South Carolina
Contents
- 1 Election Law
- 2 Parties
- 3 Petition Candidates
- 4 Write-in Candidates
- 5 Ballot Position
- 6 Election Commission
- 7 Ethics Commission
- 8 Election Results
- 8.1 Presidential Election Results
- 8.2 Senatorial Election Results
- 8.3 Gubernatorial Election Results
- 8.4 Lieutenant Gubernatorial Election Results
- 8.5 Secretary of State Election Results
- 8.6 State Treasurer Election Results
- 8.7 Attorney General Election Results
- 8.8 Comptroller General Election Results
- 9 Links
Election Law
- Method for Choosing Presidential Electors: Statewide Popular Vote, Winner-Take-All
- Fusion Legal: Yes
- Primary/Caucus: At the discretion of the party. If a primary, must be held on a specific date and paid for by the party. No party registration, but voters may participate only in one primary or caucus for each election. Presidential primary date is separate from the primary for other races and considered a separate election.
Parties
There are, as of 2008, eight certified parties in South Carolina, six of which are affiliated with a national party. To register a new party requires the signatures of 10,000 registered voters.
- Constitution Party
- Democratic Party
- Green Party
- Independence Party of South Carolina (not formally a part of the Independence Party of America, but friendly with it
- Labor Party
- Libertarian Party
- Republican Party
- United Citizens Party (not affiliated with any national party)
- Working Families Party
Petition Candidates
Candidates may also have their names appear on the ballot by filing a petition by noon 120 days before election day.
Petitions must contain the signatures of the lesser of 10,000 registered voters or 5% of the active registered voters of the area of the office. The 5% is based on the total number of registered voters in the area of the office 120 days prior to the election. At present, the 10,000 figure applies for statewide offices, U.S. Congressional races, some multi-county offices and for countywide offices in Greenville County.
Petitions must be standardized as follows:
- Be on 8 1/2 " x 14" good quality original bond paper.
- Contain a concise statement of purpose, name of candidate, office and date of election.
- Contain in separate columns from left to right the signature and printed name of voter, address where registered and precinct.
- Each petition page must contain signatures of registered voters from the same county.
- Each page must be consecutively numbered.
Write-in Candidates
Write-in candidates are allowed for the general election only and must not have been defeated for that office in a primary election. Write-in votes are not accepted for President or Vice President.
Ballot Position
The order of offices on a ballot is as follows:
- President and Vice President
- Governor
- Lieutenant Governor
- Secretary of State
- State Treasurer
- Attorney General
- Comptroller General
- State Superintendent of Education
- Adjutant General
- Commissioner of Agriculture
- U.S. Senator
- U.S. Representative in Congress
- State Senate
- State House of Representatives
- Circuit Solicitors
- County and less than county offices
- Soil and Water Commissioners
- Watershed Commissioners
The order of parties on the ballot is determined by a rotating list. For the 2006 Election the order will be:
- United Citizens
- Reform
- Green
- Republican
- Libertarian
- Petition
- Democrat
- Constitution
- Working Families
For the next two year cycle, the party at the top of the list is moved to the bottom of the list.
Election Commission
The State Election Commission certifies the results for the presidential election, to the U.S. Congress, to the General Assembly, and to multi-county offices. The State Election Commission also maintans a statewide voter registration system. County election commissions certify the results for elections affecting only that county, handle the manning of precincts and the purchase of voting equipment.
Ethics Commission
Persons wishing to run for state or local office in South Carolina must file Campaign Diclosure Forms that list their contributors with the Ethics Commission. As of January 11, 2006, the information for those running for statewide office was made available via the Internet.
Election Results
Presidential Election Results
- South Carolina Presidential Election Results 2004 Summary Page
- South Carolina Presidential Election Results 2000 Summary Page
- South Carolina Presidential Election Results 1996 Summary Page
- South Carolina Presidential Election Results 1992 Summary Page
- South Carolina Presidential Election Results 1988 Summary Page
- South Carolina Presidential Election Results 1984 Summary Page
- South Carolina Presidential Election Results 1980 Summary Page
- South Carolina Presidential Election Results 1976 Summary Page
- South Carolina Presidential Election Results 1972 Summary Page
- South Carolina Presidential Election Results 1968 Summary Page
- South Carolina Presidential Election Results 1964 Summary Page
- South Carolina Presidential Election Results 1960 Summary Page
Senatorial Election Results
- South Carolina Senatorial Election Results 2004 Summary Page
- South Carolina Senatorial Election Results 2002 Summary Page
- South Carolina Senatorial Election Results 1998 Summary Page
- South Carolina Senatorial Election Results 1996 Summary Page
Gubernatorial Election Results
- South Carolina Gubernatorial Election Results 2006 Summary Page
- South Carolina Gubernatorial Election Results 2002 Summary Page
- South Carolina Gubernatorial Election Results 1998 Summary Page
Lieutenant Gubernatorial Election Results
- South Carolina Lieutenant Gubernatorial Election Results 2002 Summary Page
- South Carolina Lieutenant Gubernatorial Election Results 1998 Summary Page
Secretary of State Election Results
- South Carolina Secretary of State Election Results 2002 Summary Page
- South Carolina Secretary of State Election Results 1998 Summary Page
State Treasurer Election Results
Attorney General Election Results
Comptroller General Election Results