Columbia Area Subscribed Articles

Columbia Area Subscribed Articles

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The Post & Courier

Columbia, December 22 - State House lawmakers released an alternate proposed set of congressional lines making Republican U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace’s 1st Congressional District safer for a Republican to win — a stark reversal from a previous plan that left the Lowcountry seat more competitive.

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Testimony will be accepted on H 4492 (Congressional maps, Lucas) and S. 865 (Redistricting, Rankin). No new House map has been announced, so the two existing House maps, possibly with amendments, are under consideration. While the first House staff map is preferable to House Alternative 1, neither respects major regional communities of interest.

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The Post & Courier

Columbia, December 19 - The redrawn election lines for South Carolina legislators give more power to the coast and also to the suburbs of Charlotte where population ballooned over the last decade, while further depleting the influence of rural communities. This informative article highlights the changes and implications, with comments by Lynn Teague, LWVSC Vice President, Issues & Advocacy.

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WIS News 10

The House staff plan would redraw boundaries across a large swath of the state, especially involving the 1st, 2nd, and 6th districts.In the Midlands, the proposal would move significant portions of Richland, Orangeburg, and Sumter counties to new districts. None of Richland County would belong in the 2nd district, as parts of the county currently do. “North Charleston, we don’t believe, belongs with Columbia in a district. It belongs with Charleston,” Lynn Teague of the League of Women Voters of South Carolina added.

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The News & Observer

The House's Congressional plan is not one we can be enthusiastic about. Teague said she disagreed with the proposal to extend the 5th District into Richland County, noting that district has become dominated by the suburbs south of Charlotte, North Carolina, which is “a very different area.” The House plan for the 6th District also creates an unnecessary minority population imbalance,

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The Post & Courier

The League of Women Voters was also critical of the new Congressional lines. Teague questioned the wisdom of including predominantly Black Charleston precincts with Columbia, more than 100 miles away. " We can keep communities of interest together and the House has not chosen to do that. "

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The State newspaper

The LWVSC is not enthusiastic about the SC House's proposed  Congressional map because it doesn’t honor communities of interest. The plan significantly alters district lines in Richland County and the Lowcountry, but does so without addressing concerns about the amorphous 6th District, which still stretches from Columbia to Charleston. We believe they need a map that respects the communities of interest, and doing that will keep Charleston County whole.

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Today the SC House released their Congressional plan for public comment on that plan this Thursday. The Ad Hoc Committee will hear testimony on the House Staf Plan, the Senate Staff Plan, and any other submissions.

SC House and Senate maps have been approved by both houses and signed by the Governor. The League's final assessment is that the Senate map is a reasonable map in which the number of competitive districts is not reduced. The House plan is an extreme gerrymander with a very high level of incumbent protection. Only 15 House members voted against this plan.

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Public Statement

Both the Senate and House maps are shaped in part by demographics that lead to many non-competitive districts in SC. The Senate map shows some effects from incumbent and partisan considerations. However, it is drawn with reasonable concern for communities of interest and it doesn’t reduce the number of competitive districts. However, the lack of competition that begins in population distributions is greatly amplified in the House map. This lack of competition is a very serious threat to representative democracy.

Lynn Teague, LWVSC VP for State Issues & Advocacy, at the SC Statehouse steps
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SC Lede PODCAST, Part 2:
Continuation of conversation with Lynn Teague: potential congressional map changes, possible legal challenges, and what the State House could look like, especially since primaries will play more of a pivotal role.

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