COLUMBIA, S.C. The South Carolina Senate voted 26-18 on Tuesday to continue a proposed congressional redistricting bill, effectively halting an effort to adopt a new map for the 2026 election as early voting opened across the state on May 26; senators adjourned without taking final amendments or a final passage vote. The decision came amid record early turnout and public comment: Rep. Jim Clyburn linked high participation to voter anger over the map, local officials reported thousands of early ballots (44,600 by 3:00 p.m. statewide and 1,119 in Aiken County by 2:00 p.m.), and lawmakers are scheduled to return June 10 after the June 9 primary to resume business.
Prepared by Lauren Mitchell and reviewed by editorial team.
The Senate's decision affects your vote in 2026. The proposed redistricting could change your congressional district. This can impact who you vote for and who represents you. Stay informed by checking your district's status online.
The halted redistricting effort shows the power of public participation. High early voting turnout and public comment influenced this decision. Your voice matters in shaping political outcomes. Worth forwarding if you believe in the power of the vote.
By voting 26-18 to continue the redistricting bill, the Senate preserved existing congressional district lines, maintaining the status quo for voters and incumbents until lawmakers reconvene and preventing an immediate partisan map change.
Republican lawmakers and allies advocating for a new seven-district GOP-favored map, including supporters aligned with President Trump, failed to secure sufficient votes to advance the redistricting plan before early voting and the primary.
Clyburn on South Carolina record-breaking early voter turnout: People were 'very angry'
The HillSenate halts South Carolina 2026 redistricting effort
ArcaMax WCCB Charlotte's CW Post and CourierNo right-leaning sources found for this story.
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