
South Carolina
Southern US state; legislative leaders confirmed staff drawing new maps after Callais ruling.
Last refreshed: 7 May 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
With an all-Republican delegation, what does South Carolina actually gain from redistricting now?
Timeline for South Carolina
Confirmed legislative staff were drawing new congressional maps on 5 May
US Midterms 2026: Four states queue maps after Callais ruling- Is South Carolina redrawing its congressional maps after the Callais ruling?
- Yes. South Carolina legislative leaders confirmed on 5 May 2026 that staff were already drawing new maps in response to the Callais ruling, though no formal extraordinary session has been called.Source: Lowdown reporting
- How many congressional seats does South Carolina have?
- South Carolina holds six congressional seats, all currently held by Republicans, giving it no Democratic incumbents to target in a redistricting sweep.
- Why would South Carolina redraw maps if it already has all Republican seats?
- Redistricting can still consolidate margins, dilute growing Democratic Coalition areas, and prevent future competitive districts by packing minority voters into fewer configurations.
Background
South Carolina moved into the redistricting cascade on 5 May 2026, when state legislative leaders confirmed publicly that staff were already drawing new congressional maps in the wake of the Callais ruling. Unlike Tennessee's formal extraordinary session call, South Carolina's announcement indicated an administrative preparation phase, with the legislature yet to convene formally.
South Carolina currently holds six congressional seats split 6-0 Republican, giving the legislature no Democratic incumbents to target outright. The redistricting pressure instead centres on tightening already-SAFE Republican seats, potentially concentrating Black and Democratic voters into fewer, more lopsided configurations in line with the Callais-freed map framework. The state has a history of VRA litigation over its congressional lines, including the Alexander v. South Carolina State Conference case that predated Callais.
The 5 May confirmation from legislative leaders, rather than the Governor, signals the General Assembly is taking the lead, consistent with South Carolina's legislature-dominant redistricting model. Any maps passed by the Republican-controlled General Assembly will face federal court scrutiny, though the Callais ruling significantly narrowed the grounds on which challengers can sue under VRA Section 2.