Complete 2024 South Carolina Election Results & Analysis

November 6, 2024

Palmetto Promise Team

To view results in the various races, you can click these links to be brought to that section.

Winners are marked in bold.

UPDATED Monday, November 11, 2024 10:10 AM

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Presidential Results

PRESIDENT AND VICE PRESIDENT (SOUTH CAROLINA)

Randall A Terry / Stephen E Broden ( Constitution ) 0.21%
Cornel West / Melina Abdulla ( United Citizens ) 0.26%
Jill Stein / Rudolph Butch Ware ( Green ) 0.32%
Donald J Trump / JD Vance ( Republican ) 58.23%
Chase Oliver / Mike ter Maat ( Libertarian ) 0.50%
Kamala D Harris / Tim Walz ( Democratic ) 40.36%
Claudia De La Cruz / Karina Garcia ( Workers ) 0.12%

All-time highs for candidates for President among South Carolina voters since 1980 are: Ronald Reagan 63.55% (1980), George H.W. Bush 61.50% (1988), George W. Bush 57.98% and 56.83% (2004; 2000), and Donald Trump 55.11% and 54.94% (2020; 2016).

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U.S. House Results

 

U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES DISTRICT 1

Beaufort, Berkeley, Charleston, Colleton, Dorchester, Jasper 
Nancy Mace (incumbent) 58.22% R
Michael B. Moore 41.60% D

Mace is elected to a third term. She defeated Congressman Joe Cunningham to win the seat in 2020 and Catherine Templeton to win the Republican Primary in June. Mace was one of a handful of members of Republican members of Congress to vote to replace incumbent Speaker Kevin McCarthy.

 

U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES DISTRICT 2

Aiken, Barnwell, Lexington, Orangeburg, Richland
David Robinson II 40.25% D
Joe Wilson (incumbent) 59.53% R

Wilson served in the SC Senate for 17 years before being elected to this seat in a Special Election after the death of his mentor and friend Congressman Floyd Spence in 2001.

 

U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES DISTRICT 3

Abbeville, Andreson, Edgefield, Greenville, Greenwood, Laurens, McCormick, Newberry, Oconee, Pickens, Saluda 
Mike Bedenbaugh 2.86% Alliance
Bryon L Best 25.30% D
Sheri Biggs 71.66% R

Former Mississippian Sheri Biggs is a newcomer to politics. She came from behind to defeat Rev. Mark Burns by 1,087 votes of 55,173 cast in the June Republican Primary Runoff.

 

U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES DISTRICT 4

Greenville, Spartanburg
Mark Hackett 2.82% Constitution
Kathryn Harvey 37.23% D
William Timmons (incumbent) 59.73% R

The real race in this +12 Republican district was in the June primary where incumbent Timmons defeated State Rep. Adam Morgan with 51.6% of the vote.

 

U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES DISTRICT 5

Cherokee, Chester, Fairfield, Kershaw, Lancaster, Lee, Spartanburg, Sumter, Union, York 
Evangeline Hundley 36.34% D
Ralph Norman (incumbent) 63.51% R

In 2017, Norman resigned his SC House seat to campaign full-time for this seat that opened when former Congressman Mick Mulvaney took a position in the Trump Administration.

 

U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES DISTRICT 6

Allendale, Bamberg, Calhoun, Charleston, Clarendon, Dorchester, Florence, Hampton, Jasper, Orangeburg, Richland, Sumter, Williamsburg 
Duke Buckner 36.72% R
Jim Clyburn (incumbent) 59.50% D
Gregg Marcel Dixon 1.61% United Citizens
Joseph Oddo 0.35% Alliance
Michael Simpson 1.73% Libertarian

Attorney Duke Buckner ran an aggressive campaign, but there was no beating former US House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn, who first won the seat in 1992.

 

U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES DISTRICT 7

Chesterfield, Darlington, Dillon, Florence, Georgetown, Horry, Marion, Marlboro
Russell Fry (incumbent) 64.90% R
Mal Hyman 34.97% D

Former State Representative Russell Fry is elected to a second term in Congress. Fry, a strong advocate of school choice, won a multi-candidate primary in 2022 that included the sitting Congressman Tom Rice.

 

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SC Senate Results

The incumbent 2023-24 South Carolina Senate was 30-16 Republican (65% GOP). But district lines shifted due to the Census that couldn’t be drawn in any other manner than to favor Republicans. The most Republican Senate in our region is Tennessee with 82% GOP. Florida is second with 70%. South Carolina is third with 65%. To advance to second, South Carolina Republicans would have to win 3 seats from the Democrats this cycle.

Depending on turnout, Republicans hoped to pick up between 2 and 6 Senate seats this cycle. It looks like +4 as of this writing, which would leapfrog Florida. The GOP missed on Districts 26 and 35, each of which were vacated by retiring Democratic incumbents.

SC SENATE DISTRICT 1

Oconee, Pickens
Thomas Alexander (incumbent) 98.91% R

Alexander is the President of the Senate and Chairman of the Oversight Committee. He was elected to the House in 1986 and the Senate in 1994.

SC SENATE DISTRICT 2

Greenville, Pickens
Rex Rice (incumbent) 98.89% R

Rice served in the House from 1995-2010 and was first elected to the Senate in 2016.

SC SENATE DISTRICT 3

Anderson
Richard Cash (incumbent) 75.41% R
Jessicka Spearman 24.49% D

Cash was first elected to the Senate in 2017 to fill the unexpired term of Kevin Bryant who became Lieutenant Governor.

SC SENATE DISTRICT 4

Abbeville, Andreson
Mike Gambrell (incumbent) 99.25% R

Gambrell served in the House from 2007-2016 and was elected in a Special Election to the Senate in 2016.

