
South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster called a special session Thursday for state lawmakers to tackle redistricting ahead of the midterm elections. Subscribe to read this story ad-free Get unlimited access to ad-free articles and exclusive content. A new map is expected to eliminate the state’s only majority-minority district, which is held by Rep. James Clyburn, a key Democratic power broker.
Main Idea: South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster called a special session to push redistricting before the midterm elections, setting up a fight over the state’s congressional map.
Key Points:
Redrawing South Carolina’s map could weaken minority voting power and make some voters feel less represented in Congress.
The special session may settle district lines sooner, giving voters and campaigns more time to prepare for the midterm elections.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Called the special session and is the central decision-maker in the redistricting story.
The state government is the central arena for the special session and redistricting fight.
Pressured South Carolina Republicans to support mid-decade redistricting and is a major influence in the article.
His majority-minority district is expected to be eliminated, making him a key affected figure in the story.
Was called back into extra session to address congressional districts and the budget.
Rejected the measure to extend the session and is a key legislative actor.
Its recent ruling is a major catalyst for the redistricting push described in the article.
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Sign in to commentMentioned as another state affected by the Supreme Court ruling and redistricting changes.
Passed a map in the same redistricting wave and is referenced as part of the regional context.
Named Republican leader who publicly opposed rushing the map change and is part of the internal party conflict.
Mentioned as a comparison state that enacted a new redistricting map in the broader regional effort.