Senate race may be
up to 15 swing S.C. counties
By Jeff
Stensland Knight
Ridder
Horry and Georgetown counties, along with 13 other swing
counties, may play crucial roles in helping determine who wins the
U.S. Senate race between Jim DeMint and Inez Tenenbaum.
The majority of voters in swing counties have an uncanny ability
to pick a winner.
All 15 of the swing counties went for Republican Lindsey Graham
in his successful 2002 U.S. Senate race against Democrat Alex
Sanders.
Those same 15 counties all voted in larger numbers for Democrat
Jim Hodges over incumbent Republican Gov. David Beasley in 1998.
In 2002, 13 of them went for Republican Mark Sanford instead of
Hodges.
An analysis of voting patterns in recent elections shows S.C.
counties can be divided into three categories 21 "blue" counties
that typically vote Democratic, 10 "red" counties that consistently
tilt Republican, and the 15 swing counties:
Blue counties generally are more rural and have a much higher
percentage of black residents than the state average. Residents also
tend to be below the state average educationally and earn less than
those in Republican and swing counties.
Red counties have a disproportionate percentage of white
residents, earn above the state's average income and have larger
population cen- ters.
Swing counties are somewhere in the middle and come closer to
mirroring the state as a whole than either red or blue counties.
South Carolina elects its officials by popular vote not through
the complicated Electoral College process that has President Bush
and John Kerry obsessing over a handful of swing states.
In the homestretch of the race between DeMint and Tenenbaum,
strategists on both sides have put together game plans for one final
appeal to voters.
They might choose to shore up their support among traditional
Republican or Democratic strongholds.
Or they might go after the elusive swing voters who still can be
swayed one way or another.
Maybe they'll do both.
Wyeth Ruthven, communications director for the S.C. Democratic
Party, said voting patterns among individuals are more important
than how a county leans.
And Luke Byars, executive director of the S.C. Republican Party,
said "we feel we need to be everywhere."
But if history is any guide, odds are that many of the
battleground counties such as Charleston, Newberry and Florence once
again will play a big role in deciding whether Tenenbaum or DeMint
represents South Carolina in the U.S. Senate. |