SC SENATE DISTRICT 5

Greenville, Spartanburg
Tom Corbin (incumbent) 98.91% R

Corbin served in the House for a term before being elected to the Senate in 2012.

SC SENATE DISTRICT 6

Greenville
Jason Elliott 97.55% R

Current state Representative Elliott won a Republican Primary Runoff in June to move from the House to the Senate. He will replace retiring Senator Dwight Loftis.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 7

Greenville
Karl Allen (incumbent) 97.07% D

Allen turned back a primary challenger in June and is elected to a fourth term.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 8

Greenville
Taylor Culliver 36.92% D
Ross Turner (incumbent) 62.98% R

Turner was first elected to the Senate in 2012.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 9

Greenville, Laurens, Union
C Randy Driggers 29.64% D
Danny Verdin (incumbent) 70.24% R

Senate Medical Affairs Committee Chairman Verdin was first elected to the SC Senate in 2000.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 10

Greenwood, Lexington, and Saluda
Billy Garrett (incumbent) 69.09% R
Francie Kleckley 30.74% D

Billy Garrett is re-elected for second term. He won in a four-way Republican Primary field in a runoff for a very different district than the one he won in 2020.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 11

Spartanburg
Josh Kimbrell (incumbent) 65.25% R
Angela L Geter 34.64% D

Kimbrell flipped this seat Republican in 2020 and is elected to a second term,

SC SENATE DISTRICT 12

Greenville, Spartanburg
Octavia Amaechi 35.84% D
Roger Allen Nutt 64.04% R

Nutt moves from the House to the Senate to fill the seat of retiring Senator Scott Talley. Nutt won a runoff in June in primary that attracted four candidates including former Senator Lee Bright, who finished first in the original primary.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 13

Greenville, Spartanburg, Union
Shane Martin (incumbent) 98.42% R

Senate Corrections & Penology Chairman Martin has been serving in the Senate since 2009.

SC SENATE DISTRICT 14

Cherokee, Spartanburg, Union, York
Harvey Peeler (incumbent) 99.09% R

Senate Finance Committee Chairman Peeler was first elected to the SC Senate in 1980.

SC SENATE DISTRICT 15

York
Wes Climer (incumbent) 76.05% R
Sarah Work 23.49% Alliance

Senate Agriculture & Natural Resources Chairman Climer was elected to the Senate in 2016.

SC SENATE DISTRICT 16

Lancaster, York
Michael Johnson (incumbent) 78.78% R
Kiral Mace 20.71% Workers

Attorney Michael Johnson returns for a second term.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 17

Chester, Fairfield, Lancaster, York
Mike Fanning (incumbent) 49.93% D
Everett Stubbs 49.98% R

This district changed with redistricting and was on the Republican shortlist for flipping red. Stubbs won a three-way primary to set up the race with Fanning, an aggressive opponent of school choice. Stubbs leads by 29 votes. Fanning has conceded.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 18

Lexington, Newberry, Richland
Ronnie Cromer (incumbent) 98.60% R

Senate Banking & Insurance Chairman Cromer was first elected to the Senate in a Special Election when Andre Bauer became Lieutenant Governor (2003).

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 19

Richland
Tameika Isaac Devine (incumbent) 87.27% D
Chris Nelums 12.38% United Citizens

Former Columbia City Council member Isaac Devine wins her first full term after winning a 2024 Special Election to replace the late Senator John Scott.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 20

Charleston
Kendal Ludden 26.09% Libertarian
Ed Sutton 73.42% D

District 20 moved to Charleston from Richland-Lexington with redistricting after the 2020 census. Sutton, a veteran and businessman, is the first Senator to hold the new seat.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 21

Richland
Darrell Jackson (incumbent) 98.54% D

Jackson was first elected to the Senate in 1992.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 22

Richland
Overture Walker 98.55% D

Former Richland County Councilman Walker finished second in the Democratic Primary in June but defeated Rep. Ivory Thigpen for the nomination in the runoff. Senator Mia McLeod retired to open up this seat.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 23

Lexington
Carlisle Kennedy 97.94% R

Incumbent Senator Katrina Shealy led the original three-way Republican Primary field in this one, but Kennedy, the son of a former SC House member, won this runoff two weeks later. Shealy defeated incumbent Senator Jake Knotts in 2012.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 24

Aiken
Dee Elder 32.93% D
Tom Young (incumbent) 67.01% R

Young served two terms in the House before being elected to the Senate in 2012.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 25

Aiken, Edgefield, Lexington, McCormick, Saluda
Shane Massey (incumbent) 98.99% R

The Majority Leader of the South Carolina Senate, who also chairs the Rules Committee, was elected in a Special Election in 2007.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 26

Calhoun, Lexington, Richland
Jason Guerry 45.02% R
Russell Ott 54.83% D

There is much to say about this seat and this race, one of the closest-watched of the night. The district changed during reapportionment and to become only +3 Democrat. Ott, a House member and the son of a House member from the Calhoun County portion of the district, defeated Richland-based incumbent Senator Dick Harpootlian in June. The district included two incumbents. Senator Nikki Setzler retired from the seat to which he was elected in 1976.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 27

Chesterfield, Kershaw, Lancaster
Allen Blackmon 70.16% R
Yokima Cureton 29.74% D

Penry Gustafson won a seat with different boundaries in 2020 to unseat former two-time Democratic candidate for Governor Vincent Sheheen. Blackmon, a general contractor who formerly worked with the State Department of Revenue, defeated Gustafson in the June Republican Primary.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 28

Horry
Greg Hembree (incumbent) 99.13% R

Senate Education Committee Chairman Hembree returns for a fourth term in the Senate.

