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TUE · 2026-05-26 · 19:41 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0526-79405
News/Alabama pushes US Supreme Court to appro/South Carolina Republicans defy Trump again to reject rapid …
NSR-2026-0526-79405News Report·EN·Political Strategy

South Carolina Republicans defy Trump again to reject rapid redistricting drive

South Carolina Republican lawmakers in the state senate have rejected a proposal to redraw congressional districts ahead of the November midterm elections. The bid, which aimed to reduce Democratic voters in Congressman Jim Clyburn's district and potentially benefit Republicans, failed in a 26-18 vote during a special legislative session.

George Chidi and agenciesThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-05-26 · 19:41 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 3 min
South Carolina Republicans defy Trump again to reject rapid redistricting drive
The Guardian - World NewsFIG 01
Reading time
3min
Word count
596words
Sources cited
3cited
Entities identified
12entities
Quality score
100%
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Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

South Carolina Republican lawmakers in the state senate have rejected a proposal to redraw congressional districts ahead of the November midterm elections. The bid, which aimed to reduce Democratic voters in Congressman Jim Clyburn's district and potentially benefit Republicans, failed in a 26-18 vote during a special legislative session. This decision defies pressure from Donald Trump, who had lobbied for the redistricting plan. The proposal would have canceled the ongoing congressional election and rescheduled it with new district lines. Some Republican senators cited the late timing and the ongoing early voting as reasons for their opposition, while others criticized the rushed process and lack of public input.

Confidence 0.90Sources 3Claims 5Entities 12
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Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Political Strategy
Legal & Judicial
Tone
Measured
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.80 / 1.00
Factual
LowHigh
Sources cited
3
Well sourced
FewMany
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Key claims

5 extracted
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Jim Clyburn stated he would run for reelection regardless of district changes, even if it became 'Trump plus 20'.

quoteJim Clyburn
Confidence
1.00
02

Senator Tom Davis stated a consultant from Washington DC presented a map with "seven minutes and 40 seconds" of explanation and no questions.

quoteTom Davis
Confidence
1.00
03

State senators rejected mid-decade redistricting in a special session with a 26-18 vote.

factual
Confidence
1.00
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Republican lawmakers in South Carolina rejected a bid to redraw congressional districts.

factual
Confidence
1.00
05

The proposal aimed to split up congressman Jim Clyburn’s district and increase Republican gerrymandered gains.

factual
Confidence
0.90
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Full report

3 min read · 596 words
Republican lawmakers in South Carolina have defied Donald Trump and rejected a breakneck bid to redraw the state’s congressional districts ahead of November’s US midterm elections.In a 26-18 vote, state senators rejected mid-decade redistricting in a special session of the legislature, ending hope in Washington to split up congressman Jim Clyburn’s district and add to the list of gerrymandered gains for Republicans.The proposal would have canceled the congressional election under way – early voting began Tuesday morning – and rescheduled it with new district lines that would have significantly reduced the number of reliably Democratic voters in Clyburn’s district.It comes as Republicans push to redraw voting districts to the party’s advantage in a bid to preserves its slim majority in the US House of Representatives, scrambling to leverage a recent US Supreme Court ruling that weakened minority protections under the federal Voting Rights Act.The South Carolina state senate is composed of 34 Republican senators and 12 Democratic senators. Fourteen Republicans voted with Democrats blocking passage of the redistricting bill, days after a supermajority of the South Carolina state House of Representatives voted to send it to the senate.“Nineteen days ago, a map … was generated by a consultant from Washington DC, without any input from South Carolinians,” said state senator Tom Davis, a Republican from Beaufort and Jasper counties. “We were told: pass this map.”A short-circuited process led legislators to reject the proposal, he said. The consultant who drew the map spoke with legislators via Zoom from Washington DC for seven minutes and 40 seconds before leaving without taking questions, Davis said. “Seven minutes and 40 seconds is our legislative record… I don’t know how anybody with a straight face in this chamber can vote for a map with that absence of diligence.”Some senators said it was simply too late to make a change. “South Carolina citizens are going to the polls today. And neither my conscience or common sense is going to let me stop an election that is already under way,” Republican state senator Richard Cash said.Clyburn, the Democrat whose district Republicans are trying to reshape in their quest for a clean sweep of South Carolina’s seven congressional seats, was among the first to cast an early ballot in the small city of Orangeburg. A defiant Clyburn insisted he would run for reelection, regardless of what the district looks like.“I’m OK if it’s Trump plus 20,” Clyburn said while describing the potential Republican advantage in a reshaped district. “I would be running where I live.”More than 26,000 votes were cast in South Carolina by noon on Tuesday on the first day of early voting for the 9 June primary after Democrats called for people against a proposed new map to turn out in force. In 2022, about 125,000 early votes were cast the entire two weeks.The Republican-led House already has passed a plan that would reconfigure Clyburn’s district, void the results of current congressional primaries and instead hold new US House primaries in August.Trump has lobbied for the plan, making at least two phone calls to Republican state senate majority leader Shane Massey and also phoning in to a private meeting of Republican senators earlier this month. He also has maintained the pressure on social media.But Massey has resisted. “South Carolina has always punched above their weight,” he said during a debate earlier this month. “Doing this will diminish that influence.”“There are likely consequences for me, personally, taking the position that I am right now,” he added. I’m comfortable with that. I may not like it, but I’m comfortable with it.”Associated Press contributed reporting
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Entities

12 identified
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Keywords & salience

10 terms
redistricting
1.00
gerrymandering
0.90
us midterm elections
0.80
republican party
0.70
donald trump
0.60
congressional districts
0.50
voting rights
0.50
us house of representatives
0.40
election integrity
0.40
south carolina
0.40
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