What Redistricting Looks Like In Every State
An updating tracker of proposed congressional maps — and whether they might benefit Democrats or Republicans in the 2022 midterms and beyond. How this works »
Map source: South Carolina state Senate
Old map | R+4.5 |
New map | R+7.0 |
New map | R+24.8 |
Old map | R+26.6 |
Old map | 0/7 |
New map | 0/7 |
District | Partisan lean | Racial makeup |
---|---|---|
1st | R+17 | |
2nd | R+20 | |
3rd | R+44 | |
4th | R+27 | |
5th | R+26 | |
6th | D+25 | |
7th | R+26 |
The racial makeup of each district is of the voting-age population.
The latest in South Carolina
On Jan. 27, South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster signed into law South Carolina’s new congressional map, which will cement the GOP’s 6-1 majority in the state. The map largely maintains the boundaries of South Carolina’s current congressional map, with the biggest change being that one district, the 1st, goes from Republican-leaning to solidly Republican. It does this by splitting up Charleston, moving a good portion of it to the 6th District, South Carolina’s lone Democratic-leaning district.
The South Carolina chapter of the NAACP has filed a lawsuit alleging that the Republican-drawn maps disadvantage Black voters. “The Legislature chose perhaps the worst option of the available maps in terms of its harmful impact on Black voters that it proposed or were proposed by members of the public,” the lawsuit stated. The three-judge panel was set to hear the case on Feb. 28, but it was postponed and has yet to be rescheduled.
Latest changes 🤖
Dec. 22, 2021
Our latest coverage
Map | Plan | Partisan breakdown |
---|---|---|
Alternative state House proposal, Senate amendment 2 | ||
Alternative state House proposal | ||
State House proposal | ||
State Senate proposal |
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