SC SENATE DISTRICT 29

Chesterfield, Darlington, Lee, Marlboro, Sumter
JD Chaplin 50.03% R
Gerald Malloy (incumbent) 49.86% D

Farmer JD Chaplain wins a huge pickup for the SCGOP in one of the biggest results of the night. This district did not make the Republican short list due to its +8 Democratic lean, but it was on the long list. Malloy first was elected to represent this district in 2002. Final margin after recount: 87 votes.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 30

Darlington, Dillon, Florence, Horry, Marion
Rodney Berry 45.21% R
Kent M Williams (incumbent) 54.68% D

Williams was first elected to the SC Senate in 2004.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 31

Florence
Mike Reichenbach (incumbent) 65.96% R
Belinda Timmons 33.98% D

Reichenbach was elected to the Senate in a Special Election in 2022 to replace the late Senator Hugh Leatherman.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 32

Berkeley, Charleston, Florence, Georgetown, Williamsburg, Horry
Ronnie A Sabb (incumbent) 98.22% D

Sabb served two terms in the House before being elected to the Senate in 2014.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 33

Horry
Pete John Bember 31.33% D
Luke A Rankin (incumbent) 68.46% R

Senate Judiciary Chairman Rankin (first elected in 1992) survived a Republican Primary in June 54%-46%.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 34

Georgetown, Horry
Stephen Goldfinch (incumbent) 98.99% R

Goldfinch served in the House before being elected to the Senate in 2016.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 35  INCOMPLETE

Kershaw, Lee, Richland, Sumter
Jeffrey R Graham 52.18% D
Mike Jones 47.66% R

When Democratic Senator Thomas McElveen announced his retirement, four Republicans and three Democrats filed to run in this redrawn district (+5 Democrat). Army veteran and entrepreneur Jones comes just short of beating former Camden Mayor Graham, who won the Democratic Primary back in June by a mere 24 votes. This is a Democratic hold in the Senate on a night when many of their seats were flipped.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 36

Calhoun, Clarendon, Orangeburg, Sumter
Kevin L Johnson (incumbent) 49.28% D
Jeff Zell 50.60% R

This was another seat on the B list for the Republican Party. School Board Member and veteran Zell pulls off a huge upset against Johnson who was originally elected in 2012 to replace Senator John Land.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 37

Georgetown, Horry
Larry Grooms (incumbent) 98.22% R

Senate Transportation Committee Chairman Larry Grooms, a champion of school choice, returns to the seat he won in a Special Election in 1997.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 38

Charleston, Dorchester
Sean Bennett (incumbent) 98.20% R

Senate Ethics Committee Chairman Bennett, a champion of tax reform, was elected to the Senate in 2012.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 39

Berkeley, Dorchester, Orangeburg
Tom Fernandez 50.95% R
Vernon Stephens (incumbent) 48.81% D

Fernandez, a Michigan native who has come close to being elected to the SC House a few times, challenged Stephens who was elected in 2020 to replace longtime Senator John Matthews. This is an approximately +8 Democratic district and a big flip for the SCGOP.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 40

Aiken, Allendale, Bamberg, Barnwell, Colleton, Orangeburg
Sharon Carter 47.26% R
Brad Hutto (incumbent) 52.66% D

Hutto, a Senate Democratic leader, wins his ninth term.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 41

Charleston, Colleton, Dorchester
Rita Adkins 42.42% D
Matt Leber 57.37% R

The lines of this district have changed over the years since it was represented by Glenn McConnell. House member Leber defeated incumbent Republican Senator Sandy Senn by 31 votes of 7,843 cast in the June Primary. Senn was first elected in 2016 and had faced some close general elections in what was then a swing district.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 42

Charleston, Dorchester
Deon Tedder (incumbent) 98.20% D

Former Representative Deon Tedder won a 2023 special election to fill the Senate seat once held by Marlon Kimpson after Kimpson resigned to accept a position in the Biden administration. Tedder won the June Democratic Primary handily.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 43

Beaufort, Charleston, Colleton
Chip Campsen (incumbent) 61.09% R
Julie Cofer Hussey 38.84% D

Senate Fish, Game, and Forestry Chairman Campsen served in the House from 1997-2002 and was elected to the Senate in 2004.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 44

Berkeley, Charleston
Brian Adams (incumbent) 60.50% R
Vicky Wynn 39.40% D

Adams returns for a second term.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 45

Allendale, Beaufort, Charleston, Colleton, Hampton, Jasper
Margie Bright Matthews (incumbent) 97.70% D

Senator Clementa Pinckney was murdered during a Bible study in Charleston in 2015. Bright Matthews was chosen in a Special Election later that year.

 

SC SENATE DISTRICT 46

Beaufort, Jasper
Tom Davis (incumbent) 67.30% R
Gwyneth J Saunders 32.65% D

Senate Labor, Commerce, and Industry Chairman Davis was first elected to the Senate in 2008.

 

Of the 46 State Senate seats, 26 had contested elections in November.

 

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SC House Results

The incumbent 2023-24 South Carolina House was 88-36 Republican (71% GOP). However, district lines shifted due to the 2020 Census and Reapportionment/Redistricting. The most Republican House in our region is Tennessee with 76% GOP. South Carolina is second with 71%. To advance to first, South Carolina Republicans would have had to win 6 seats from the Democrats this cycle and hold on to marginal seats won in 2022. As of this writing, the R’s have gained at least one seat and defended their own districts.

