Search for: "South Carolina Republican Party" Results 181 - 200 of 744
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3 Nov 2010, 7:48 am by Nate Persily
I think this is true even accounting for the fact that "in-party" members might have been placed a greater risk than "out party" members in partisan gerrymandered states. [read post]
20 Oct 2011, 4:06 pm by Jason Mazzone
Charles Pinckney of South Carolina moved to strike the requirement that states make an application for protection. [read post]
9 Mar 2008, 10:28 am
The Republican Presidential ticket carried North Carolina by 12% in 2004. [read post]
10 Jul 2017, 12:30 pm by David Kravets
"It's not the dumbest idea I have ever heard, but it's pretty close," Senator Lindsey Graham, a Republican of South Carolina, said of the plan. [read post]
14 Feb 2017, 8:22 am
Pinckney said, South Carolina could never receive the plan, “if it prohibits the slavetrade. [read post]
24 Oct 2014, 6:50 am by Jim Sedor
South Carolina – Donors Use Loophole to Pour Money into Governor’s Race Charleston Post & Courier – Jeremy Borden | Published: 10/17/2014 Chowdary Yalamanchili, a Houston real-estate investor, has maxed out campaign contributions to South Carolina Gov. [read post]
3 Aug 2020, 7:05 am by Peter Briccetti
The focus shifts from Mississippi to North Carolina, where in 2010 the Republican Party took full control of the state for the first time in a century. [read post]
25 Nov 2007, 8:00 am
Giuliani to be familiar, at least from his former life, with the number of New Yorkers who were killed by weapons bought in South Carolina and brought into New York, but I seriously doubt that he will choose to tell the Republican primary voters what he knows, given his new incarnation as a would-be Charleton Heston.] [read post]
3 Jan 2023, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
By 1790 both North Carolina and Rhode Island had ratified the Constitution and the proposed amendments. [read post]
2 Mar 2020, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
  The success of these efforts is best indicated by the Republican Party’s share of the South Carolina vote in presidential elections during that decade, which dropped from 58,071 in 1880 to 13,740 in 1888.[6]     South Carolina was notable because African-Americans constituted close to sixty percent of the population of the state, but other southern states also followed suit in disenfranchising this population,… [read post]
4 May 2018, 6:20 am by Jim Sedor
      National: Crimes Are No Longer a Disqualification for Republican CandidatesSan Francisco Chronicle – Michael Scherer (Washington Post) | Published: 5/1/2018 Criminal convictions, once seen as career-enders, are no longer disqualifying in the world of Republican politics. [read post]
4 Jan 2011, 4:45 am by rhapsodyinbooks
Their stated goal was to get a Republican elected, so that the South would have an “excuse” to secede. [read post]
6 Sep 2011, 6:24 am by Lovechilde
Berman provides a list of a dozen states that have approved these obstacles to voting thus far:  Kansas and Alabama now require proof of citizenship to register to vote; Florida and Texas have erected barriers to groups like the League of Women Voters to register new voters; Maine repealed a 1973 law that permitted Election Day voter registration; Florida, Georgia, Ohio, Tennessee and West Virginia cut short their early voting periods; Florida and Iowa barred all ex-felons from the … [read post]
25 Oct 2011, 1:00 pm by jleaming@acslaw.org
This morning Perry announced tax policy in South Carolina, which “would dramatically reduce taxes, particularly on wealthy Americans and corporations,” The Washington Post reports. [read post]
14 Mar 2016, 11:30 am by Lovechilde
” Then there was the offensive campaign ad sponsored by the Republican Governors Association (RGA), entitled "Vincent Sheehan Protects Criminals, Not South Carolina. [read post]
19 Jan 2012, 12:45 pm by Buce
  Or don't they have internet in South Carolina? [read post]
30 Jan 2013, 3:44 pm by Sandy Levinson
  Nicki Haley's apponitment of Tim Scott, the first African-American to represent South Carolina in the United States Senate, though no doubt based on political considerations (nothing wrong with that) raises no such questions inasmuch as he had represented his district in the United States House of Representatives and, presumably, is thought by many South Carolina Republicans to have the attributes of genuine public leadership. [read post]
12 Mar 2008, 1:54 pm
Consider that his wins in Idaho, Utah, Georgia, Wyoming, Mississippi and South Carolina -- even Texas assuming as expected he wins those -- are all strong Republican states. [read post]