South Carolina

SC upheld its 6-week ban unanimously, SCOTUS let it defund Planned Parenthood, and a new voucher program hit 10K students while schools are $500M short.

Latest: June 24, 2026 Latest BriefSC Governor Runoff June 23June 11, 2026

The South Carolina Supreme Court unanimously upheld the six-week abortion ban in May 2025. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that South Carolina can defund Planned Parenthood from Medicaid, opening the door for 17 other states to follow. The state refuses Medicaid expansion while rural hospitals operate in the red.

Public schools are underfunded by half a billion dollars per year. Governor McMaster is term-limited, and the open governor’s race decides who inherits all of it.


Reproductive rights

South Carolina enforces a six-week abortion ban, before most people know they are pregnant. The state Supreme Court unanimously upheld the law in May 2025, ruling that state law’s definition of “fetal heartbeat” applies when an ultrasound first detects cardiac activity.

Then in June 2025, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 6-3 in South Carolina’s favor in the Planned Parenthood defunding case. The Court held that individual Medicaid patients cannot sue to enforce their right to choose a provider. The case originated from McMaster’s 2018 executive order blocking Planned Parenthood from providing family planning services under Medicaid.

”This decision will have widespread ramifications and allow seventeen states to strip Planned Parenthood clinics of the ability to provide non-abortion medical services to rural and low income people.”

Alexis McGill Johnson, Planned Parenthood President/CEO, on the Supreme Court ruling

Public schools

The South Carolina Supreme Court struck down the original voucher program 3-2 in September 2024: “After we clear away the window dressing, we can see the Act funnels public funds to the direct benefit of private schools. This is what our constitution forbids.”

Lawmakers passed a new voucher program in May 2025, designed to sidestep the ruling. The House voted 73-32. For 2025-26, up to 10,000 students receive $7,500 scholarships (families under 300% FPL). For 2026-27, the cap rises to 15,000 students with eligibility expanding to 500% FPL ($160,750 for a family of four). The program hit its 10,000-student cap with thousands more rejected.

South Carolina already underfunds its own mandated expenses for public schools by half a billion dollars per year. Vouchers disproportionately exclude Black and brown students and those in rural areas with no private school access.

Who This Affects

A parent in a rural SC county, Williamsburg County

Her county has no private schools within 30 miles. The $7,500 voucher is useless to her family. Her public school lost state funding when students in larger cities took vouchers. The district was already $2 million short of what the state mandates it spend on education.

Based on documented cases and public data.


Healthcare and benefits

South Carolina is one of 10 states that refuse Medicaid expansion. In non-expansion states, 52.2% of rural hospitals are in the red. Multiple expansion bills were introduced in 2025-2026, including Bill 3377, which would have put an advisory referendum on the 2026 ballot asking voters whether to expand.

The state’s Medicaid agency submitted a request to expand coverage to working low-income parents. The federal reconciliation bill creates new uncertainty for rural hospitals. If reimbursement rates drop while costs rise, sustaining those hospitals becomes impossible.

Two “billion-dollar” disasters hit South Carolina in 2025: Tropical Storm Chantal and an October coastal storm system. NOAA’s hurricane forecast calls for 8-14 named storms, 3-6 hurricanes in 2026.


Voting access

Starting January 1, 2027, only voters registered as members of a party can vote in that party’s primary. South Carolina currently has open primaries. The state also banned ranked choice voting.

The SC NAACP and disabled voters filed a federal lawsuit challenging state restrictions on voter assistance, including limits on who can help and how many voters they can assist. Plaintiffs argue the laws violate the Voting Rights Act.

The Heritage Act expansion bill, which the Senate approved in April 2026, would extend protections to all public memorials statewide and ban QR codes or informational plaques placed near monuments to provide historical context.


2026 elections

McMaster is term-limited. The June 9 Republican primary includes AG Alan Wilson, Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette, Rep. Nancy Mace, Rep. Ralph Norman, and others. An April poll showed Wilson leading the field.

RaceKey candidatesDate
Governor (R primary)Alan Wilson, Pamela Evette, Nancy Mace, Ralph NormanJune 9, 2026
Governor (D primary)Justin Bennett, Jermaine Johnson, Mullins McLeodJune 9, 2026
General electionTBDNov. 3, 2026

Wilson is the current AG. If he wins the governor’s race, that opens the AG seat. That office decides whether South Carolina keeps joining multistate pro-Trump legal coalitions or starts defending residents against federal overreach.


Protect yourself right now

  1. Check your voter registration. The June 9 primary is first. Verify at scvotes.gov. Starting 2027, you must be registered with a party to vote in primaries.

  2. Ask governor candidates about Medicaid. South Carolina refuses expansion while rural hospitals operate in the red. Make them answer.

  3. Know your school district’s voucher impact. 10,000 vouchers went out this year. Ask your school board whether your district lost funding and what it means for staffing.

  4. Track the voter assistance lawsuit. If you need help voting due to disability, the ACLU of South Carolina tracks the case.

  5. Prepare for hurricane season. Two billion-dollar disasters hit in 2025. NOAA forecasts 3-6 hurricanes in 2026. Know your evacuation zone and insurance status.

Call Your Senators
Lindsey Graham Republican
202-224-5972 Senate profile →
Tim Scott Republican
202-224-6121 Senate profile →
Governor Henry McMaster (R) 803-734-2100
Events

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Briefs

What Changed Recently

Reproductive Rights Updated June 24, 2026

Reproductive Rights Are Under Coordinated Federal and State Attack. Here Is Where Things Stand.

Abortion access is under coordinated federal and state attack. Planned Parenthood lost Medicaid funding. Title X is in limbo.

Voting June 11, 2026

South Carolina Governor Primary Headed to Runoff. Nancy Mace Finished Last After Defying Trump on Epstein Files.

Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette (Trump-endorsed) and AG Alan Wilson advance to June 23 runoff. Rep. Nancy Mace finished 5th after losing Trump's endorsement for pushing Epstein file release. First open seat since 2010.

Civil Rights Updated June 3, 2026

19 Congressional Seats, 191 State Seats: The Nationwide Cost of Callais

District-by-district breakdown of seats at risk after the Supreme Court gutted the VRA. Nine states are moving. Here are the numbers.

Gun Safety Updated June 1, 2026

Six States Have Made It a Crime to Enforce Red Flag Laws. Three More Are Moving Bills.

Texas made it a felony. Wyoming: up to a year in prison. Montana: $10,000 fines. Six states now punish officials who try to remove guns from people flagged as dangerous. Iowa, Missouri, and South Carolina have bills advancing.

Public Workers July 3, 2026

Forest Service Ends 120-Year Structure. 60 Research Stations May Close.

Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz is dissolving the regional office structure Gifford Pinchot created in 1905, replacing it with 15 state director offices

Public Workers July 3, 2026

Unions Sue DoD After Hegseth Canceled All CBAs in 24 Hours.

AFGE and NFFE filed suit July 3, 2026, alleging the Defense Department violated the Administrative Procedure Act when it canceled collective bargaining

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