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 1

Oconee, Pickens
Bill Whitmire (incumbent) 99.13% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 2

Oconee
Adam Duncan 95.87% R

New House member Adam Duncan cruises into his seat after a surprising primary upset against longtime representative Bill Sandifer. Duncan serves as high school wrestling coach at West-Oak High School.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 3

Pickens
Phillip Bowers 64.28% R
Eunice Lehmacher 35.61% D

Pickens County Council member Phillip Bowers defeated incumbent Representative Jerry Carter in the June primary.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 4
Pickens
Davey Hiott (incumbent) 98.98% R

House Majority Leader Davey Hiott is elected to his eleventh term.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 5

Greenville, Pickens
Neal Collins (incumbent) 98.24% R

Neal Collins easily wins reelection after a contentious primary election against a Freedom Caucus backed candidate in June.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 6

Anderson
April Cromer (incumbent) 74.33% R
Tony Wagoner 25.41% D

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 7

Abbeville, Anderson, Greenville
Lee Gilreath 90.60% R
Hunter Savirino 9.05% Libertarian

Lee Gilreath, a Freedom Caucus candidate who defeated incumbent Jay West in June, easily wins the general election.

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 8

Anderson
Don Chapman (incumbent) 86.90% R
Jackie Todd 12.69% Alliance

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 9

Anderson
Blake Sanders 98.68% R

The former West Pelzer Mayor Blake Sanders will take over the seat of retiring Representative Anne Thayer.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 10

Anderson, Greenville, Pickens
Thomas Beach (incumbent) 98.58% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 11

Abbeville, Anderson, Laurens
Craig Gagnon (incumbent) 99.48% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 12

Greenwood, McCormick
Jumelle Brooks 47.68% D
Daniel Gibson (incumbent) 52.26% R

This district is rated a +6.5 Democratic seat. Retired commercial pilot Gibson won it in 2022 by defeating 24-year incumbent Democrat Anne Parks, and he has managed to hang on in a highly contested race.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 13

Greenwood, Laurens
Bill Kimler 25.17% D
John McCravy (incumbent) 74.75% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 14

Laurens
Luke Rankin 96.86% R

Laurens County Council member and county GOP chairman Luke Rankin (no relation to the Senator of the same name) easily picked up a state house seat without any primary or general election opposition. The seat was vacated by Stewart Jones upon his candidacy for Congress.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 15

Berkeley, Charleston
JA Moore (incumbent) 55.69% D
Carlton Walker 44.14% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 16

Greenville, Laurens
Mark Willis (incumbent) 98.70% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 17

Greenville
Mike Burns (incumbent) 99.06% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 18

Greenville 
Alan Morgan (incumbent) 98.91% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 19

Greenville
Patrick Haddon (incumbent) 98.02% R

Operations and Management Chairman Haddon was first elected in a 2019 special election.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 20

Greenville
Stephen Dreyfus 31.66% D
Stephen Frank 68.13% R

A matchup of Stephens in former Freedom Caucus Chairman Adam Morgan’s Taylors seat. Frank runs a commercial insurance agency.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 21

Greenville
Bobby Cox (incumbent) 98.28% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 22

Greenville
Brann Fowler 39.84% D
Paul Wickensimer 59.99% R

For Rep. Jason Elliott’s House seat (as he ascends to the Senate), former Clerk of Court Paul Wickensimer easily wins.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 23

Greenville
James Archibald Adkins Jr 19.55% Libertarian
Chandra Dillard (incumbent) 79.97% D

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 24

Greenville
Bruce Bannister (incumbent) 60.37% R
Shauna R Johnson 39.48% D

House Ways and Means Chairman Bruce Bannister survives a well-funded challenge from nurse Shauna Johnson.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 25

Greenville
Wendell Jones (incumbent) 62.71% D
Tim Kennedy 37.16% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 26

York
David Martin 62.56% R
Matt Vilardebo 37.16% D

For retiring Rep. Raye Felder’s former seat, attorney (and former Coastal Carolina quarterback) David Martin won a primary against John Warren backed candidate Elizabeth Enns.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 27

Greenville
John MacCarthy 39.93% D
David Vaughan (incumbent) 60.02% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 28

Greenville
Chris Huff 64.86% R
J Fritz Weibel 35.00% D

For former Rep. Ashley Trantham’s open seat, her endorsed candidate Chris Huff won a contentious primary and runoff back in June. Huff is a retired pastor.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 29

Cherokee, Spartanburg, York
Dennis Moss (incumbent) 99.23% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 30

Cherokee, Spartanburg
Brian Lawson (incumbent) 79.33% R
Ysante McDowell 20.59% D

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 31

Spartanburg
Rosalyn Henderson-Myers (incumbent) 98.50% D

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 32

Spartanburg
Scott Montgomery 98.08% R

Spartanburg businessman Scott Montgomery takes over the seat of retiring Rep. Max Hyde.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 33

Spartanburg
Travis A Moore (incumbent) 71.86% R
Clemson Turregano 27.92% D

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 34

Spartanburg
Sarita Edgerton 98.35% R

Rep. Roger Nutt is the new Senator in Spartanburg County. Sarita Edgerton – a local realtor – won the June primary and now takes over his seat.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 35

Greenville, Spartanburg
Bill Chumley (incumbent) 98.05% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 36

Spartanburg
Rob Harris (incumbent) 98.25% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 36

Spartanburg
Steven Long (incumbent) 98.40% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 38

Spartanburg
Josiah Magnuson (incumbent) 81.61% R
JR Taylor 18.21% D

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 39

Lexington, Saluda
Cal Forrest (incumbent) 99.25% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 40

Lexington, Newberry
Joe White (incumbent) 98.42% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 41

Chester, Fairfield, Richland
Annie McDaniel (incumbent) 98.11% D

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 42

Laurens, Union
Doug Gilliam (incumbent) 67.96% R
David Gossett 31.87% D

Gilliam was first elected in 2020.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 43

