Columbia, South Carolina. The South Carolina Republican Party filed a 19-page federal lawsuit in early July seeking to restrict participation in its primary elections exclusively to registered Republican voters, a move Chairman Drew McKissick announced in a July 8 video. The complaint follows a yearslong party push to require party registration for voters and a rule change adopted at the party’s recent convention after the Legislature declined to pass a bill. Conway Belangia of the S.C. Election Commission declined to comment and board chairman Robert Bolchoz did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The lawsuit argues that open primaries, in which South Carolina does not require voters to register by party so long as they vote in only one party’s primary per cycle, violate the party’s First Amendment freedom-of-association rights and its ability to choose nominees. The party says compelled participation by nonmembers may dilute its message and alter nominees; the filing cites Supreme Court precedent recognizing nomination selection as a basic party function. Critics warn the change could prevent the public from influencing primary contests that often decide November winners in the state, and observers note similar efforts in Republican-led states have had mixed legal results.
Prepared by Lauren Mitchell and reviewed by editorial team.
This lawsuit could change who can vote in South Carolina's GOP primaries. If successful, only registered Republicans can participate. This could impact the candidates chosen and the issues they focus on. Check your voter registration status to ensure you can vote in the primaries you care about.
The South Carolina GOP is pushing to close its primaries to nonmembers. Critics worry this could limit public influence on key races. Similar efforts in other states have had mixed results. Worth forwarding if you know someone in South Carolina who values their voting rights.
Registered Republican voters and state GOP leaders stand to gain more exclusive control over who may vote in Republican primary elections if courts allow the party to limit participation to registered Republicans.
Independent voters, Democrats, and advocates for open primaries may lose practical access to selecting nominees in South Carolina if the lawsuit succeeds and primaries are closed.
South Carolina GOP Lost in the Legislature -- Now They Want a Judge to Close the Primaries
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