News

South Carolina’s Republican-created congressional map deliberately split up Black neighborhoods in Charleston ... which has long been anchored in Charleston County. In 2018, Joe Cunningham ...
The Supreme Court upheld South Carolina ... raised the black voting-age population (BVAP) from 16.56% to 16.72%.” In response to the district court’s finding that the revised map unlawfully ...
A three-judge panel in January said the plan by the Republican-led legislature split Black ... County.” South Carolina said the three-judge panel’s “thinly reasoned order” rejecting the ...
COLUMBIA, S.C. — A federal court today ordered South Carolina to redraw its 2021 enacted congressional map, ruling that ... an artificially-low target Black population in Congressional District 1, ...
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday agreed to hear a bid by South Carolina officials ... Republican-drawn map had deliberately split up Black neighborhoods in Charleston County in a “stark ...
The Supreme Court on Wednesday seemed likely to reinstate a South Carolina congressional map drawn by ... “exiled” 30,000 Black voters to create a district safer for a White Republican incumbent.
The three judges wrote that legislators deliberately moved 30,000 Black residents from Charleston County ... redrew its maps. The court found that the designated mapmaker of South Carolina ...
By a vote of 6-to-3, along ideological lines, the court upheld a redistricting map drawn by the South Carolina ... 200,000 Black voters into new districts and chopped up Charleston County ...
Three Democratic-appointed judges, who heard the case in South Carolina’s federal district court, found that state lawmakers’ shifting some 30,000 African Americans in Charleston County to a ...
See how South Carolina's three largest population groups - White, Black and Hispanic - are estimated to have increased or decreased in every county from 2022 to 2023. Click or tap on a county read ...
In the Pee Dee region last year, Marlboro County Elections ... and rural Black populations shrinking. As of 2022, there were 987,665 non-White voters registered in South Carolina and 2,367,656 ...