Chester, York
Randy Ligon (incumbent) 99.01% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 44

Lancaster
Katie Crosby 38.91% D
Mike Neese (incumbent) 60.98% R

Educator Katie Crosby raised more money than Neese in this election (by about $2,000). Despite this, Neese defends his seat (once held by former Lt. Governor candidate Mandy Powers Norrell) and returns to the House for a second term.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 45

Kershaw, Lancaster
Brandon Newton (incumbent) 64.31% R
Nicole Ventour 35.52% D

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 46

York
Heath Sessions (incumbent) 59.90% R
John Zabel 40.02% D

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 47

York
Tommy Pope (incumbent) 98.81% R

SC House Pro Tempore Pope returns for his eighth term in the House.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 48

York
Brandon Guffey (incumbent) 98.11% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 49

York
John King (incumbent) 98.14% D

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 50

Kershaw, Lee, Sumter
Will Wheeler (incumbent) 98.12% D

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 51

Sumter
David Weeks (incumbent) 98.72% D

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 52

Kershaw, Richland
Jermaine Johnson (incumbent) 97.70% D

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 53

Chester, Darlington, Lancaster
Bruce Wallace 26.14% D
Richard Richie Yow (incumbent) 73.74% R

Yow returns for a sixth session in the House.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 54

Chesterfield, Darlington, Dillon, Marlboro
Jason Scott Luck 52.02% D
Sterling McDiarmid 47.85% R

In the seat of retiring Rep. Pat Henegan, attorney Jason Luck (endorsed by Henegan) defeats Sterling McDiarmid, who owns a local paving business. The PeeDee district leans about 56.7% Democrat, so this isn’t a surprise but definitely one Republicans had hoped to pick up.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 55

Dillon, Florence, Horry, Marlboro
Jackie Hayes (incumbent) 98.63% D

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 56

Horry
Tim McGinnis (incumbent) 99.04% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 57

Horry, Marion, Williamsburg
Lucas Atkinson (incumbent) 58.61% D
Kevin Taylor Coleridge 41.12% R

Democrat Atkinson hangs on in a race that Republicans hoped to flip.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 58

Horry
Jeff Johnson (incumbent) 99.15% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 59

Florence, Marion
Terry Alexander (incumbent) 98.24% D

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 60

Florence
Phillip Lowe (incumbent) 98.92% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 61

Horry
Carla Schuessler (incumbent) 98.78% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 62

Darlington, Florence
Robert Williams (incumbent) 97.77% D

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 63

Florence
Kory Haskins 33.55% D
Jay Jordan (incumbent) 66.37% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 64

Clarendon, Sumter
Quadri Bell 44.18% D
Fawn Pedalino (incumbent) 55.76% R

Pedalino upset incumber Democrat Kimberly Johnson for this Democrat-leaning seat in 2022. This is a seat SC Democrats were looking to win back this year, but it looks like Pedalino held on.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 65

Chesterfield, Darlington, Kershaw, Lancaster
Cody T Mitchell (incumbent) 99.23% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 66

York
Jackie Terribile 90.58% R

Terribile serves currently on the SC State Board of Education. She is an advocate for parental rights and involved in York County’s Moms for Liberty chapter.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 67

Sumter
Murrell Smith (incumbent) 98.41% R

The Speaker of the House returns. He was first elected in 2000.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 68

Horry
Heather Ammons Crawford (incumbent) 99.00% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 69

Lexington
Allen James Broadus 17.95% Libertarian
Chris Wooten (incumbent) 81.45% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 70

Kershaw, Richland
Robert Reese 97.26% D

District 70 used to be Jermaine Johnson’s district, but with district lines changing, Johnson is now running in District 52. Reese handily won a three-way primary without a runoff. He serves on the board of SC State University and is involved in several nonprofits.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 71

Lexington, Richland
Nathan Ballentine (incumbent) 98.07% R

 

SC HOUSE  DISTRICT 72

Richland
Seth Rose (incumbent) 98.96% D

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 73

Richland
Chris Hart (incumbent) 98.97% D

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 74

Richland
Todd Rutherford (incumbent) 98.42% D

House Minority Leader Todd Rutherford was first elected in 1998.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 75

Richland
Heather Bauer (incumbent) 53.31% D
Kirkman Finlay 46.61% R

In one of the few truly swing districts in the SC House, Heather Bauer faced off against former Rep. Kirkman Finlay, whom she defeated in the general election two years ago. Both candidates and parties have spent significant sums of money on this race. Finlay, who was first elected in 2012, held onto the seat by about 250 votes in 2020 but lost it by about 200 in 2022. Bauer appears to have won the matchup once again, although Richland County is still finalizing vote totals.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 76

Richland
Leon Howard (incumbent) 92.00% D
Gary Votour 7.65% Workers

Votour is a chronic candidate who has run for many local and statewide seats in South Carolina.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 77

Richland
Kambrell Garvin (incumbent) 99.08% D

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 78

Richland
Beth Bernstein (incumbent) 98.72% D

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 79

Richland
Hamilton Grant 75.27% D
Rebecca Madsen 24.62% R

In the seat vacated by Rep. Thigpen when he unsuccessfully ran for Senate, businessman Hamilton Grant easily wins.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 80

Charleston
Kathy Landing (incumbent) 65.12% R
Donna Brown Newton 34.83% D

 

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 81

Aiken
Charles Hartz 68.03% R
Jensen Jennings 31.85% D

For the seat of retiring Rep. Bart Blackwell, Charles Hartz won a busy primary without a runoff election. Hartz chairs the Aiken Chamber of Commerce and runs several local businesses.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 82

