"Polling Place" signs are displayed on Election Day in 2024. On Tuesday, voters in South Carolina headed to polls for the start of in-person voting, while the South Carolina state Senate declined to vote on a redistricting plan that would throw out those votes. File Photo by Bonnie Cash/UPI | License Photo
May 26 (UPI) -- South Carolina's state Senate adjourned Tuesday without acting on a new congressional map that would have redrawn voting districts in favor of Republicans.
President Donald Trump has called on states to redraw their voting maps to favor Republicans, especially after a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision that badly weakened a part of the landmark federal Voting Rights Act of 1965 that helped protect minority voting power.
However, as voters started heading to the polls Tuesday for the first in-person voting in primaries, state senators said it was just too late. If the state Senate pushed the map through Tuesday, the state would have had to throw out tens of thousands of ballots that had already been cast that day and schedule a new primary.
"Neither my conscience nor my common sense would allow me to stop an election that is already underway," Republican state Sen. Richard Cash said during the vote, The BBC reported.











