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South Carolina’s primary: What moving it up would mean to Black voters

In just over a year, Democrats will break a 52-year tradition of kicking off presidential jockeying with the Iowa caucuses. Instead, South Carolina, pending approval, will host the first Democratic primary. President Joe Biden recommended this, acknowledging the need to give Black voters “a louder and earlier voice in the process.”

This effort reminded me of a group of South Carolina state legislators – the mostly Black delegates who convened in Charleston in 1868 to draft a state constitution. The Reconstruction-era document was groundbreaking for that time in its attention to detail regarding Black South Carolinians and overall social uplift, such as public schooling for all children regardless of race.

Why We Wrote This

For our commentator, the new plan to start the Democratic presidential primary season in South Carolina, in order to give Black voters more say in the process, is but another step in a longtime fight for equity.

But the gains made in 1868, however tenuous, would be entirely overturned by a wave of white violence less than a decade later. In July 1876, the Hamburg Massacre started a series of events that ultimately yielded Jim Crow.

The reason for that violence was the “threat” of equity. Black people were gaining essential civil rights: basic needs such as housing, food, and education. 

Over a century and a half later, too many Black people are still seeking those rights. Yet they continue to impact democracy in a way that benefits all of us.

In just over a year, Democrats will break a 52-year tradition of kicking off presidential jockeying with the Iowa caucuses. Instead, pending approval from the full Democratic National Committee, South Carolina will host the first Democratic primary on Feb. 3, 2024. 

Admittedly, I did a double take when I read that President Joe Biden had called for this change. His primary reason? “Voters of color.” 

As he expressed in a letter to fellow Democrats, “For decades, Black voters in particular have been the backbone of the Democratic Party but have been pushed to the back of the early primary process. … It is time to stop taking these voters for granted, and time to give them a louder and earlier voice in the process.”

Why We Wrote This

For our commentator, the new plan to start the Democratic presidential primary season in South Carolina, in order to give Black voters more say in the process, is but another step in a longtime fight for equity.

My cause for surprise wasn’t because I’m a native of the Palmetto State. It came from my political experiences in a Republican stronghold, and my home state’s sordid history of racial injustice. Last January, on the day before the state’s General Assembly convened, I dropped off letters to each state House and Senate member, petitioning for the removal of a white supremacist monument. I still haven’t received a response from a single member. 

That personal angst combined with Mr. Biden’s push to reshape the primary season reminded me of a more noble group of South Carolina state legislators – the mostly Black delegates who convened in Charleston in 1868 to draft a state constitution. The Reconstruction-era document was groundbreaking for that time in its attention to detail regarding Black South Carolinians and overall social uplift.

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