Aiken, Edgefield, Saluda
William Bill Clyburn (incumbent) 53.89% D
Suzanne Suzy Spurgeon 46.07% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 83

Aiken, Edgefield
Bill Hixon (incumbent) 98.73% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 84

Aiken
Melissa Oremus (incumbent) 98.83% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 85

Lexington
Jay Kilmartin (incumbent) 98.12% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 86

Aiken, Lexington
Bill Taylor (incumbent) 98.86% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 87

Lexington
Paula Rawl Calhoon (incumbent) 85.58% R
Robin Machajewski 14.03% Libertarian

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 88

Lexington

RJ May (incumbent) 92.18% R
Write In 7.82%

Freedom Caucus founding member RJ May is reelected, despite being subject to a federal investigation that reportedly will yield criminal charges in the coming months. May faced a late write-in opponent in businessman Brian Duncan, as no one had filed to run against him when the investigation was made public.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 89

Lexington
Wayne Borders 39.62% D
Micah Caskey (incumbent) 60.24% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 90

Bamberg, Colleton, Dorchester, Orangeburg
Justin Bamberg (incumbent) 59.92% D
H Frank Dickson 39.95% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 91

Allendale, Barnwell, Orangeburg
Lonnie Hosey (incumbent) 51.60% D
Ben Kinlaw 48.35% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 92

Berkeley
Brandon Cox (incumbent) 97.90% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 93

Calhoun, Lexington, Orangeburg
Herold Geddings 1.82% Workers
Jerry Govan 51.58% D
Krista Hassell 46.40% R

In the seat vacated by Rep. Russell Ott upon his run for state Senate, former Rep. Jerry Govan returns to the House. Govan served six terms in the House before redistricting moved his House district lines. He ran for Superintendent of Education in 2022.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 94

Charleston, Dorchester
Gil Gatch (incumbent) 98.20% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 95

Dorchester, Orangeburg
Gilda Cobb-Hunter (incumbent) 98.27% D

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 96

Lexington
Ryan McCabe (incumbent) 99.08% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 97

Colleton, Dorchester
Robby Robbins (incumbent) 99.07% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 98

Dorchester
Chris Murphy (incumbent) 56.85% R
Sonja Ogletree Satani 42.94% D

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 99

Berkeley
Mark Smith (incumbent) 98.51% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 100

Berkeley
Sylleste Davis (incumbent) 98.61% R

House “Triple M” chair Davis is elected to a sixth term.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 101

Berkeley, Florence, Williamsburg
Roger Kirby (incumbent) 98.45% D

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 102

Berkeley, Dorchester
Harriet Holman 51.88% R
Joe Jefferson (incumbent) 47.99% D

This seat is a +6 Democratic district, but Republicans flipped districts with a similar lean in 2022. Dorchester County Councilwoman Harriet Holman recently switched from Democrat to a Republican. This result is a huge pickup for South Carolina Republicans.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 103

Berkeley, Georgetown, Horry
Carl L Anderson (incumbent) 98.40% D

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 104

Horry
William Bailey (incumbent) 99.38% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 105

Horry
Kevin Hardee (incumbent) 99.25% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 106

Horry
Val Guest (incumbent) 98.53% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 107

Horry
Case Brittain (incumbent) 98.70% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 108

Charleston, Georgetown
Lee Hewitt (incumbent) 99.30% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 109

Charleston, Dorchester
Tiffany Spann-Wilder (incumbent) 98.03% D

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 110

Charleston
Tom Harnett (incumbent) 55.94% R
John Moffett 43.97% D

This Charleston/Mount Pleasant district is a top target for Democrats hoping to beat an incumbent.  Real estate appraiser Hartnett was elected first in 2022 John Moffett serves as State Director for the Land and Water Conservation Fund Coalition and has significantly outraised Hartnett. However, Hartnett managed to defend his seat, winning pretty handily.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 111

Charleston
Wendell G Gilliard (incumbent) 82.91% D
Joe Jernigan 16.71% Libertarian

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 112

Charleston
Peter Brennan 38.87% D
Joe Bustos (incumbent) 61.04% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 113

Charleston
Martin Pendarvis (incumbent) 97.28% D

Martin Pendarvis resigned his House seat earlier this year after having his law license revoked for alleged legal malpractice. However, in resigning, he did not remove his name from the ballot for reelection. We expect a special election in District 113 in the coming months to replace Pendarvis.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 114

Charleston, Dorchester
Gary Brewer (incumbent) 61.13% R
Adrienne Lett 38.76% D

Brewer survived a costly primary from a Freedom Caucus challenger back in June.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 115

Charleston
J Warren Sloane 48.07% R
Spencer Wetmore (incumbent) 51.89% D

This purple seat that includes James Island, Johns Island, Kiawah Island, Seabrook Island, and Folly Beach has been a bit of a revolving door. Wallace Scarborough and Peter McCoy won it for the Republicans. But it has been held by Robert Barber, Anne Peterson, and now Spencer Wetmore for the Democrats. Wetmore won it twice in 2020—a Special Election and a General Election.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 116

Charleston, Colleton
Charlie Murray 48.77% D
James Teeple 51.18% R

Charles Murray is the brother of Chardale Murray whom Matt Leber defeated in this swing district in 2022. Leber is the candidate for this area in the SC Senate.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 117

Berkeley
Jordan Pace (incumbent) 97.90% R

New Freedom Caucus chairman Jordan Pace is reelected for a second term.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 118

Beaufort
Bill Herbkersman (incumbent) 64.73% R
Charity Owens 35.22% D

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 119

Charleston
Brendan R Magee 44.74% R
Leon Stavrinakis (incumbent) 55.14% D

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 120

Beaufort, Jasper
Kate Creech 33.24% D
Weston Newton (incumbent) 66.68% R

House Judiciary Chairman Weston Newton has represented Beaufort since 2013.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 121

Beaufort, Colleton
Michael F Rivers Sr (incumbent) 58.04% D
Shelley Gay Yuhas 41.86% R

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 122

Beaufort, Colleton, Hampton, Jasper
Bill Hager (incumbent) 53.59% R
Audrey Hopkins Williams 46.36% D

Bill Hager surprised many when he won this +10 Democrat district over incumbent Democrat Shedron “Hook” Williams in 2022.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 123

Beaufort, Jasper
Jeff Bradley (incumbent) 59.87% R
Lisette Cifaldi 40.07% D

Regulations and Administrative Procedures chairman Bradley easily defeats social worker Cifaldi. Bradley was first elected in 2014.

