Congressional District, Mace’s vote performance in her 2022 primary will provide a good benchmark as results are reported on Tuesday night. That year, she and former state Rep. Katie Arrington each carried three of the district’s six counties, with Mace carrying vote-rich Beaufort and Charleston counties and Arrington more narrowly winning Berkeley and Dorchester. They split the two smaller counties. The AP does not make projections and will declare a winner only when it’s determined there is no scenario that would allow the trailing candidates to close the gap. If a race has not been called, the AP will continue to cover any newsworthy developments, such as candidate concessions or declarations of victory. In doing so, the AP will make clear that it has not yet declared a winner and explain why.In South Carolina, recounts are automatic if the margin between the winning and losing candidates (or between the second-place runoff-qualifying candidate and a candidate who does not qualify for the runoff) is not more than 1% of the total vote. The AP may declare a winner in a race that is eligible for a recount if it can determine the lead is too large for a recount or legal challenge to change the outcome.WHAT DO TURNOUT AND ADVANCE VOTE LOOK LIKE?As of Wednesday, there were nearly 3.3 million registered voters in South Carolina.In the 2022 primaries for governor, turnout was 5% of registered voters in the Democratic primary and 10% in the Republican primary. About 29% of Democratic primary voters and 17% of Republican primary voters cast their ballots before primary day.As of Wednesday, a total of 82,724 voters had cast ballots before primary day, most of it in the form of early in-person voting. About 15,000 votes were cast by mail, about 48% for the Democratic primaries and about 52% in the Republican primaries.HOW LONG DOES VOTE COUNTING USUALLY TAKE?In the 2022 primaries, the AP first reported results at 7:21 p.m. ET, or 21 minutes after polls closed. The election night tabulation ended at 1:14 a.m. ET with more than 99% of total votes counted.ARE WE THERE YET?As of Tuesday, there will be 147 days until the November general election.

Federal and state lawmakers in South Carolina will go before voters on Tuesday in primary elections, where the latest skirmish in an ongoing feud involving a former Republican U.S. House Speaker will play out.

Voters will decide nearly 90 contested primaries for the House of Representatives and both chambers of the state legislature. Republicans’ grip on those offices is likely not at risk this fall, but one contest may further exacerbate a high-profile rift within the party.

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Rep. Nancy Mace is running for a third term in the 1st Congressional District in the state’s Lowcountry along the Atlantic coastline near Charleston. In 2023, she was one of eight U.S. House Republicans to break with the party and vote to oust Rep. Kevin McCarthy as Speaker of the House. Since then, McCarthy has thrown the weight of his political operation and fundraising prowess against the defectors and has backed challengers to unseat them in their primaries.

In April, McCarthy’s political action committee, Majority Committee PAC or “MC PAC,” made a $10,000 contribution to Mace’s primary opponent, Catherine Templeton, the former director of the state’s labor agency under then-Gov. Nikki Haley. A separate committee, American Prosperity Alliance, where a McCarthy ally serves as a senior adviser, has made contributions to a group called South Carolina Patriots PAC, which has spent more than $2.1 million to defeat Mace. American Prosperity Alliance has also made contributions to a group called the America Fund, which is one of the South Carolina Patriots PAC’s principal donors.

McCarthy backed Mace as recently as her 2022 reelection bid, but the relationship deteriorated quickly since the Speaker vote. McCarthy told reporters in February that he hopes Mace “gets the help to straighten out her life. She’s got a lot of challenges.” Mace responded in a fundraising video that McCarthy “lied to the American people” and that he is “a loser.” She has described Templeton as McCarthy’s “puppet.”

    In addition to McCarthy, Templeton’s other supporters include former Speaker Newt Gingrich and Rep. Joe Wilson of the nearby 2nd Congressional District. Mace has the backing of former President Donald Trump and current Speaker Mike Johnson.

    Other key races on Tuesday include the GOP primaries in the state’s 3rd and 4th Congressional Districts. In the 3rd District, a crowded field of seven Republicans is competing for the nomination to replace Rep. Jeff Duncan, who announced in January that he would not seek an eighth term. In the 4th District, three-term Rep. William Timmons faces a challenge from state Rep. Adam Morgan, founder of South Carolina’s version of the U.S. House Republicans’ Freedom Caucus. Voters in the 3rd District gave Trump 68% of the vote in 2020, while 58% of 4th District voters backed the then-president.

    Further down the ballot are about two dozen state Senate primaries and just shy of 60 state House primaries. All 170 state legislative seats are up for election in November. Republicans enjoy lopsided majorities in both chambers.

    The congressional elections will use district boundaries that have been at the center of an ongoing legal dispute over the representation of the state’s Black voters. In late May, the Supreme Court upheld a Republican-drawn map that drew Mace into a considerably safer district than the one she was first elected into in 2020. A lower court ruled in 2023 that the map discriminated against Black voters by intentionally diluting their voting power.

    Here’s a look at what to expect on Tuesday:

    PRIMARY DAY

    The South Carolina state primary will be held Tuesday. Polls close at 7 p.m. ET.

    WHAT’S ON THE BALLOT

    The Associated Press will provide vote results and declare winners in 88 races, including nine contested primaries for the U.S. House, 23 for the state Senate and 56 for the state House.

    WHO GETS TO VOTE

    South Carolina has an open primary system, which means any registered voter may participate in any party’s primary.

    DECISION NOTES

    In South Carolina, primaries with three or more candidates are subject to a runoff if no candidate receives more than 50% of the vote. If the leading candidate in a contest hovers near the 50% mark, the race might not be called until additional votes are counted. The AP will either call winners in races in which a candidate has clearly received more than 50% of the vote or, if no candidate has received a majority, declare that each of the top two vote-getters has advanced to a runoff.

    In the 1st Congressional District, Mace’s vote performance in her 2022 primary will provide a good benchmark as results are reported on Tuesday night. That year, she and former state Rep. Katie Arrington each carried three of the district’s six counties, with Mace carrying vote-rich Beaufort and Charleston counties and Arrington more narrowly winning Berkeley and Dorchester. They split the two smaller counties.

    The AP does not make projections and will declare a winner only when it’s determined there is no scenario that would allow the trailing candidates to close the gap. If a race has not been called, the AP will continue to cover any newsworthy developments, such as candidate concessions or declarations of victory. In doing so, the AP will make clear that it has not yet declared a winner and explain why.

    In South Carolina, recounts are automatic if the margin between the winning and losing candidates (or between the second-place runoff-qualifying candidate and a candidate who does not qualify for the runoff) is not more than 1% of the total vote. The AP may declare a winner in a race that is eligible for a recount if it can determine the lead is too large for a recount or legal challenge to change the outcome.

    WHAT DO TURNOUT AND ADVANCE VOTE LOOK LIKE?

    As of Wednesday, there were nearly 3.3 million registered voters in South Carolina.

    In the 2022 primaries for governor, turnout was 5% of registered voters in the Democratic primary and 10% in the Republican primary. About 29% of Democratic primary voters and 17% of Republican primary voters cast their ballots before primary day.

    As of Wednesday, a total of 82,724 voters had cast ballots before primary day, most of it in the form of early in-person voting. About 15,000 votes were cast by mail, about 48% for the Democratic primaries and about 52% in the Republican primaries.

    HOW LONG DOES VOTE COUNTING USUALLY TAKE?

    In the 2022 primaries, the AP first reported results at 7:21 p.m. ET, or 21 minutes after polls closed. The election night tabulation ended at 1:14 a.m. ET with more than 99% of total votes counted.

    ARE WE THERE YET?

    As of Tuesday, there will be 147 days until the November general election.