News

The S.C. Supreme Court on Sept. 11 reversed a circuit court judge's order that temporarily blocked the release of sensitive voter registration information to the U.S. Department of Justice.
Justices lifted a restraining order blocking the Election Commission from giving the Justice Department access to state voter registration information.
Primaries for the seats will be conducted by the South Carolina Election Commission in the fall, with four names on each ballot.
The South Carolina Supreme Court is allowing the state to share voter data with the Justice Department after a lower court prevented it from doing so.
Some voters in Greenville and Spartanburg counties will cast ballots in special elections after two state lawmakers resigned, effective Jan. 5.
Air Force veteran Dr. Sonja Ogletree Satani has announced her candidacy for the South Carolina House District 98 special election following incumbent Republican
The U.S. Department of Justice and staff from the State Election Commission are now set to meet Wednesday morning, after weeks of back-and-forth, to discuss the request of voter list data from the South Carolina Election Commission.
The U.S. Department of Justice wants sensitive South Carolina voter information, but the Election Commission has resisted. It should.
South Carolina can begin giving voter information to the federal government, the state Supreme Court said in a Thursday opinion.The six-page opinion overturned
The South Carolina Election Commission was served a lawsuit and received a restraining order Tuesday night, temporarily preventing it from sharing voter information with the federal government. Last month,
Earlier this summer, the DOJ told South Carolina to turn over the information of the more than 3.3 million people registered to vote in the state, including their names, addresses, birthdates, driver’s license numbers, and last four digits of their Social Security Numbers. Other states received similar requests.