 

SC HOUSE DISTRICT 124

Beaufort
Shannon Erickson (incumbent) 63.21% R
Melinda Henrickson 36.66% D

SC House Education Chairlady Erickson returns for her tenth session in the House.

 

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Referenda Results

Voters went to the polls to make important decisions on local and statewide referenda, to amend the state constitution, enact or reinstate taxes, or change alcohol sale laws. Read below for the results.

STATEWIDE CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

Must Section 4, Article II of the Constitution of this State, relating to voter qualifications, be amended so as to provide that only a citizen of the United States and of this State of the age of eighteen and upwards who is properly registered is entitled to vote as provided by law?
YES, In Favor of the Question 85.94%
NO, Opposed to the Question 14.06%

 

Local Referendum

Purpose

County

% Yes

Capital Project Sales Tax Referendum
Capital Projects AIKEN 69.04%
Special 1% sales and use tax to be re-imposed for various cities’ projects
Education Property Tax Swap and Bond Referendum
Education Capital Projects AIKEN 72.48%
Reduce school-based property taxes; $285 million capital projects
Education Bond Referendum
Education Capital Projects AIKEN 71.16%
(only #1 passes) School District to receive $285 million for renovations/additions as well as a new elementary school
Sunday Alcohol Sales Referendum
Sunday Alcohol Sales AIKEN 64.58%
Allow on-premise 24-hour alcohol permits in Wagener.
Capital Project Sales Tax and Bond Referendum
Capital Projects ALLENDALE 67.84%
1% sales and use tax and general obligation bonds not exceeding $3 billion for various capital improvement needs (fire station construction, wastewater pumping station improvements, facility and equipment improvements, water and sewer system improvements, etc.).
Anderson County Transportation Sales Tax
Transportation Capital Projects ANDERSON 47.17%
NEW 1% sales and use tax and general obligation bonds not exceeding $3 billion for improvements to highways, roads, streets, intersections, bridges, and related drainage system improvements
Anderson County Transportation Sales Tax
Transportation Capital Projects ANDERSON 50.29%
Issuance of $15 million to fund a portion of the projects described in the Anderson County Road Study
Capital Project Sales Tax and Bond Referendum
Capital Projects BARNWELL 70.35%
1% sales and use tax and general obligation bonds not exceeding $14 million for acquisition projects related to animal shelter construction, landfill equipment, courthouse improvements, amphitheater construction, agricultural building improvements, water and sewer improvements, police department equipment improvements, etc. 
Transportation & Greenbelt Sales Tax
Transportation Capital Projects BEAUFORT 44.42%
NEW 1% sales and use tax until a total of $950 million for financing the costs of highways, roads, streets, bridges, etc. AND the cost of greenbelt initiatives 
Transportation & Greenbelt Bonds
Transportation Capital Projects BEAUFORT 44.91%
Issue general obligation bonds not exceeding $515 million for transportation and greenbelt initiative projects
Charleston Special Sales & Use Tax
Transportation Capital Projects CHARLESTON 38.55%
1.5% sales and use tax until $5.4 billion has been collected for financing the costs of highways, roads, streets, bridges, drainage facilities, mass transit system operations, etc. 
Charleston Special Sales & Use Tax
Transportation Capital Projects CHARLESTON 41.02%
Issue general obligation bonds not exceeding $1 billion to fund transportation projects
Education Bond Referendum
Education Capital Projects CHESTER 45.94%
Issue general obligation bonds not exceeding $227 million to finance School District projects (improvements/renovations to existing schools and constructing 2 new High Schools
Education Sales Tax
Education Capital Projects CHESTERFIELD 76.18%
1% sales and use tax to finance education capital improvement projects
Alcohol Sales
Sunday Alcohol Sales DILLON 60.24%
Allow on-premise 24-hour alcohol permits
Florence County Alcohol Sales Referendum
Sunday Alcohol Sales FLORENCE 67.33%
Allow permits for the sale of beer and wine at off-premises locations
Sunday Alcohol Sales Referendum
Sunday Alcohol Sales FLORENCE 67.33%
Allow on-premise 24-hour alcohol permits
Town of Quinby Alcohol Sales Referendum
Sunday Alcohol Sales FLORENCE 63.64%
Allow permits for the sale of beer and wine at off-premises locations
Capital Project Sales Tax Referendum
Capital Projects GEORGETOWN 51.03%
NEW 1% sales and use tax to fund water system improvements, electric utility line improvements, sewer system improvements, etc. 
Local Sales Tax Option Referendum
Tax Swap GEORGETOWN 49.86%
NEW 1% sales and use tax for the purpose of allowing credit against a taxpayer’s county to fund municipal operations
Capital Projects Sales Tax Referendum
Transportation Capital Projects GREENVILLE 48.50%
NEW 1% sales and use tax to fund road improvements
Capital Project Sales Tax Referendum
Capital Projects GREENWOOD 63.84%
1% sales and use tax for various capital projects including a career center, fire station upgrades, public safety training station, wastewater treatment facility, etc. 
Horry County Special Sales and Use Tax
Transportation Capital Projects HORRY 56.96%
NEW 1% sales tax until $6.35 billion collected for transportation-related projects including drainage facility improvements, mass transit systems, etc. 
Education Sales Tax
Education Capital Projects JASPER 54.88%
NEW 1% sales and use tax to fund education capital improvement projects including early learning academies and athletic facilities
Education Bond Referendum
Education Capital Projects JASPER 55.26%
Issue general obligation bonds not exceeding $133 million to fund education capital improvement projects
Transportation Sales Tax
Transportation Capital Projects JASPER 52.68%
NEW 1% sales and use tax to fund various transportation projects such as highways, roads, streets, bridges, drainage facilities, and greenbelt projects
Transportation Sales Tax
Transportation Capital Projects JASPER 55.71%
Issue general obligation bonds not exceeding $150 million to fund various transportation projects and greenbelt initiatives
Education Bond Referendum
Education Capital Projects LANCASTER 47.24%
Issue general obligation bonds not exceeding $588.15 million 
Lanc. County Transportation Sales Tax Ref
Transportation Capital Projects LANCASTER 47.53%
NEW 1% sales and use tax to fund the costs of Highway 521 and various highways, roads, streets, bridges, greenways, pedestrian and bike paths, sidewalk improvements, etc.
Lanc. County Transportation Sales Tax Ref
Transportation Capital Projects LANCASTER 40.42%
Issue general obligation bonds not exceeding $250 million to fund various transportation projects
Town of Gray Court Referendum
Deauthorize Water District LAURENS 84.56%
Transfer of the water system to Laurens County Water and Sewer Commission from the town of Gray Court
Education Bond Referendum
Education Capital Projects LEXINGTON 68.85%
Issue general obligation bonds not exceeding $240 million to finance the costs of renovating and repairing school facilities
Modoc Fire Protection District Tax
Authorize Fire District MCCORMICK 39.83%
Create a special tax district within the Modoc service area to be known as the Modoc Fire Protection District to provide funds for fire protection services
Capital Project Sales Tax and Bond Referendum
Capital Projects MCCORMICK 68.64%
1% sales and use tax and general obligation bonds not exceeding $7.3 million to defray the costs of capital improvement needs including public safety communications, Sheriff’s office system, volunteer fire department, roads, and bridges, etc.
Corinth-Shiloh Special Tax District
Authorize Fire District OCONEE 60.23%
Create a special tax district called the Corinth-Shiloh Special Purpose Tax District for Fire Protection to provide fire protection and related services
Capital Project Sales Tax and Bond Referendum
Capital Projects ORANGEBURG 67.34%
1% sales and use tax and general obligation bonds not exceeding $115 million to fund various capital projects including town hall improvements, water and sewer line improvements, playground improvements, etc. 
Horse Range Watershed
Deauthorize Water District ORANGEBURG 67.09%
Dissolving the Horse Range Swamp Watershed Conservation District
Education Bond Referendum
Education Capital Projects RICHLAND 71.85%
Issue general obligation bonds not exceeding $240 million to finance the costs of renovating and repairing school facilities
Richland Special Sales & Use Tax
Transportation Capital Projects RICHLAND 61.59%
1% sales and use tax to fund community investment projects such as improving roads, bikeways, greenbelts, sidewalks, etc.
Richland Special Sales & Use Tax
Transportation Capital Projects RICHLAND 63.79%
Issue general obligation bonds not exceeding $950 million to fund transportation improvements. 
Cherokee Springs Fire Dist Bond Referendum
Fire District Capital Projects SPARTANBURG 56.79%
Collection of a tax of $35.2 million upon all the taxable property in the Cherokee Springs Fire District to fund the operational costs of the Cherokee Springs Fire District
Hilltop Area Fire Dist Bond Referendum
Fire District Capital Projects SPARTANBURG 59.83%
Issue general obligation bonds not exceeding $2.5 million to defray the costs of various fire service facility improvements
Hilltop Area Fire District Bond Referendum
Fire District Capital Projects SPARTANBURG 73.58%
Collection of a tax of $55 million upon all the taxable property in the Hilltop Area Fire District to fund the operational costs of the Hilltop Area Fire District
New Prospect Fire District Bond Referendum
Fire District Capital Projects SPARTANBURG 59.92%
Collection of a tax of $20 million upon all the taxable property in the New Prospect Area Fire District to fund the operational costs of New Prospect Area Fire District
Westview-Fairforest Fire Dist Bond Referendum
Fire District Capital Projects SPARTANBURG 60.62%
Collection of a tax of $36 million upon all the taxable property in the Westview-Fairforest Fire District to fund the operations of the Westview-Fairforest Fire District
Capital Project Sales Tax Referendum
Capital Projects SUMTER 61.10%
NEW 1% sales and use tax to fund capital projects such as fire trucks, EMS radio stations, safety improvements, park improvements, paving/resurfacing
Santuc Fire District Bond Referendum
Fire District Capital Projects UNION 66.48%
Issue general obligation bonds not exceeding $500,000 to fund the Fire District
Sunday Alcohol Sales Referendum
Sunday Alcohol Sales UNION 64.65%
Allow on-premise 24-hour alcohol permits
Capital Projects Sales Tax Referendum
Capital Projects YORK 71.43%
1% sales and use tax to fund transportation and road projects
Education Bond Referendum
Education Capital Projects YORK 64.14%
Issue general obligation bonds not exceeding $90 million to finance education capital improvement projects

 

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